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Document Details :

Title: Excavations at Samtavro, 2008-2009
Subtitle: An Interim Report
Author(s): SAGONA, Antonio , NIKOLAISHVILI, Vakhtang , SAGONA, Claudia , OGLEBY, Clifford , PILBROW, Varsha , BRIGGS, Christopher , GIUNASHVILI, Gela , MANJEGALADZE, Giorgi
Journal: Ancient Near Eastern Studies
Volume: 47    Date: 2010   
Pages: 1-136
DOI: 10.2143/ANES.47.0.2051621

Abstract :
The vast necropolis at Samtavro, near Tbilisi, Georgia, is accorded primacy in the archaeology of the southern Caucasus for several reasons. Covering area approximately 20 hectares it is the largest burial ground in the Caucasus. Its longevity of use is also remarkable. First utilised as a cemetery in the third millennium BC, it peaked during the Late Bronze and Iron Ages, and again in the late Roman and late Antique periods. It was also intensely used, shown by the proximity of the burials, often packed closely together, and, in some cases, stratified. Finally, Samtavro was the main burial ground at Mtskheta during the Iberian Kingdom and witnessed the implantation of Christianity in the fourth century AD. Curiously, though, the burial traditions from the fourth and fifth centuries are not those usually associated with Christian burial practice elsewhere. This paper reports on the results of the first two years of renewed excavations carried out by the Georgian National Museum and The University of Melbourne.

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