Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-q99xh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-19T15:46:02.502Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

THE EARLY KURGAN PERIOD IN RABATI, GEORGIA: THE CULTURAL SEQUENCE AND A NEW SUITE OF RADIOCARBON DATES

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 July 2021

Giorgi Bedianashvili
Affiliation:
Georgian National Museum, Shota Rustaveli Avenue, Tbilisi0105, Georgia
Andrew Jamieson
Affiliation:
University of Melbourne, School of Historical and Philosophical Studies, Melbourne, Victoria3010, Australia
Claudia Sagona*
Affiliation:
University of Melbourne, School of Historical and Philosophical Studies, Melbourne, Victoria3010, Australia
*
*Corresponding author. Email: [email protected]

Abstract

This paper reports on radiocarbon (14C) results from the recent archaeological investigations in the ancient frontier fortress of Rabati, in southwest Georgia, a collaborative research project involving archaeologists from the Georgian National Museum and the University of Melbourne. From the first three excavation seasons spanning 2016, 2018, and 2019, it became clear that significant Bedeni phase deposits capped most of the summit of the site. Levels with their distinctive vessels and a range of contemporary, local domestic wares, pits and some traces of architecture seal underlying Early Bronze Age strata. The Early Bronze Age levels include massive architecture rarely seen in Kura-Araxes settlements. Some finds can only be described as unique and extraordinary while others suggest that the core population was stable with long-held traditions, yet open to new influences infiltrating this highland site during the subsequent Early Kurgan (Martkopi-Bedeni) period. We discuss the key discoveries at Rabati relative to the 14C readings from the site within the wider setting of contemporary sites in the Caucasus.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press for the Arizona Board of Regents on behalf of the University of Arizona

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Apakidze, AM, Nikolaishvili, VV, Narimanishvili, GK, Davlianidze, RV, Sadradze, VG, Khetsuriani, LG, Iremashvili, SA, Noneishvili, AI. 1995. Mtskhetskaia Ekspetsiia. Polevie Arkheologicheskie Issledovaniia V 1987 Godu. p. 83–89.Google Scholar
Badalyan, R. 2014. New data on the periodization and chronology of the Kura-Araxes culture in Armenia. Paléorient 40(2):7192.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Batiuk, S. 2013. The fruits of migration: understanding the “longue dureé” and the socio-economic relations of the Early Transcaucasian Culture. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 32:449477.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Batiuk, S, Rothman, R, Samei, S, Hovsepyan, R. In press. Unravelling the Kura-Araxes cultural tradition across space and time. Ancient Near Eastern Studies.Google Scholar
Bedianashvili, G, Sagona, C, Longford, C, Martkoplishvili, I, Losaberidze, L, Kirkitadze, G. 2019. Archaeological investigations at the multi-period settlement of Rabati, southwest Georgia: Preliminary report (2016, 2018 seasons). Ancient Near Eastern Studies 56:1133.Google Scholar
Boaretto, E, Lev, R, Regev, L. 2016. Radiocarbon dating of the Early Bronze Age burial site “Kurgan-Ananauri 3,” Georgia. In: Makakharadze, Z, Kalandadze, N, Murvanidze, B, editors. Ananauri Big Kurgan 3. Tbilisi: Georgian National Museum. p. 284291.Google Scholar
