Archaeologists in Azerbaijan have unearthed the 3,800-year-old tomb of a towering warrior who was buried with a four-pronged spearhead in his hand.
The tomb was found on the remote and windswept plains of Ceyranchol, just a few miles from Azerbaijan’s western borders with both Georgia and Armenia. The burial mound — known locally as a kurgan — is on the Keshikchidagh historical and cultural reserve, an area known for its natural and human-made caves, castles and early Christian monasteries.
An analysis of the man’s skeletal remains indicate that he stood around 6 feet, 7 inches (2 meters) tall when he was alive in about 1800 B.C., during the Middle Bronze Age.
According to a translated statement from government authorities, the ancient tomb and remains were discovered inside a newfound kurgan that was more than 90 feet (28 m) across and more than 6.6 feet (2 m) high.
The burial chamber itself was divided by walls into three parts. One contained the body and equipment, including weapons; another held only pottery vessels; and a third part was empty. The division within the tomb may have reflected a belief in an “other world” after death, the researchers said in the statement.
Related: Stunning reconstruction reveals warrior and his weapons from 4,000-year-old burial in Siberia
Warrior’s tomb
The warrior’s remains were found in a “semiflexed” position, and he was holding a bronze spearhead.
Bronze adornments were also found around one of the man’s ankles. Other grave goods included glass beads, obsidian tools, and “twelve inlaid and richly decorated earthenware jugs,” the statement said. Some of the jugs contained the remains of animal bones that had apparently been cooked for the warrior to eat after death — “food for the afterlife,” according to the statement.
The archaeologists said the style of the tomb indicates that the man had been a warrior, and perhaps a military leader. In particular, the bronze spearhead he was holding was in a distinctive “four-pronged” style and a rare find in the region, the statement said.
Azerbaijan boasts hundreds of kurgans dating to the Bronze Age (roughly from 3300 to 1200 B.C. in this region) and Iron Age (from about 1200 to about 600 B.C.) The Keshikchidagh reserve is an archaeological hotspot, and for the past five years more than 2,000 university academics, volunteers and government archaeologists have excavated parts of it, including Shamil Najafov, an archaeologist at the Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology of the Azerbaijan Academy of Sciences, who led the latest excavation.