A glimpse from the ancient world: What a gold necklace from Tillya-tepe reveals about opium in Afghanistan
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Published:2020-10
Issue:2
Volume:3
Page:135-173
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ISSN:2399-357X
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Container-title:Afghanistan
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Afghanistan
Abstract
Among the six excavated burials at Tillya-tepe, in northern Afghanistan, was one occupied by an elite woman wearing a substantial necklace consisting of large gold beads shaped as seed-heads. The scale and fine workmanship of this necklace suggest that it was one of her most important possessions. It can be demonstrated that these large seed-heads are representations of poppy capsules, whose significance lies in the fact that they are the source of the potent drug opium. This necklace is the most outstanding object within a group of items decorated with poppy imagery, all of which were discovered in female burials. The opium poppy has long been a culturally important plant, and the implication of this identification is investigated in several contexts. Firstly, the proliferation of poppy imagery in the female burials at Tillya-tepe is examined, and then there is a discussion of material evidence for opium among relevant peoples along the Eurasian steppes. The particular cultural importance of opium is reviewed, leading finally to a proposal for the societal role of these women.
Publisher
Edinburgh University Press
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Religious studies,Anthropology,Visual Arts and Performing Arts,History,Archeology,Classics
Cited by
1 articles.
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