Pliska
- 100 years of archaeological excavations
R. Rashev, Ya. Dimitrov
III. The legacy of Pliska
8. Devtashlars and mounds
In the immediate surroundings of Pliska there still exist groups of
large crude stones, erected in rows or without any order, known under the
name of devtashlars. A local legend from the end of the XIX c. attributes
their erection to giants and links them to the construction of the old
town. The stones set up in rows are always an odd number and the rows are
oriented along the principal directions. Isolated stones showing the direction
of the sunrise has been found at the eastern side of two groups. Probably,
the devtashlars were connected with beliefs and cults of the heavens and
the heavenly bodies. Small items and animal bones have been found near
some stones. The available data allow to characterise these monuments as
commemorative constructions of Proto-Bulgarian notables. Besides Pliska,
they have been erected at various places along the way leading to the neighbouring
earthen rampart, today at the horse-breeding station Kabijuk.
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Devtashlars from the village of Zlatna niva, Shumen district
SVaklinov, p. 80 |
Devtashlars to the south of Pliska
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Devtashlars near Pliska
ZAladzhov, p. 69 |
------> External
reference: Ziezi's review of devtashlars (in Bulgarian)
Three mounds to the north and the west of the stone fortress also belong
to this group of monuments. The function of mound XXXII is still not clear.
Probably it has not been investigated completely. Mound XXXIII with its
thick ash layer and the more than 20 complete clay vessels on its top can
be regarded as a commemorative construction. Its additional investigation
at various levels found signs of ritual fires. The complete skeleton of
a horse, found nearby, is probably connected with the mound. Mound XXXIV,
partially studied by K. Skorpil, has been re-investigated in the last years.
Its regular, isolated by layers of reeds, beds in its lower half also betray
the commemorative character of the monument. The dates and the function
of a nunber of large and small mounds along the western side of the earthen
rampart remained unclear until recently. The new exacavations showed that
the small mounds belong to the Bronze Age. Some of them were re-used in
the building of commemorative constructions. Most intriguing, one of its
kind, so far, is the 12-metre deep vertical shaft in mound XXII, which
at different depths contained two horses and two dogs. At the very top
the shaft was “sealed” by a commemorative ritual, containing fragments
of clay vessels and bones of various animals. The circular cultic structure
at Zlatna niva, situated on the road between Pliska and the camp at Kabijuk,
was also linked with similar beliefs and rites.
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Mound No XXXIV |
Mound No XXXI. Pottery from the burial
SVaklinov, p. 139 |
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