Shengavit Of Kura Araxes Culture: One Of Armenia’s Historical Sites Inhabited Since At Least 3200 BC
A. Sutherland - AncientPages.com - One of the most prominent historical sites of Kura Araxes (Uraxes) culture, dating from 3400 BC to 2000 BC, is the Shengavit settlement, located just beyond the suburbs of the city of Yerevan, Armenia.
The Kura-Araxes culture (3400-2000 BCE). Although the Kura-Araxes people were less aggressive and more sedentary, they also underwent a significant expansion, first west to Anatolia, south to the Fertile Crescent, and east toward the Iranian plateau to Pakistan, where they would have influenced the Indus Valley Civilisation.
The area of modern-day Shengavit has been inhabited since at least 3200 BC, probably, late Neolithic 3500-3000 BC). The site was excavated and relatively well studied by archaeologists who revealed findings attributed to many cultures that existed during the very long time from 4,000 to 2,000 BC.
People had developed agriculture, ranching, cattle breeding industry, reprocessed agricultural produce, and possessed equipment for corn milling. The city had unique food storage and depository of wheat, housing 4 tons of crops.
The excavations at the ancient Shengavit revealed a large set of tools and bronze artifacts, which confirm that Shengavit was a town with prospering agriculture and well-developed craft, including spinning looms, bone spindle whorls, looms, seals, marble, and onyx scepters.
People also worked as craftsmen creating pottery and skilled metalworkers. It is believed that copper smelting may have taken place in ancient Shengavit.
The settlement's highly developed architecture included defensive, economic, administrative, residential, and spiritual buildings.
One example is a rectangular semi-subterranean temple-like building, a temple with a low altar with a hole that may have held a wooden figurine and terracotta hearths, and a place for keeping the sacred fire during rituals.
Square M5 room with ritual emplacement and symbols buried near it. Source
The ruins of the city area, located on an irregular-oval platform built on a slope, are approximately 6 ha and are still surrounded by a wall with cyclopean towers constructed of vast and uncut stones from basalt without mortar. Under the northern part of the wall is an underground passage leading directly to the river Hrazdan and on the south side, there are traces of a filled moat.
When Shengavit was a flourishing center, it had the best defensive system.
People lived in round (sometimes rectangular) dwellings about 6 to meters in diameter and built at a distance of 7.3 meters from each other. Still, they were connected with the last wall of the adjacent buildings.
Their walls had a stone base, on which raw brickwork increased. A round, decorated clay fireplace - usually located in the house's center–had an essential economic and ritual role.
The walls of both round dwellings and rectangular buildings from inside and outside were plastered with clay. The round homes - covered with rubbles - had a corridor entrance opened from the east side.
Shengavit's ancient burial places were found outside the walls of the city. Each unearthed tomb had a place for 10-12 people, burial property, tools, goods, black clay pots, flint and obsidian, copper armlets, earrings, and beads.
According to one theory, Shengavit's burial area was once inside the walled city. Later, for unknown reasons, the city was confined to a smaller place within the walls, and the abandoned area became a burial place dated 3,000 BC.
Written by – A. Sutherland AncientPages.com Staff Writer
Updated on October 29, 2022
Copyright © AncientPages.com All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in whole or part without the express written permission of AncientPages.com
Expand for referencesMore From Ancient Pages
-
Researchers Sequenced 137 Human Genomes From The Middle East
Archaeology | Aug 6, 2021 -
Earliest Period Of Warfare In Europe Occurred Over 1,000 Years Earlier Than We Thought
Archaeology | Nov 3, 2023 -
Clan MacGregor: Fearless, Lawless And Persecuted Clan Of The Highlands
Featured Stories | Jul 9, 2018 -
Sumerian King List – Ancient Record Of Kingship That Has Long Been Of Great Interest
Artifacts | Jan 22, 2016 -
Prince John’s Plot Against King Richard The Lionheart
Featured Stories | Nov 20, 2018 -
Unknown Saxon Village And Bronze Age Artifacts Found Near Ely, Cambridgeshire
Archaeology | Sep 18, 2023 -
Ganesha: Elephant-Headed God Of Knowledge, Learning, Literature And Scribe Of The Mahabharata
Featured Stories | Aug 17, 2016 -
Forbidden Underwater Discovery Could Re-Write Ancient History But The Investigation Was Stopped
Ancient Mysteries | Aug 27, 2019 -
Draupnir: God Odin’s Magical Ring That Could Multiply Itself
Featured Stories | Jul 26, 2017 -
Beautiful Ancient Irish Legend Of The Blessing Of The Bees – Ancient Tradition Revived In Ireland Again
Ancient Traditions And Customs | Oct 11, 2017 -
On This Day In History: Amelia Earhart, Most Famous Female Pilot – Disappeared Over The Pacific Ocean – On July 2, 1937
News | Jul 2, 2016 -
Itiner-e: Digital Map That Increases Roman Empire Road Network By 100,000 Kilometers
Archaeology | Nov 6, 2025 -
Evidence Of 3,600-Year-Old Settlement Unexpectedly Uncovered On Arabian Peninsula
Archaeology | Feb 2, 2022 -
Fate Of Eminent Pharaoh Hatshepsut’s Statues After She Passed Away – New Study
Archaeology | Jun 24, 2025 -
Lhasa’s Potala Palace: Greatest Building In Tibet With History Of 1300 Years
Civilizations | Nov 23, 2018 -
Patasola: Hideous One-Legged Female Vampire Who Kills Driven By Hatred In Colombian Folklore
Featured Stories | Jul 26, 2019 -
Obatala ‘King Of The White Cloth’ And Creation Story Of Yoruba People
African Mythology | Jan 9, 2021 -
Mysterious Ancient Mushrooms In Myths And Legends: Sacred, Feared And Worshiped Among Ancient Civilizations
Featured Stories | Apr 26, 2023 -
Daily Life Of Ancient Maya
Ancient History Facts | Oct 12, 2020 -
Tomb Of A 1,000-Year-Old Sican Surgeon Wearing A Golden Mask Discovered In Peru
Archaeology | Mar 30, 2022