Brock, F, Higham, T, Ditchfield, P, Ramsey, C. 2010. Current pretreatment methods for AMS radiocarbon dating at the Oxford Radiocarbon Accelerator Unit (ORAU). Radiocarbon 52:103112.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burchuladze, AA, Togonidze, GI. 1987. Tbilisi radiocarbon dates IV. Radiocarbon 29(2):239262.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Butomo, SV. 1965. Radiocarbon dating in the Soviet Union. Radiocarbon 7:223228.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carminati, E. 2016. The emergence of inequality in the Southern Caucasus: the Early Kurgan Period (2600–2100 BC) [unpublished PhD thesis]. Melbourne: School of Historical and Philosophical Studies, The University of Melbourne.Google Scholar
Chernykh, EN, Avilova, LI, Orlovskaja, LB. 2000. Metallurgiche skie provintsii i radiouglerodnaja khronologija (Metallurgical Provinces and Radiocarbon Chronology). Moscow: Institute of Archaeology of Russian Academy of Sciences.Google Scholar
Chubinishvili, TN. 1963. Amiranis-Gora: Materialy k Drevneishei Istorii Meskhet-Dzhavakheti. Tbilisi: Sabchota Sakartvelo. In Georgian with Russian summary.Google Scholar
Chubinishvili, T, Nebieridze, L, Pkhakadze, G, Grigolia, G, Mirtskhulava, G, Orjonikidze, A, Esakia, K, Gogelia, D, Prisheninko, L. 1976. The results of fieldwork of Kvemo Kartli Archaeological Expedition (IX–XIII). Polevie Arkhelogicheskie Isledovanya v 1974:14–20. Tbilisi: Metsniereba. In Russian.Google Scholar
Dedabrishvili, S. 1969. Pamiatniki epokhi rannei i srednei bronzy. Trudy Kakhetskoi Arkheologicheskoi Ekspeditsii (T.K.A.E.) I (1965–1966 gg) 1:35–75. In Georgian.Google Scholar
Dedabrishvili, S. 1979. Kurgany Alanzaskoi Doliny. Tbilisi: Metsniereba. In Georgian and Russian.Google Scholar
Edens, C. 1995. Transcaucasia at the end of the Early Bronze Age. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research (The Archaeology of Empire in Ancient Anatolia) no. 299/300:53–64.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gambashidze, O, Kvijinadze, K. 1982. Meskhet-Javakheti expedition. Polevie Arkhelogicheskie Isledovanya v 1980:29–31. Tbilisi: “Metsniereba”. In Russian.Google Scholar
Gasparyan, SE. 1987. Dambaranneri Peghumner Ijevani Shrjani Berkaber Gyughum (Excavations of tombs in the village Berkaber, District Ijevan). Patma-Banasirakan Handes (Yerevan) 2:229–33.Google Scholar
Gobejishvili, G. 1980. Bedenis Gorasamarxebis Kultura. Tbilisi: Metsniereba. In Georgian.Google Scholar
Gogadze, E. 1972. Periodizatsiya i genezis kurgannoy kul’tury Trialeti. Tbilisi (na gruz. Yaz).Google Scholar
Gogochuri, G. 2008. Archaeological sites of the Early Barrow Period in the Aragvi Gorge. In: Sagona, A, Abramishvili, M, editors. Archaeology in Southern Caucasus: Perspectives from Georgia (ANES Supplement 19). Leuven: Peeters. p. 3762.Google Scholar
Hansen, S, Mirtskhulava, G. 2012. The datings. In: Lyonnet B, Guliyev F, Helwing B, Aliyev T, Hansen S, Mirtskhulava G, editors. Ancient Kura 2010–2011: the first two seasons of joint field work in the Southern Caucasus. Archäologische Mitteilungen aus Iram und Turan Sonderdruck aus Band 44:85–97.Google Scholar
Japaridze, O. 1992. Sakartvelos Arkeologia II. Eneolit-Adre Brinjaos Khana. Tbilisi: Metsniereba. In Georgian.Google Scholar
Japaridze, O. 1998. Kartveli Tomebis Etnokulturuli Istoriisatvis dzv. ts. III Atastsleulshi (Adreqorghanuli kultura) (Zur Ethnokulturellen Geschichte der Georgischen Stämme im 3. Jahrtausend v. Chr.; On the Ethno-Cultural History of the Georgian Tribes in the 3rd Milliennium BC). Tbilisi: Tbilisi University Press. In Georgian.Google Scholar
Japaridze, O. 2003. Satartvelos Istoriis Sataveebtan. Tbilisi: Tbilisi University Press. In Georgian.Google Scholar
Javakhishvili, A. 2017. Berikldeebi Settlement. Tbilisi: Georgian National Museum. In Georgian.Google Scholar
Javakhishvili, AI, Glonti, L. 1962. Urbnisi I. Arkheologicheskie raskopki, provedennye v 1954–1961 gg na selishche Kvatskhelebi (Tvlepia-kokhi). Tbilisi: Izdatelstvo Akademii Nauk Gruziniskoi SSR. In Georgian with Russian summary.Google Scholar
