scriptorru писал(а) 13.08.2018 :: 19:37:29:О степном гарнизоне в Бирке, конечно, не приходится говорить, скорее об отдельных представителях, венгров например ...
Не только венгров.
"An important parallel to the archery equipment in the Garrison has beenfound in Birka grave Bj1125b.
This chamber grave contained the inhumatedremains of an individual and a horse. The rare composition of grave con-tents suggests the interpretation that the interred was a mounted archer of Eastern type. The grave goods include a bundle of arrows, very specificmounts from an Eastern so called closed quiver, and a button of a typeusually associated with the caftan or oriental-style dress.
The presence of such a grave in Birka supports the idea that there couldhave been accomplished Eastern type archers active in the defence of Birka....Thus the composite bow and the oriental mounts found in the Garrisonhave been characterised as key evidence in the question of the identity andcultural affiliations of Birka’s warriors (Hedenstierna-Jonson & HolmquistOlausson 2006). Together with the rest of the weapons and equipment, themounts help to define the complete attire of an Eastern warrior, thus reveal-ing a close connection with the mounted warrior of the steppe nomads (cf.Gorelik 2002:145). The complexity and repetitiveness of the panoplies(complete sets of armour) found in the Garrison indicate that their equip-ment at least to some extent was in accordance with the fighting techniqueof the mounted nomadic warriors. The use of the composite bow as sug-gested above supports this assumption. Still, there were obvious differences – in culture and way of living. The itinerant lifestyle of the nomads was re-placed by a more stationary life and there is a great difference concerning the most important symbol of all of nomadic life – the horse.... Another stratagem of steppe nomadic origin, and practised by medievalforces in western Europe, was the well-known trick of feigned flight (Hidán1996; Nithard describes the feigned flight performed in the battle at Wormsin 842; Halsall 2003:118, 189). These distinct forms of warfare technique,both required extensive training, but also suitable terrain, and though theBirka warriors surely were accustomed to the tactic of the feigned flight inboth theory and practice, they could probably not, for other reasons, use themore advanced forms of nomadic mounted warfare.In the particular case of the composite bow, it is highly probable that the warriors from Birka’s Garrison could utilize it when mounted, and even if horses not were employed in the battle of the Garrison, these warriors weretrained in the art of mounted warfare and accustomed to the use of cavalry in a battle situation. At the time of the Birka warrior, the Northmen restedupon a long and continuous tradition of mounted warfare, and according toErik Nylén and Bertil Almgren there was knowledge and even use of thecomposite bow ever since the 5 th
century, when they came in contact withthe Huns (Almgren 1963; Gamber 1968; Nylén 1982; Nylén & Schönbäck 1994; Engström 1994; 1997; 2001.... Birka warriors
If we accept Franklin’s statements on what constitutes Rus’ identity, in what way does this apply to the warriors from Birka’s Garrison? The answer is inthe full picture, in the complexity and at the same time homogeneity of thematerial culture. The Garrison displays a material culture that was intendedfor use and as such it was predisposed to be functional.
The warriors in theGarrison were not mere receivers of imported prestigious goods that heldthe function of being exotic or high status symbols. They were very discimi-nating users of these goods, and well aware of both the functional use andthe symbolic value of the objects. This suggests that the warriors in Birka’sGarrison actually identified themselves with Rus’ culture, something thathowever does not automatically mean that they were of a different geo-graphical or even cultural origin than the other inhabitants of the area. Thedifferences between the warriors in Birka and the people living in the Mälar Valley region and other parts of eastern Sweden, may not have been culturalbut, as Siân Jones puts it, “rather a consciousness of difference reproducedin the context of ongoing social interaction” (Jones 1996:71). In other wordsand in accordance with Jones’ definition, the Rus’ formed an ethnic groupand set themselves apart from the people they interacted with in that region.In the absence of actual cultural or geographical differences, the Rus’ iden-tity had to be expressed in their material culture, in which they could mani-fest their particularity... The Oriental style
One feature of Rus’ expression, and the main topic of paper IV, is the so-called ‘Oriental style’ found in Ancient Rus’ as well as in Birka. Usually theterm Oriental style alludes to the stylistic complex based on palmetts andscrolls designed in concordance with art from Islamic areas. It constitutes aforeign element in northern art and style during the Viking Age and is re-garded as an import from eastern territories. While the name derives from Ture Arne and his important work on Sweden and the Orient (1911; 1914)there is no actual consensus as to place of oriental origin. The issue has beendominated by the discussion concerning the origin of Birka’s oriental dresscustoms. Inga Hägg considers the silk and metal braids found in Birka’sgraves to be evidence of an oriental court dress related to the ByzantineEmpire (Hägg 1983; 2002; 2003). Ingmar Jansson instead emphasises thesteppe nomadic and Persian impact on Birka dress, reflecting a generalizedoriental cultural influence (Jansson 1977:391; 1988:605). This cultural influ-ence was not limited to the import of prestigious objects but, according to the results of paper IV, included a certain degree of intake of ideas and values as well. The oriental style is a composite style including ornaments,dress, equipment, weaponry and possibly ideals and practices (Hedenstierna- Jonson & Holmquist Olausson 2006). To my mind, this style which inte-grates Persian, Islamic and steppe nomadic traits, originated and developedin the trading posts along the rivers of Ancient Rus’ during the late 9 th and10 th
centuries. The oriental style developed the image and allure of the ex-otic and reflected the need for a cultural expression exclusive to the inhabi-tants of these geographically dispersed trading posts. It is not only orna-ments that exhibit these orientalised features, but even dress and military equipment It is possible to interpret this as the will of the Rus’ to identify themselves with a warrior ideal and martial organisation inspired by thesuccessful steppe nomads and the superior Byzantine army....
