I find it interesting that a even before the horse, that these nomadic clans accumulated wealth and attained wagon based mobility. mobile war chariots had a thousand years of ascendancy on the battle field and was then replaced by riding horses. Thus the Yurt ha a far longer history than any of us ever imagined.
Once mobile, it makes sense to then follow the wild herds or to manage your own. Ox carts certainly made that possible.
The remaining question is how old the practice might be. It is potentially as old as ten thousand years but for that we have no indication at all. Yet it was certainly mature at this site.
4,000-Year-Old Burial with Chariots Discovered in South Caucasus
By By Owen Jarus, Live Science Contributor | LiveScience.com – Thu, 26 Jun, 2014
https://ca.news.yahoo.com/4-000-old-burial-chariots-discovered-south-caucasus-120004027.html
Yahoo
News
An
ancient burial containing chariots, gold artifacts and possible human
sacrifices has been discovered by archaeologists in the country of
Georgia, in the south Caucasus.
The burial site, which would've been intended for a chief, dates back over 4,000 years to a time archaeologists call the Early Bronze Age, said Zurab Makharadze, head of the Centre of Archaeology at the Georgian National Museum.
Archaeologists discoveredthe timber burial chamber within a
39-foot-high (12 meters) mound called a kurgan. When the archaeologists
reached the chamber they found an assortment of treasures, including two
chariots, each with four wooden wheels. [See Images of the Burial Chamber & Chariots]
The team discovered ornamented clay and wooden vessels, flint and
obsidian arrowheads, leather and textile artifacts, a unique wooden
armchair, carnelian and amber beads and 23 golden artifacts, including
rare and artistic crafted jewelry, wrote Makharadze in the summary of a
presentation he gave recently at the International Congress on the
Archaeology of the Ancient Near East, held at the University of Basel in
Switzerland.
"In the burial chamber were placed two four-wheeled chariots,
both in good condition, [the] design of which represents fine
ornamental details of various styles," Makharadze wrote. Thechamber also
contained wild fruits, he added.
While the human remains had been disturbed by a robbery, which
probably occurred in ancient times, and were in a disordered position,
the archaeologists found that seven people were buried in the chamber.
"One of them was a chief and others should be the members of his family,
sacrificed slaves or servants," Makharadze told Live Science in an
email.
A time before the horse
The burial dates back to a time before domesticated horses
appeared in the area, Makharadze said. While no animals were found
buried with the chariots, he said, oxen would have pulled them.
Other rich kurgan burials dating to the second half of the third
millennium B.C. have also been found in the south Caucasus,said
Makharadze in another paper
he presented in February at the College de France in Paris. The
appearance of these rich burials appears to be connected to interactions
that occurred between nomadic people from the Eurasian steppes and
farming communities within and near the south Caucasus, Makharadze said.
These interactions appear to have led to some individuals, like this
chief, getting elaborate burials. The newly discovered armchair
symbolizes the power that individuals like the chief had. "The purpose
of the wooden armchair was the indication to power, and it was put in
the kurgan as a symbol of power," Makharadze said in the email.
The kurgan was found in eastern Georgia near the municipality of Lagodekhi and was excavated in 2012.
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