Bulgaria to Show Thracian Gold Treasure from Zlatinitsa – Malomirovo in ‘Insignia of Power’ Exhibition in Lazienki Museum in Poland

Bulgaria to Show Thracian Gold Treasure from Zlatinitsa – Malomirovo in ‘Insignia of Power’ Exhibition in Lazienki Museum in Poland

The 4th century BC golden laurel wreath from the Zlatinitsa – Malomirovo Treasure and the 29 gold rosettes attached to a band, which served as a crown to the Ancient Thracian ruler buried in the mound where the treasure was found. Photo: Bulgaria’s Ministry of Culture

Part of one of Bulgaria’s numerous stunning treasures from Ancient Thrace, the 4th century BC Zlatinitsa – Malomirovo Treasure, is going to be showcased in an exhibition entitled “Insignia of Power” in the Royal Lazienki Museum in Poland’s capital Warsaw.

The Zlatinitsa – Malomirovo Gold and Silver Treasure was discovered in 2005 by Bulgarian archaeologist Daniela Agre in a Thracian burial mound in Elhovo Municipality in Southeast Bulgaria.

It is considered especially notable for a number of reasons, including the fact that it came from a fully intact grave of an Ancient Thracian ruler from the Odrysian Kingdom (5th century BC – 1st century AD), the fact that the funeral inventory was especially rich, and the fact that discovering a treasure in Bulgaria during archaeological excavations is considered more of an exception than a rule since most of the most famous treasures from Ancient Thrace (and not only) have been found by accident.

The person who was buried in the Large Mound, an Ancient Thracian tumulus between Bulgaria’s Zlatinitsa and Malomirovo, may have been one of the four known sons of King Cersobleptes (Cersebleptes, Kersobleptes, Kersebleptes), son of Cotys I, King of the Ancient Thracian Odrysian Kingdom (r. 384 – 360 BC).

Learn more about the Ancient Thracian Zlatinitsa – Malomirovo Gold and Silver Treasure in the Background Infonotes below!

The Bulgarian exhibition in the Royal Lazienki Museum in Poland’s capital Warsaw, which is to be opened on May 1, 2018, is organized by the National Museum of History in Sofia (which is the owner of the Zlatinitsa – Malomirovo Treasure), Bulgaria’s Culture Ministry, and the Bulgarian Cultural Institute in Warsaw.

The exhibition in Warsaw is entitled “Insignia of Power. Thracian Gold from the Collections of the National History Museum in Sofia”, and is part of the cultural program of the Bulgarian Presidency of the European Union, which spans the first half of 2018, and is also dedicated to the European Year of Cultural Heritage.

“Preliminary interest [in the exhibition] is extremely big – an Ancient Thracian gold [treasure] from Bulgaria hasn’t been showcased in Poland since 1976,” Bulgaria’s National Museum of History has said.

The Thracian “Insignia of Power” Exhibition in the Royal Lazienki Museum in Poland’s capital Warsaw is going to feature only three of the artifacts from the Zlatinitsa – Malomirovo Treasure but those are three of the most impressive ones.

Namely, the gold laurel wreath of the Ancient Thracian ruler (or a ruler’s young heir) featuring a depiction of ancient victory goddess Nike, a massive gold seal ring found on the little finger of the Thracian ruler’s left hand, and a chain of 29 gold rosettes which were attached to a leather band placed on his head in the form of a crown.

The ring depicts scene from Ancient Thracian mythology which is known from other artifacts as well, namely, how the Great Mother Goddess offers a phiale (bowl) to the Horseman – King (also known as the Thracian Horseman) in order to make him part of the world of gods.

“The ruler’s insignia – a golden wreath, crown, and seal ring – from the 4th century BC mound near Zlatinitsa are among the most precious Thracian finds from Bulgaria’s territory, which have changed the scientific perceptions of the Antiquity, and the ancient techniques in the jewelry art,” the National Museum of History in Sofia says.

The Museum notes that its partnership with the Royal Lazienki Museum in Poland’s capital has been established through the Bulgarian Cultural Institute in Warsaw.

The Ancient Thracian Insignia of Power exhibition in Warsaw will also be part of a series of events dedicated to the 45th anniversary since the founding of the National Museum of History in Sofia.

In addition of the exhibition in Poland, three more international exhibitions of Bulgaria’s National Museum of History will be opened abroad – in Slovakia’s capital Bratislava, in the Russia’s capital Moscow, and in the Louvre Museum in France’s capital Paris.

The National Museum of History in Sofia also notes the history of Poland’s Royal Lazienki Museum

The Lazienki Park (“baths park”) was originally designed in the 17th century for nobleman Stanislaw Herakliusz Lubomirski, “one of the most important politicians, writers, and philosophers of his time”.

In 1764, the place was bought and transformed by Polish King Stanislaw August. A previously baroque pavilion on a small island was turned into a neoclassical palace, with the help of architects from Italy and Dresden. The Lazienki Park including the so called Palace on the Isle has been a public park and a tourist spot since 1918.

