Aleksandr Podushkin

Reconstruction of a Xiongnu chief warrior, 2nd century BCE-1st century CE, by archaeologist A.N. Podushkin. Central State Museum of Kazakhstan.[1]

Aleksandr Nikolaevich Podushkin (Александр Николаевич Подушкин, born March 19, 1953) is an archaeologist from Kazakhstan.[1] He holds a doctorate in history and is a professor at the Southern Kazakhstan State Pedagogical Institute in Shymkent, Kazakhstan.[2][3]

Podushkin specializes on the archaeology of Southern Kazakhstan, and on the cultures of the Sakas, Sarmatians and Kangju in the 4th century BCE – 4th century CE.[3]

He has published four monographs and about ninety articles, some in collaboration with foreign scholars, such as Franz Grenet and Nicholas Sims-Williams.[3][4]

Works

  • Podushkin, Alexsandr. "ART AND RELIGIOUS BELIEFS OF KANGJU: EVIDENCE FROM AN ANTHROPOMORPHIC IMAGE FOUND IN THE UGAM VALLEY (SOUTHERN KAZAKHSTAN)" (PDF). Silk Road Foundation.
  • Aleksandr N. Podushkin. Arysskaia kul’tura Iuzhnogo Kazakhstana IV v. do n.e.–VI v. n.e. [The Arys Culture of southern Kazakhstan 4th century BCE–6th century CE]. Turkestan: Izdatel’skii tsentr MKTU im. A. Iassavi, 2000.
  • Podushkin 2010. “Sarmaty v Iuzhnom Kazakhstane” [Sarmatians in southern Kazakhstan]. In: Drevnie kul’tury Evrazii. Materially mezhdunarodnoi nauchnoi konferentsii, posviashchennoi 100-letiiu A. N. Bernshtama. Sankt-Peterburg: Institut istorii material’noi kul’tury RAN, 2010: 207–17.
  • Podushkin 2013 ´(SLJUDÀFKHVNLH DUWHIDNW\ JRURGLVKFKD .XO·WREHµ [Epigraphic artefacts of the Kul’tobe site]. In: Sogdiitsy, ikh predshestvenniki i nasledniki. Trudy Gos. Ermitazha, T. LXII. Sankt-Peterburg: Gos. Ermitazh, 2013: 82–95.
  • Podushkin 2015. “Siunnu v Iuzhnom Kazakhstane: arkheologicheskii i istoricheskii konteksty” [Xiongnu in southern Kazakhstan: archaeological and historical contexts]. In: Drevnie kul’tury Severnogo Kitaia, Mongolii i Baikal’skoi Sibiri. Materially VI mezhdunarodnoi nauchnoi konferentsii. T. II. Khukh-Khoto (China), 2015: 507–14.

References

  1. ^ a b *Kradin, Nikolay N. (2019). "Some Aspects of Xiongnu History in Archaeological Perspective". In Hao, Chen (ed.). Competing Narratives between Nomadic People and their Sedentary Neighbours: Papers of the 7th International Conference on the Medieval History of the Eurasian Steppe Nov. 9–12, 2018 Shanghai China. University of Szeged. pp. 149–165. doi:10.14232/sua.2019.53.149-165. Nonetheless, among archaeologists, there are many supporters of the Xiongnu migration to the West. In recent years, S. Botalov (2009) constructed a broad picture of the migration of the Xiongnu to the Urals, and then Europe. In Kazakhstan, A.N. Podushkin discovered the Arysskaya culture with a distinct stage of Xiongnu influence (2009). Russian archaeologists are actively studying the Hun sites in the Caucasus (Gmyrya 1993; 1995)
    Podushkin, A.A. 2009. Xiongnu v Yuznom Kazakhstane. In: Nomady kazakhstanskikh stepey: etnosociokulturnye protsessy i kontakty v Evrazii skifo sakskoy epokhi: Edited by Z. Samashev, Astana: Ministry of Culture and Information of the Kazakhstan Republic: 147‒154
  2. ^ "Podushkin, Aleksandr - Persée". www.persee.fr.
  3. ^ a b c Podushkin, Alexsandr. "ART AND RELIGIOUS BELIEFS OF KANGJU: EVIDENCE FROM AN ANTHROPOMORPHIC IMAGE FOUND IN THE UGAM VALLEY (SOUTHERN KAZAKHSTAN)" (PDF). Silk Road Foundation.
  4. ^ "Podushkin, Aleksandr - Persée". www.persee.fr.


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