Salvete Omnes,
so we have this brand new year, whatever... but life and Old Man Time are relentless in their going, so many thousand years ago Heraclitus of Ephesus cleverly stated - panta rhei... and some other sentences worth pondering.
My new drawing tablet has not arrived before the end of the last year, so I am looking forward to get it this year, fingers crossed.
Ad rem, the recommendation -
yesterday I finished reading a 'historical fantasy' novel by a British writer Dan Davis and it was a very enjoyable 'ride' into the Eurasian steppe some 5000 years ago, especially since his fictional story is so deeply immersed into the Yamnaya and other prehistoric cultures of our Eastern Europe, but also is based on the ancient Greek and other Indo-European mythology, including mu most favorite Greek mythology hero - Heracles.
The story titled Godborn is already the second novel in his Gods of Bronze series, and I am looking forward to read the next installment sometime this year (so many books and articles to read, especially on academia,edu and archive.org and other research and internet libraries).
And the same author Dan Davies has a channel on YT, and there you can find many interesting presentations , and one of them is this presentation on the Maykop culture in the Kuban steppe (3,700-3000 BC) and North Caucasus reaching south to the Kura River (and Kura-Araxes culture) and Transcaucasia; so the Maykop existed along the Yamnaya culture in the north, including also a separate cultural 'fusion' known in Russian archaeology as Novotitorovskaya culture (very interesting wagons that have been discovered all over the area and more about them in the future). Meantime in the south, in today's Iraq there was Uruk and the flowering of the Summerian culture (rather known via school education and multiple museum collections).
Enjoy Dan's presentation and his novels (but be forewarned that his book covers for the Gods of Bronze are pure fantasy) - note that is basically based on David Anthony's book The Horse, the Wheel et al. - which is great and it shows that our author is doing his research and is versed in the subject quite deeply. Congrats! (obviously also Mallory and others).
Nota bene from the Maykop kurgan (of the Mykop culture) comes probably the oldest image of the horse of the post-glacial period in human history.
from one of the most influential Soviet and Russian archaeologists Svetlana Alexandrovna Pletnieva's book on the cultural treasures from the Hermitage museum comes this photo of the metal(silver) vessel with a horse- above, and a drawing showing the horse with other animals (you could watch Dan's video presentation for details or read dr Anthony's chapter on the Maykop chief/king burial) from the vessel itself.
and one of the bulls from the burial.
Valete
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