Kakhiani, K, Ghlighvashvili, E. 2008. Bronze Age barrows in southeast Georgia. In: Sagona, A, Abramishvili, M, editors. Archaeology in Southern Caucasus: perspectives from Georgia (ANES Supplement 19). Leuven: Peeters. p. 229–47.Google Scholar
Kakhiani, K, Sagona, A, Sagona, C, Kvavadze, E, Bedianashvili, G, Messager, E, Martin, L, Herrscher, E, Martkoplishvili, I, Birkett-Rees, J, Longford, C. 2013. Archaeological investigations at Chobareti in southern Georgia, the Caucasus. Ancient Near Eastern Studies 50:1135.Google Scholar
Kavtaradze, G. 1983. K Khronologii Epokhi Eneolita I Bronzy Gruzii (On the Chronology of the Aeneolithic-Bronze Age of Georgia). Tbilisi: Metsniereba. In Russian.Google Scholar
Kavtaradze, G. 1999. The importance of metallurgical data for the formation of a central Transcaucasian chronology. In: Hauptmann, E, Pernicka, E, Rehren, T, Yalçin, U, editors. The Beginnings of Metallurgy: Proceedings of the International Conference “The Beginnings of Metallurgy”, Bochum 1995 (Der Anschnitt 9). Bochum: Deutsches Bergbau-Museum. p. 67102.Google Scholar
Kohl, P. 2003. Integrated interaction at the beginning of the Bronze Age: new evidence from the Northeastern Caucasus and the advent of tin bronzes in the third millennium BC. In: Rubinson, K, Smith, AT, editors. Archaeology in the Borderlands: Investigations in Caucasia and Beyond (Monograph 47). Los Angeles: The Cotsen Institute of Archaeology at UCLA. p. 921.Google Scholar
Kohl, P. 2007. The making of Bronze Age Eurasia. Cambridge: Cambridge World Archaeology.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kuftin, BA. 1941. Archeologicheskie Raskopki v Trialeti. Tbilisi: Tbilisi Publishing House of the Academy of Sciences of the Georgian SSR. In Georgian with Russian and English summary.Google Scholar
Kushnareva, KK. 1997. The Southern Caucasus in Prehistory. Stages of cultural and socioeconomic development from the eight to the second millennium B.C. (University Museum Monograph, 99). Translated by Michael, HN. Philadelphia: The University Museum, University of Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
Kvavadze, E, Boschian, G, Chichinadze, M, Gagoshidze, I, Gavagnin, K, Martkoplishvili, I, Rova, E. 2019. Palynological and archaeological evidence for ritual use of wine in the Kura Araxes Period at Aradetis Orgora (Georgia, Caucasus). Journal of Field Archaeology 44(8):500–22.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Licheli, V, Rusishvili, R. 2008. A Middle Bronze Age burial at Atsquri. In: Sagona, A, Abramishvili, M, editors. Archaeology in Southern Caucasus: perspectives from Georgia (ANES Supplement 19). Leuven: Peeters Publishers. p. 205–28.Google Scholar
Lorkipanidze, O. 1991. Archäologie in Georgien: Von der Altsteinzeit zum Mittelalter. Weinheim: VCH, Acta Humaniora.Google Scholar
Lyonnet, B. 2014. The Early Bronze Age in Azerbaijan in the light of recent discoveries. Paléorient (The Kura-Araxes culture from the Caucasus to Iran, Anatolia and the Levant Between unity and diversity) 40(2):115–30.Google Scholar
Lyonnet, B, Guliyev, F, Baudouin, E, Bouquet, L, Bruley-Chabot, G, Samzun, A, Foutugne, M, Degorre, E, Husson, X, Raymond, R. 2017. Mentesh Tepe (Azerbaijan), Preliminary report on the 2012–2014 excavations. In: Helwing, B, Aaliyev, B, Lyonnet, B, Guliyev, F, Hansen, S, Mirtskhulava, G, editors. The Kura Projects. New Research on the Late Prehistory of the Southern Caucasus (Archäeologie aus Iran und Turan 16). Berlin: Dietrich Reimer. p. 125140.Google Scholar
Lyonnet, B, Guliyev, F, Helwing, B, Aliyev, T, Hansen, S, Mirtskhulava, G. 2012. Ancient Kura 2010–2011: The first two seasons of joint field work in the Southern Caucasus. Archäologische Mitteilungen aus Iran und Turan 44:1190.Google Scholar
