Abashevo culture
Years: 2500BCE - 1900BCE
Abashevo culture is a later Bronze Age (ca.
2500-1900 BCE) archaeological culture found in the valleys of the Volga and Kama River north of the Samara bend and into the southern Ural Mountains.
It receives its name from a village of Abashevo in Chuvashia.
Artifacts are kurgans and remnants of settlements.
The Abashevo was the easternmost of the Russian forest zone cultures that descended from Corded Ware ceramic traditions.
The Abashevo culture played a significant role in the origin of Sintashta.
The Abashevo culture does not pertain to the Andronovo culture and genetically belongs to the circle of Central European cultures of the Fatyanovo culture type corded ware ceramics.The economy is mixed agriculture.
Cattle, sheep, goat, as well as other domestic animals are kept.
Horses are evidently used, inferred by cheek pieces typical of neighboring steppe cultures ( as well to those of (earliest) Mycenae ).
The population of Sintashta derived their stock-breeding from Abashevo, although the role of the pig shrinks sharply.It follows the Yamna culture and Balanovo culture in its inhumation practices in tumuli.
Flat graves were also a component of the Abashevo culture burial rite, as in the earlier Fatyanovo culture.
Grave offerings are scant, little more than a pot or two.
Some graves show evidence of a birch bark floor and a timber construction forming walls and roof.
There is evidence of copper-smelting, and the culture would seem connected to copper mining activities in the southern Urals.
The Abashevo culture was an important center of metallurgy and stimulated the formation of Sintashta metallurgy.