The presence of an Eastern or oriental type of warrior in Birka has beenquestioned, and admittedly the presence of full-blood eastern warriors inBirka’s Garrison is thought-provoking indeed.
Yet such scepticism must reston firm ground and not on idle speculation. The assumption that the Garri-son warrior had Rus’ affiliations finds strong support in the find-material. The Birka warriors from the late 10 th century could very likely have definedthemselves as being part of the Rus’ community, even though they wereborn in the Mälar region. The Rus’ material culture is not fixed to a certainplace or region and consists of a mixture of objects from different ethnicgroups and cultures. If it is possible to talk about a homogenous mix of cultures, this is what the Rus’ material culture display in the trading postsalong the rivers of Ancient Rus’, and in late 10
th century Birka.....
The Eastern focus is clearly visible in the find-material, and thematerial culture of the warriors is no exception to this. The extensive ar-chaeological remains deriving from recent years’ excavations of Birka’s Gar-rison display a multitude of artefacts of various origins, but with strong Eastern connotations.... the closest parallels to 10 th century Birka and especially to the Garrison, islocated to a number of trading posts on the great rivers in the territory of Ancient Rus’. It is stated that these Rus’ trading posts, essentially inhabitedby Northmen, shared a common culture – a possible Rus’ identity, main-tained throughout a vast area by means of exceptionally close contacts which put their imprint on their shared cultural expression.
I point to thecreation of a Rus’ stylistic expression discernable in the archaeological mate-rial both in Birka and in Ancient Rus’ which integrates Norse, Steppe no-madic, Islamic, Byzantine and other traits. The so-called Oriental style issuggested to be a particular Rus’ style. The thesis also maintains that thecultural identity of the Rus’, together with their relations to the greater geo-graphical sphere within which they acted, are of great importance for thefurther understanding of this Eastern network of trade and political alli-ances....
With the study of the material culture of the Birka warrior, this thesis hasshown that the warriors from Birka’s Garrison had an equal part in the mar-tial development in contemporary Europe but with their own particulartraits, which included the use of advanced non-Scandinavian fighting tech-niques and symbols of rank and status deriving from the cultural sphere of the Steppe nomads. ... " (The Birka Warrior - the material culture of a martial Charlotte Hedenstierna-Jonson
https://www.academia.edu/1429897/The_Birka_Warrior_-_the_material_culture_of_a_m...)
"The Magyar element
Returning to the men in the Birka garrison,there is a clear indication of closer contactswith the Magyar culture, in particular themartial culture. The weapon assemblagesfrom Birka’s Garrison, in general, give animpression of being more eastern than theRus material, showing closer links with thewarrior equipment of the nomad horsemenof the steppes. The Magyars were importantin this respect as their horsemen still re-tained their steppe-nomadic roots in their fighting techniques and equipment... The Sabretache
Awell-known insignia of the steppe no-madic warrior was the composite belt, com-monly referred to as the oriental belt, and present in many cultures along the Easternriver routes. Even in Birka there are severa examples of this type of belt and of mountsre-used into pendants. The types found in Birka, and in the Garrison are not of a predominantly Magyar type, but rather of Volga Bulgarian or Khazar origin. Closer linksare instead to be found in the pouch material. The so-called sabretache, carried by the belt together with weapons like the sabre/sword, was made of leather and its flap wasdecorated with various types of metalmounts. The tradition of decorating pouches with increasing numbers of individualmounts, eventually led to the flap becomingtotally covered by one single plate. In somecases even the bow case was decorated
(fig.3) There are a number of pouches in the Birka graves, some of which are of undisputable Magyar origin. Different types arerepresented and in the Garrison mountsfrom what can be interpreted as a sabretachehave been identified
(fig. 4). The closest parallels to the Birka sabretaches are con-centrated in the upper Tisza region in thenortheast of Hungary (cf. Horváth 1996; Nepper 1996; Révész 1996; Hedenstierna-Jonson & Holmquist Olausson 2006).... All of the different specific objects of theEastern archer are represented in Birka.There are examples of mounts from closedquivers, as well as a worked bone attach-ment to a composite bow, the wing-shapedmount from a bow case, and possibly evena thumb-ring In the garrison several quiver mounts have been found, allowing for atleast four quivers (Lundström et al 2009) (fig. 5)... .
Visitors or locals? How should the archaeological material in Birka be understood? As traces of visiting archers or as evidence that Scandinavianshad acquired the advanced archery tech-niques, the dress, and the customs of theSteppe nomads, in particularly that of theMagyar? To my mind it is clear that therewere warriors in Birka fully accomplishedin the fighting techniques and weaponry of the steppe nomads. ... There is another strong indication thatthe Magyar element in Birka was somethingthat concerned the locals. Burial 1125b,usually disregarded as incomplete, plun-dered or tampered with, should to my mind be reconsidered as it contains the fullequipment of a mounted oriental archer – and nothing more. The man has been buriedwith a horse and archery equipment, com- plete with bow case and all (cf. Arbman1943a, 1943b). The mount on the bow caseis definitely of Magyar origin, and the ar-rows were kept in a closed quiver of steppenomadic or Magyar type. Interestingly, theset up of arrows are a mixture of differenttypes, and not necessarily typical for anEastern archer (Lundström et al 2009)....
Similarities and differences The archaeological remains from Birka’sGarrison show traces of well-equipped war-riors. Their dress style and weaponry wereapparently modelled on eastern tribes fromamong the mounted nomads, especially theKhazars and the Volga Bulgars, and possi- bly also the Magyars. The composition of their attire indicates that rather than import-ing them merely for prestige, they hadadopted not only the warring techniques butalso ideals that lay behind the borroweditems. " (Magyar - Rus' - Scandinavia. Cultural exchange in the early medieval period.
http://www.academia.edu/2423650/Magyar_-_Rus_-_Scandinavia._Cultural_exchange_in...)
" There is still a certain neglect of Khazars in the early history of Russia, the focus being on the Viking-perspective; the situation in the former Soviet Union was an extreme example of that.
The western archaeologists, on the other hand, regarded certain objects as ‘Khazar, Magyar or Alan’. The south to north interpretation of the trade and ‘colonization’ of Viking Age Russia, in the light of the new dating of chamber graves in Birka and Russia of the 9th and 10th centuries, is not only one of the possible factors. According to these new ways of looking at Birka material, most of the chamber graves with ornaments (about 120), dated to the 10th century, can be interpreted as pagan Rus with Khazar objects or, as pagan Khazar with Rus features, and often interpreted as eastern ornaments. … The belt mounts with stylized plant ornaments, as well as the heart-shaped silver amulets with a loop and plant decoration, often with animal and human figures, have been interpreted by S.A. Pletnjeva as Khazarian or Saltovo-Majaki (Pletnjeva 1967). This kind of silver ornament and the belt mounts from the 9th-10th centuries, found in Birka, was usually called oriental, and interpreted as Khazarian only by H. Arbman (Arbman 1942: 303ff; 1940-1943: tab. 95f.; Werbart 1996a: 216, fig. 7).
The key question is who those easterners, living among other foreigners in Birka, wearing eastern clothing, and using eastern burial customs were? Archaeologists often suggested that these graves could be the burial of “merchant-warrior clan of Swedish nobles”. But Birka was the centre of international trade, world-wide contacts, commerce and diplomacy, with a lot of foreign merchants and emissaries, and the local nobles were not located in Birka, but in the area of King Court on Adelso, the island across the water, opposite the island of Bjorko.
Nowadays it is suggested that the chamber graves are the burial of foreigners, containing a large number of eastern objects, both Khazar and Kievan Rus. This interpretation is probably still contrary to that of the archaeological majority (information from Bjorn Ambrosiani and Mats Philip, Stockholm)." (с) Werbart B. (Sweden. University of Lund) The invisible identities: cultural identity and archaeology People, material culture and environment in the North // Pr