Arkaim

Dublin Core

Title

Arkaim

Description

Arkaim is an archaeological site of an ancient fortified settlement, situated in the steppe of the Southern Ural, 8.2 km (5.10 mi) north-to-northwest of the village of Amursky and 2.3 km (1.43 mi) south-to-southeast of the village of Alexandrovsky in the Chelyabinsk Oblast of Russia, just north of the border with Kazakhstan. It was discovered in 1987 by a team of archaeologists led by Gennady Zdanovich, preventing the planned flooding of the area for the creation of a reservoir. Arkaim is attributed to the early Proto-Indo-Iranian of the Sintashta culture, which some scholars believe represents the proto-Indo-Iranians before their split into different groups and migration to Central Asia and from there to Persia and India and other parts of Eurasia. The discovery of Arkaim and the Land of Towns has fueled the growth of schools of thought among Rodnovers, Rerikhians, Zoroastrians and other movements which regard the archaeological site as the second homeland of the Aryans, who originally dwelt in Arctic regions[citation needed] and migrated southwards when the weather there became glacial, then spreading from central Eurasia to the east, south and west, founding other civilisations. According to them, all Vedic knowledge originated in the southern Urals.

Source

isfiveoneonezero,worldheritagelayer

Contributor

mc387

Type

Site

Identifier

365

Date Submitted

21/05/2021

Extent

cm x cm x cm

Spatial Coverage

current,52.649427,59.572067;

Europeana

Europeana Data Provider

Arkaim

Europeana Type

TEXT

Site Item Type Metadata

Institutional nature

Building

Prim Media

567

Status

public

Condition

1

Contact

mc387@st-andrews.ac.uk

Citation

“Arkaim,” STAGE, accessed December 13, 2025, https://stage.openvirtualworlds.org/omeka/items/show/568.

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