History Museum in Bulgaria’s Pleven Shows Ivanski Gold Treasure – Full Set of Ancient Thracian Horse Rein Decorations
The Regional Museum of History in the northern Bulgarian city of Pleven is showing to its visitors the Ivanski Gold Treasure – a highly sophisticated golden Ancient Thracian horse rein decoration.
The treasure in question was found in an Ancient Thracian burial mound near the town of Ivanski, Shumen District, in Northeast Bulgaria.
It dates back to the 4th century BC, and belonged to an Ancient Thracian dynast (aristocrat) from the Krobyzoi tribe which was part of the tribal union of the Getae (or Gets).
The remains of the Thracian aristocrat’s horse with the sophisticated gold rein decorations were found by the archaeologists in the antechamber of one of the two tombs discovered inside a burial mound near Bulgaria’s Ivanski.
The 42 gold pieces are made of 23-carrat gold, and were the work of a local jeweler. The forehead decoration features the image of a ram with twisted horns, while most of the rest of the items feature the images of a winged lion.
The Ivanski Gold Treasure is among the few full sets of ancient horse rein ammunition (decoration) found in Bulgaria.
The sophisticated Ancient Thracian gold jewelry will be on display in the Pleven Regional Museum of History between November 21, 2015, and January 31, 2016.
The treasure itself has been provided for the exhibition by the Shumen Regional Museum of History whose permanent collection it is part of.
More about the Ivanski Gold Treasure and the Ivanski Burial Mound read in the Background Infonotes below.
Also check out some of our other recent stories about Bulgaria’s Ancient Thracian treasure:
Gold Rush Reminding of Ancient Thracian Treasures Draws Hundreds to Bulgaria’s Rivers – AFP
The Ivanski Gold Treasure is an Ancient Thracian treasure discovered in a burial mound (tumulus) near the town of Ivanski, Shumen District, in Northeast Bulgaria. It consists of a total of 42 elaborate golden decorations for the rein of a horse that belonged to an Ancient Thracian dynast (aristocrat).
During the period of Ancient Thrace, the territory of today’s Shumen District was inhabited by the Krobyzoi tribe which was part of the tribal union of the Getae (or Gets).
More than 600 Thracian burial mounds (tumuli) have been detected in the region; the largest concentration of those includes about 150 burial mounds situated along the valley of the Kamchiya River, near the towns of Smyadovo, Ivanski, and Yankovo.
The archaeological excavations of an Ancient Thracian burial mound near the town of Ivanvski revealed a total of two tombs of Thracian aristocrats dating back to the 4th century BC.
The first tomb was found well preserved. It was built of large limestone blocks, and consists of two rooms – an antechamber and a burial chamber. In the antechamber the archaeologists found the remains of the Thracian aristocrat’s horse, with the sophisticated gold rein decorations.
The 42 gold pieces are made of 23-carrat gold, and were the work of a local jeweler. The forehead decoration features the image of a ram with twisted horns, while most of the rest of the items feature the images of a winged lion.
The Ivanski Gold Treasure is among the few full sets of ancient horse rein ammunition (decoration) found in Bulgaria.
Together with the golden treasure inside the antechamber of the first Ivanski tomb, the archaeologists found 40 bronze arrow tips, and numerous fragments from amphorae which originated on the Greek islands of Thasos and Rhodes.
In the tomb’s burial chamber, the archaeologists discovered a stone bed with decoration where the urn containing the Thracian aristocrat’s ashes was placed together with other afterlife gifts. The urn itself was not found; the stone bed was probably also used for sacrifices and other religious rituals.
The second tomb in the burial mound near Bulgaria’s Ivanski was found to have been built later, in the last quarter of the 4th century BC. It was built of large rectangular blocks (quadrae). The tomb was broken into back in the Antiquity, and many of the artifacts that it supposedly contained were taken away.
The Ancient Thracian burial mound near Ivanski with its two tombs are open for visitors by appointment with the Shumen Regional Museum of History.