Makharadze, Z. 1994. Tsikhiagoris Mtkvararaksuli Namosakhlari. Tbilisi: Metsniereba. In Georgian.Google Scholar
Makharadze, Z. 2008. The settlement of Tsikhiagora and the Early Barrow at Kavtiskhevi. In: Sagona, A, Abramishvili, M, editors. Archaeology in Southern Caucasus: perspectives from Georgia (ANES Supplement 19). Leuven: Peeters Publishers. p. 63104.Google Scholar
Makharadze, Z. 2014. Ananauri no. 3 big kurgan. Dziebani Saqartvelos Arqeologiashi 22:5468.Google Scholar
Makharadze, Z, Kalandzdze, N, Murvanidze, B. 2016. Ananauri Big Kurgan 3. Tbilisi: Georigan National Museum.Google Scholar
Makharadze, Z, Murvanidze, B. 2014. Kurgan “Tchintchrianis Gora”. Dziebani Saqartvelos Arqeologiashi 22:69–80. In Georgian with English summary.Google Scholar
Manning, SW, Smith, AT, Khatchadourian, L, Badalyan, R, Lindsay, I, Greene, A, Marshall, M. 2018. A new chronological model for the Bronze and Iron Age South Caucasus: radiocarbon results from Project ArAGATS, Armenia. Antiquity 92(366):15301551.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mindiashvili, G. 2012. Early kurgans of the South Caucasus (social–economical aspect). Studies in Caucasian Archaeology 1:7189.Google Scholar
Mindiashvili, G. 2018. Gudabertqa-Eine Siedlung der Kura-Araxes Kultur. In: Giemsch, L, Hansen, S, editors. Gold & Wein Georgiens älteste Schätze (Archaeologisches Museum Frankfur). Mainz am Rhein: Nunnerich-Asmus Verlag und Media GmbH. p. 158–65.Google Scholar
Mirtskhulava, G. 2008. The Badaani settlement. In: Sagona, A, Abramishvili, M, editors. Archaeology in Southern Caucasus: Perspectives from Georgia (ANES Supplement 19). Leuven: Peeters Publishers. p. 105126.Google Scholar
Munchaev, RM. 1975. Kavkaz na zare bronzovogo veka. Neolit, Eneolit, rannaja Bronza (The Caucasus at the dawn of the Bronze Age. Neolithic, Eneolithic and Early Bronze Age). Moscow: Nauka.Google Scholar
Orjonikidze, A. 1995. Raboti Djavakhetskoi Ekspeditsii na Pamiatnikakh Bronzovogo Veka (Works of the Javakheti Expedition on Bronze Age sites). Polevije Arkheologicheskie Issledovanija v 1987 Godu. In Russian). p. 80–82.Google Scholar
Orjonikidze, A. 2004. Mtkvar-araqsis kulturis ganvitarebis dziritadi saphekhurebi agmosavlet saqartveloshi (Main development phases of the Kura-Araxes culture in eastern Georgia). Tbilisi: Academy of Science of Georgia, Center of Archaeological Studies. In Georgian.Google Scholar
Orjonikidze, A. 2014. Some points of relationship between Kura-Araxes and Bedeni cultures in the Southern Caucasus. In: Narimanishvili, G, Kvachadze, M, Puturidze, M, Shanshashvili, N, editors. Problems of early metal archaeology of Caucasus and Anatolia (Proceedings of the International Conference 19–23 November 2014). Tbilisi: Shota Rustaveli National Science Foundation and Georgian National Museum. In Russian. p. 205215.Google Scholar
Orjonikidze, A. 2015. The Earlier Period Kurgans in Georgia. Tbilisi: Georgian National Museum and Otar Lordkipanidze Center of Archaeology. In Georgian with English summary.Google Scholar
Orjonikidze, A, Jibladze, L. 2010a. The relationships of Early Bronze Age cultures in South Georgia in the light of evidence from Orchosani settlement. In: Gamkrelidze, G, editor. Rescue archaeology in Georgia: the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan and South Caucasian Pipelines. Tbilisi: Georgian National Museum. p. 137141.Google Scholar
Orjonikidze, A, Jibladze, L. 2010b. Once again about the Orchosani site. Dziebani Saqartvelos Arqeologiashi 9:105114. In Georgian with English summary.Google Scholar
Orthmann, W. 2017. Burial mounds of the Martqopi and Bedeni cultures in Eastern Georgia. In: Rova, E, Tonussi, M, editors. At the northern frontier of Near Eastern Archaeology. recent research on Caucasia and Anatolia in the Bronze Age (Publications of the Georgian-Italian Shida Kartli Archaeological Project, 2; Subartu XXXVIII). Turnhout: Brepols. p. 189202.Google Scholar
