The 'Catacomb culture', ca. 2800-2200 BC, refers to an early
Bronze Age culture occupying essentially what is present-day
Ukraine. It was related to the
Yamna culture, and would seem more of an areal term to cover several smaller related archaeological cultures.
The economy was essentially stockbreeding, although traces of grain have been found. There seem to have been skilled specialists, particularly metal-workers, however.
The name comes from its burial practices. These are similar to those of the Yamna culture, but with a hollowed-out space off of the main shaft, creating the 'catacomb'. Animal remains were incorporated into a small minority of graves. In certain graves there was the distinctive practice of what amounts to modelling a clay mask over the deceased's face, creating an obvious if not necessarily correct association to the famous gold funeral mask of
Agamemnon.
The origin of the Catacomb Culture is disputed. Jan Lichardus
[1] enumerates three possibilities: a local development departing from previous the Yamna Culture only, a migration from Central Europe or an oriental origin. The culture is first to introduce corded pottery decorations into the steppes and shows a profuse use of the polished battle ax, providing a link to the West. Parallels with the
Afanasevo culture, including provoked cranial deformations, provide a link to the East.
The linguistic composition of the Catacomb culture is unclear. Within the context of the
Kurgan hypothesis expounded by
Marija Gimbutas, an
Indo-European component is hard to deny, particularly in the later stages. Placing the ancestors of the
Greek,
Armenian and
Paleo-Balkan dialects here is tempting, as it would neatly explain certain shared features. More recently, the Ukrainian archaeologist V. Kulbaka has argued that the Late Yamna cultures of ca. 3200-2800 BC, esp. the Budzhak, Starosilsk, and Novotitarovka groups, might represent the Greek-Armenian-"Aryan"(=Indo-Iranian) ancestors (
Graeco-Aryan,
Graeco-Armenian), and the Catacomb culture that of the "unified" (to ca. 2500 BC) and then "differentiated" Indo-Iranians.
Grigoryev's (1998) version of the
Armenian hypothesis connects Catacomb culture with
Indo-Aryans, because catacomb burial ritual had roots in South-Western
Turkmenistan from the early 4th millennium (Parkhai cemetery). The Catacomb culture was ousted by the
Srubna (Timber-grave) culture from ca. the 17th century, associated with an
Iranian expansion or with the
Cimmerians (variously classified as either Iranian,
Thracian or
Celtic).
Footnotes
1. Jan Lichardus - La protohistoire de l'Europe, 1987, III.1.A
Sources
★ .
★ V. Kulbaka, "Indo-European populations of Ukraine in the paleometallic period", Mariupol 2000. ISBN 966-7329-30-5
★ .
See also
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Shaft grave