Koi-Krilgan-kala
Koy-Krilgan-kala is one of the few largest, fully excavated ancient sites of Karakalpakstan. The Fortress differs from the other monuments by its original planning. Initially, it was a round two-storied building reinforced by a double ring wall with towers and battlements. Moreover, the Koy-Krilgan-kala Fortress was surrounded by a moat 15 metres wide and 3 metres deep.
Scientists believe that originally Koy-Krilgankala was conceived as a sacred building used for astronomical observations. It may have been dedicated to the star Fomalhaut.
Early Koy-Krilgan-kala (IV–III centuries B.C.) was characterized by its monumentality, especially that of the central building, sophisticated defensive system and the presence of large storerooms. Food supplies were kept in grain pits or hums and sometimes sealed. Unfortunately, the rooms were not preserved through the ages.
However, archaeological findings of early Koy-Krilgan-kala contain art pottery, including ones with mythological scenes, censers, stepped altars and terracotta figurines, some of which depicted deities of Khorezm pantheon. During the long periods of the monument’s desolation people were still able to preserve cultural traditions. The ancient site was a place for the storage of ossuaries.
New external ring constructions (I century B.C. – IV century A.D.) contained residential compounds that were isolated from each other, separate kitchens and pantries, and rooms for religious ceremonies with various sufs and hearths.
Terracotta and alabaster statues, ornaments of ceramic jars, sculptured ceramic urns and ossuaries, fragments of wall paintings as well as stone seals discovered during the excavations represent the unique art of Ancient Khorezm. The findings also include some ancient written documents of Central Asia.
Eres-kala is located 12 kilometres southwest of Turtkul city. Once these city ruins were a magnificent complex consisting of a settlement and palaces. In ancient times the main irrigation canal of the Kaltaminar system went from Ereskala through the Angka-kala Fortress and Bazarkala Settlement. The city itself was constructed in the lower reaches of the Kaltaminer canal. It had anirregular elliptical shape with an area of 360 x 220 metres. There was a central mansion. Presumably it was a citadel with a governor’s house.
Ceramic ware found on the territory of the monument date it back to the III–V centuries A.D. Based on a number of ceramic findings from the Kangyuy culture (IV century B.C. – beginning of the I century A.D.) scientists presumed that the settlement was founded in the antiquity period and existed until the V–VI centuries A.D.
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |