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The Baron de Baye's Antiquities from North-east Russia and Siberia
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 January 2012
Extract
The archaeology of the Black Sea coast quickly attracted attention when the Russians conquered the Crimea at the end of the eighteenth century, and the Scythic barrows of the Steppes began to be carefully excavated almost as soon; but it was not till the fifties and sixties that the less imposing antiquities of northern Russia found any one to study them even among Russians. West European interest naturally came later, the pioneers were first the Finn Aspelin in the seventies and next the Baron de Baye, who about 1890 sought to throw light from the East upon the Merovingian and other Teutonic styles which were his special province.
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- Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1923
References
page 51 note 1 Zaoussaïlov, i, pp. 8-16 (see Bibliography, p. 59).
paeg 53 note 1 Tallgren, A. M., Opuscula Arch. 0. Montello dicata, 1913, pp. 115–123.Google Scholar
page 53 note 2 C. R., 1896, p. 130.
page 53 note 3 Radloff, Sib. Ant., iv, 4, not quite so straight: Martin, 15. 4, 5.
page 53 note 4 Radloff, , op. cit., xi, 5, 6, especially 7Google Scholar.
page 54 note 1 e.g. Minns, p. 249, ff. 169, 170.
page 54 note 2 C.R., 1896, p. 117, f. 415: bearded heads, Martin, 29. 41, 43.
page 54 note 3 Minns, p. 251, f. 172, after Radloff, . Aus Sib., pl. 4. 1, 2: horseman, Minns, p. 279, ff. 203, 204.Google Scholar
page 54 note 4 e.g. Minns, p. 258, f. 178, after Aspelin, 402.
page 54 note 5 Similar to Radloff, Sib. Ant., i, 30.
page 54 note 6 Radloff, xx, 7–11, xxi, I; Aspelin, 276.
page 54 note 7 Kupfer-u, . Bronzezeit, i, p. 170Google Scholar; Zaoussailov, i, p. 31.
page 55 note 1 Spitsyn, , M.A.R. 25, iv, cf. p. 5Google Scholar; the extension of the type and its congeners from Kazan and Knyaz Pogóst in Vologda to Krasnoyarsk is mapped by Tallgren, , Zaoussaïlov, ii, pp. 8-13, cf. pi. i, 24–27Google Scholar.
page 55 note 2 Spitsyn, , op. cit., pl. vGoogle Scholar.
page 55 note 3 Aspelin, 644.
page 55 note 4 The iron spear-head B.M. no. 212 also seems unlike Anáníno.
page 55 note 5 One from Anán'ino and another from Simferopol, Minns, op. cit., p. 258, ff. 180, 181.
page 55 note 6 Spitsyn, , Trans. Russ. Arch. Soc., xii, vi. 6 and p. 238Google Scholar.
page 55 note 7 e.g. Tallgren, , Tovostine, p. 65, ff.67, 68Google Scholar.
page 55 note 8 Minns, p. 167, f. 56.
page 55 note 9 Ibid., p. 214, f. 115.
page 55 note 10 Martin, 31. 60, 61; Tallgren, , Tovostine, ix, 19–21, and p. 66, f. 70. In a letter Mr. Tallgren expresses his surprise that such a thing should come from Anán'ino. One cannot say that it certainly didGoogle Scholar.
page 56 note 1 Tallgren, loc. cit., and Minns, p. 270, f. 186; p. 273, f. 192; p. 276, f. 198: cf. Reinach, , Rev. Arch, xxxviii, p. 39Google Scholar.
page 56 note 2 Baye, De, Ananino, f. xviiGoogle Scholar.
page 56 note 3 Tallgren, , Tovostine, p. 50, f. 49, after de Baye, f. vGoogle Scholar.
page 56 note 4 Perm:—Aspelin, 410, Anán'ino = Tallgren, Ananino, p. 22, f. 19, also p. 47,. f 46, Relka, a site a little later than Anán'ino: Siberia:—Minns, p. 242, f. 150, p. 247, f. 161; C.R., 1894, p. 120, f. 194; Tallgren, , Tovostine, vi, 5–10, and pp. 50, 51Google Scholar.
page 56 note 5 Martin, 8. 9.
page 57 note 1 Aspelin, 476.
page 57 note 2 Aspelin, 482.
page 57 note 3 Aspelin, 451.
page 57 note 4 Aspelin, 415, 427, there is another knife from Kotlóvka.
page 57 note 5 Cf. Minns, p. 190, f. 82.
page 58 note 1 B.M. no. 269, cf. Aspelin, 562.
page 58 note 2 B.M. no. 295, cf. Spitsyn, , op. cit., xxx, 11–21Google Scholar.
page 58 note 3 B.M. no. 41, cf. nos. 459 and 462 from the same place in Spitsyn's ‘Shaman Figures’.
page 58 note 4 See also C.R. 1890, pp. 101-103, ff. 73-84; 1893, pp. 25-26.
page 59 note 1 B.M. no. 76, a similar ring from Gagin, Sergach distr., Govt. of NizhniNovgorod, , C. R. 1894, p. 148, f. 232Google Scholar.
page 59 note 2 Syulgams and such a ring from Pichpanda, Spassk distr., Govt. Tambov, . C. R. 1892, pp. 47–50, ff. 26-29Google Scholar.