Palumbi, G. 2008. The Red and the Black: social and cultural interaction between the Upper Euphrates and Southern Caucasus Communities in the fourth and third millennium BC (Studi di Preistoria Orientale [SPO] 2). Rome: Dipartimento di Scienze Storiche Archeologiche e Antropologiche dell’Antichità, Sapienza Università di Roma.Google Scholar
Palumbi, G. 2016. The Early Bronze Age of the Southern Caucasus. Oxford Handbooks Online. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Palumbi, G, Chataigner, C. 2014. The Kura-Araxes culture from the Caucasus to Iran, Anatolia and the Levant: between unity and diversity. A synthesis. Paléorient (The Kura-Araxes culture from the Caucasus to Iran, Anatolia and the Levant between unity and diversity) 40(2):247260.Google Scholar
Passerini, A, Regev, L, Rova, E, Boaretto, E. 2016. New radiocarbon dates for the Kura-Araxes occupation at Aradetis Orgora, Georgia. Radiocarbon 58(3):649677.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Passerini, A, Rova, E, Boaretto, E. 2018a. Revising the Absolute Chronology of the 4th and 3rd Millennia BCE in the Southern Caucasus. In: Müller, V, Luciani, M, Ritter, M, Guidetti, M, Horejs, B, Schwall, C, editors. Proceedings of the 10th International Congress on the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East, volume 1. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz. p. 161172.Google Scholar
Passerini, A, Rova, E, Boaretto, E. 2018b. Chronology (and chronologies) of the Kura-Araxes culture in the southern Caucasus: an integrative approach through Bayesian Analysis. Origini (Prehistory and Protohistory of Ancient Civilizations) 41:81138.Google Scholar
Pkhakadze, G. 2002. Adrebrinjaos Khanis Ziarchurchlis Danishnulebisa da Gavrtselebis Shesaxeb (On the Distribution and Function of Early Bronze Age Double Vessels). Dziebani Saqartvelos Arqeologiashi 9:2933. In Georgian with English summary.Google Scholar
Pkhakadze, G, Baramidze, M. 2008. The settlement at Pichori and Colchian Bronze Age chronology. In: Sagona, A, Abramishvili, M, editors. Archaeology in Southern Caucasus: Perspectives from Georgia (ANES Supplement 19). Louvain: Peeters Publishers. p. 249–74.Google Scholar
Ramishvili, A. 2013. Natsargora. Adrebrinjaos khanis namosakhlari da samarovani. In: Khashuri arkeologiuri ekspeditsiis shomebi IV. Tbilisi: Sakartvelos Erovnuli Muzeumi Ot. Lordkipanidze Arkeologiis Tsentri. In Georgian.Google Scholar
Reimer, P, Austin, W, Bard, E, Bayliss, A, Blackwell, P, Bronk Ramsey, C, Butzin, M, Cheng, H, Edwards, R, Friedrich, M, Grootes, P, Guilderson, T, Hajdas, I, Heaton, T, Hogg, A, Hughen, K, Kromer, B, Manning, S, Muscheler, R, Palmer, J, Pearson, C, van der Plicht, J, Reimer, R, Richards, D, Scott, E, Southon, J, Turney, C, Wacker, L, Adolphi, F, Büntgen, U, Capano, M, Fahrni, S, Fogtmann-Schulz, A, Friedrich, R, Köhler, P, Kudsk, S, Miyake, F, Olsen, J, Reinig, F, Sakamoto, M, Sookdeo, A, Talamo, S. 2020. The IntCal20 Northern Hemisphere radiocarbon age calibration curve (0–55 cal kBP). Radiocarbon 62(4):725757. doi: 10.1017/RDC.2020.41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rothman, M. 2015. Early Bronze Age migrants and ethnicity in the Middle Eastern mountain zone. PNAS 112(30):91909195.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rova, E. 2014. The Kura-Araxes culture in the Shida Kartli region of Georgia: an overview. Paléorient (The Kura-Araxes culture from the Caucasus to Iran, Anatolia and the Levant Between unity and diversity) 40(2):4769.Google Scholar
