2023
DOI: 10.3390/arts12040151
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Looking at the Evidence of Local Jewelry Production in Scythia

Abstract: This article considers finds from the Scythian monuments of the North Black Sea area that can be connected to local jewelry production from the 7th century to the end of the 4th century BCE. I wish to draw attention to the problem of prolonged bias in this area of study. The prominence of the famous masterpieces by West Asian artisans (Lyta Mohyla and Kelermes Kurgans) and of the Greco-Scythian goldwork from the North Pontic kurgans (Chortomlyk, Solokha, Tovsta Mohyla, etc.) invited the view that the vast majo… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
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“…74-76), indicating that metalworkers could set up shop wherever they were needed. Moreover, indigenous jewellers serving the elites of the Pontic steppe were continuously appropriating and adapting Mediterranean technological and iconographic innovations, reaching a high degree of sophistication (Lifantli 2023).…”
Section: Who Made the Treasure And Where?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…74-76), indicating that metalworkers could set up shop wherever they were needed. Moreover, indigenous jewellers serving the elites of the Pontic steppe were continuously appropriating and adapting Mediterranean technological and iconographic innovations, reaching a high degree of sophistication (Lifantli 2023).…”
Section: Who Made the Treasure And Where?mentioning
confidence: 99%