Sunday News

First horse riders ‘reshaped Europe’

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ARCHAEOLOG­ISTS have found the earliest direct evidence for horseback riding – an innovation that would transform history – in 5000-year-old human skeletons in central Europe.

Researcher­s analysed more than 200 Bronze Age skeletal remains in museum collection­s in Bulgaria, Poland, Romania, Hungary and the Czech Republic to look for signs of what study coauthor and University of Helsinki anthropolo­gist Martin Trautmann called ‘‘horse rider syndrome’’ – six telltale markers, including characteri­stic wear marks on the hip sockets, thigh bone and pelvis.

The researcher­s identified five likely riders who lived around 4500 to 5000 years ago and belonged to a Bronze Age people called the Yamnaya. The

study was published yesterday in the journal Science Advances.

Archaeolog­ists have previously found evidence of people consuming horse milk, and indication­s of horses controlled by harnesses and bits dating back more than 5000 years, but this does not necessaril­y indicate that the horses were ridden.

The Yamnaya culture, known for its burial mounds, originated in what is now part of Ukraine and western Russia. The horses they kept were distinct from modern horses.

The Yamnaya were significan­t because of their dramatic expansion across Eurasia in only a few generation­s, moving west to Hungary and east to Mongolia, said University of Helsinki archaeolog­ist and study coauthor Volker Heyd.

‘‘The spread of Indo-European languages is linked to their movement, and they reshaped the genetic makeup of Europe.’’

Their relationsh­ip with horses may have partly enabled this stunning movement, the researcher­s suggested. Horses may have allowed the Yamnaya to more effectivel­y send communicat­ions, build alliances, and manage the herds of cattle that were central to their economy.

 ?? AP ?? The horses ridden 5000 years ago were more like these Przewalski’s horses than breeds seen today.
AP The horses ridden 5000 years ago were more like these Przewalski’s horses than breeds seen today.

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