Bulgaria’s exhibition “Insignia of Power. Thracian Gold from the Collections of the National History Museum in Sofia” can be seen in the Royal Lazienki Museum in Poland’s capital Warsaw from May 1 until May 31, 2018.

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Relevant Books on Amazon.com:

A Companion to Ancient Thrace (Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World)

Thrace: The History of the Ancient World’s Link Between East and West

Orpheus and Greek Religion (Mythos Books)

Dionysus in Thrace: Ancient Entheogenic Themes in the Mythology and Archeology of Northern Greece, Bulgaria and Turkey

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Background Infonotes:

The Treasure of Zlatinitsa – Malomirovo is a rich Ancient Thracian gold and silver treasure from the 4th century BC, the time of the Ancient Thracian Odrysian Kingdom.

The Zlatinitsa – Malomirovo Treasure was discovered in 2005 by archaeologist Daniela Agre from Bulgaria’s National Institute and Museum of Archaeology during rescue excavations of Golyamata Mogila (“The Large Mound”), an Ancient Thracian burial mound between the towns of Zlatinitsa and Malomirovo, Elhovo Municipality, Yambol District, in Southwest Bulgaria.

The rescue excavations were carried out after the Large Mound had been targeted repeatedly by treasure hunters trying to loot it. The mound in question was part of a large necropolis including a number of Ancient Thracian burial mounds.

Daniela Agre’s discovery is seen as especially rare not only because the better part of Bulgaria’s numerous stunning treasures from Ancient Thrace have been discovered by accident, and finding a treasure during excavations is deemed more of an exception than a rule, but also because the discovery of an intact grave of an ancient (Thracian) ruler is also extremely rare.

The grave found the Large Mound between Zlatnitsa and Malomirovo in Southeast Bulgaria in 2005 contained a big funeral inventory ranging from gold jewelry and adornments to armaments and horse harness decorations.

The most impressive treasure finds are:

 A gold laurel wreath with an image of ancient victory goddess Nike;

29 gold rosettes which attached to a leather band placed on the deceased Thracian ruler’s head at the time of his burial;

A massive gold seal ring which the Thracian ruler wore on the little finger of his left hand featuring a Thracian mythology scene known from other artifacts as well, namely, how the Great Mother Goddess offers a phiale (bowl) to the Horseman – King (also known as the Thracian Horseman) in order to make him part of the world of gods;

A silver greave with gold plating richly decorated with images of the Ancient Thracian ruler and Thracian mythology scenes;

2 silver rhytons with gold plating shaped as deer heads – one of the rhytons is decorated with a relief showing two griffins tearing to pieces a bull, the other has relief showing two young warriors killing a boar;

4 silver phiales (bowls), a bronze jug, a bronze situla (bucket or pail), a bronze sifter, a wide dish decorated with an applique, a semi-spherical bronze vessel, a black-figure kylix (wine cup), a pelike (vessel similar to an amphora), four amphorae from the Island of Thasos in the Aegean (Mediterranean) Sea, and an alabastron (a small vessel for oils) made alabaster;

Horse harness decorations: two sets of silver horse harness appliques, 200 silver beads, and two iron reins.

The armaments found in the Ancient Thracian grave with the Zlatinitsa – Malomirovo Treasure include an iron sword of the makhaira type typical for the Thracians, 200 bronze arrows, 7 spears, an iron chain armor, and a bronze Chalcidian type helmet.

On his feet, the buried Thracian ruler had a pair of leather moccasins, the first such find from Ancient Thrace.

The grave from the Large Mound between Zlatinitsa and Malomirovo is one of the richest burials from 4th century BC Ancient Thrace to have been discovered in Bulgaria so far.

Bulgarian archaeologists especially emphasize the value of the gold laurel wreath and the silver and gold greave describing them as marvelous works of Thracian “toreutics”, i.e. artistic metalworking, especially since the decorations scenes shed more light on Thracian mythology, religion, and funeral rites.

Anthropological analysis has shown that the buried Thracian aristocrat was 18 or 19 years old when he died. The artifacts found in his grave are symbols of power and status legitimizing him as an important figure in Thracian society.

Leading hypotheses state that the grave where the Zlatinitsa – Malomirovo Treasure was associated with King Cersobleptes (Cersebleptes, Kersobleptes, Kersebleptes), son of Cotys I, King of the Ancient Thracian Odrysian Kingdom (r. 384 – 360 BC). The person who was buried in the Large Mound may have been one of the four known sons of Cersobleptes.

In the mound, the archaeologists have also found the skeletons of two horses and a dog from an extinct breed. The laying of the Thracian aristocrat’s favorite animals in his grave is a well-known Thracian custom. The dog was found to have been ritually killed with a large stone judging from hairs stuck to the stone. The animal remains were covered with three hemp mats.

In order to honor their deceased ruler, the Thracians from the respective tribe dig up two moats at the burial mound which were used as alleys for remembrance rites such as horse and dog sacrifices, and leaving food and wine.

More offerings were made on top of the grave – there was a wooden structure above the grave itself, and stones were put on top of it. At this “monument”, the Thracians would smash pottery vessels filled with food.

 

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