Rova, E, Makharadze, Z, Puturidze, M. 2017. Khashuri Natsargora: new research on the Kura-Araxes and Bedeni cultures in Central Georgia. In: Rova, E, Tonussi, M, editors. At the Northern Frontier of Near Eastern Archaeology. Recent Research on Caucasia and Anatolia in the Bronze Age (Publications of the Georgian-Italian Shida Kartli Archaeological Project, 2; Subartu XXXVIII). Turnhout: Brepols. p. 153171.Google Scholar
Rova, E, Puturidze, M, Makharadze, Z. 2010. The Georgian-Italian Shida Kartli Archaeological Project: a report on the first two field seasons 2009 and 2010. Rivista di Archeologia 34 (2011):530.Google Scholar
Sagona, A. 1998. Social identity and religious ritual in the Kura-Araxes cultural complex: some observations from Sos Höyük. Mediterranean Archaeology 11:1325.Google Scholar
Sagona, A. 2000. Sos Höyük and the Erzurum region in Late Prehistory: a provisional chronology for Northeast Anatolia. In: Marro, C, Hauptmann, H. Chronologies des Pays du Caucase et de l’Euphrates aux IVe–IIIe Millenaires. Actes du Colloque d’Istanbul, 16–19 Décembre 1998 (Varia Anatolica XI). Paris: Institut Français d’Etudes Anatoliennes d’Istanbul De Boccard. p. 329373.Google Scholar
Sagona, A. 2014. Rethinking the Kura-Araxes genesis. Paléorient (The Kura-Araxes culture from the Caucasus to Iran, Anatolia and the Levant Between unity and diversity) 40(2):2346.Google Scholar
Sagona, A. 2018 The Archaeology of the Caucasus: From Earliest Settlements to the Iron Age (Cambridge World Archaeology series). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Sagona, A, Erkmen, M, Sagona, C, Howells, S. 1997. Excavations at Sos Höyük 1996: Third Preliminary Report. Anatolica 23:181223.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sagona, A, Pemberton, E, McPhee, I. 1993. Excavations at Büyüktepe Höyük, 1992: Third Preliminary Report. Anatolian Studies 43:6983.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sagona, C, Shapardon, B. 2020. Observations concerning pottery trays in the Caucasus during the Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Ages. In: Balossi Restelli, F, Cardarelli, A, Maria Di Nocera, G, Manzanilla, L, Mori, L, Palumbi, G, Pittman, H. Pathways through Arslantepe. Essays in Honour of Marcella Frangipane. Rome: Università di Roma La Sapienza and Sette Città, Viterbo. p. 279–90.Google Scholar
Shatberashvili, Z, Shatberashvili, V, Nikolaishvili, V. 2010. Bronze Age burials at Tqemlara. In: Gamkrelidze, G, editor. Rescue archaeology in Georgia: the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan and South Caucasian Pipelines. Tbilisi: Georgian National Museum. p. 194206.Google Scholar
Shatberashvili, Z, Shatberashvili, V. 2014. The kurgans of Bedeni culture excavated at Bedeni Plateau by Marabda—Akhalqalaqi. Dziebani Saqartvelos Arqeologiashi 22:86101.Google Scholar
Simonyan, H, Manaseryan, N. 2013. Royal tombs with horse sacrifices in Nerkin Naver, Armenia (Middle Bronze Age). In: De Gupere, B, Linseele, V, Hamilton-Dyer, S, editors. Archaeozoology of the Near East X: Proceedings of the Tenth International Symposium on the Archaeozoology of South-Western Asia and Adjacent Areas (ANES Supplement 44). Leuven. p. 173–208.Google Scholar
Stöllner, T. 2016. The beginnings of social inequality: consumer and producer perspectives from Transcaucasia in the 4th and the 3rd millennia BC. In: Bartelheim, M, Horejs, B, Krauss, R, editors. Von Baden bis Troia. Ressourcennutzung, Metallurgie und Wissenstransfer. Eine Jubiläumsschrift Für Ernst Pernicka. Oriental and European Archaeology 3. Rahden/Westf.: Leidorf. p. 209234.Google Scholar
Tatarashvili, N, Aghapishvili, T, Shatberashvili, V, Bakhtadze, N, Tushabramishvili, N. 2006. Cultural Heritage Management Audit. Pipeline Monitoring and Dialogue Initiative (PMDI) Program, Phase II. Tbilisi.Google Scholar