Settlements The
type site of the Abashevo culture is at
Abashevo, Chuvash Republic. More than two hundred settlements have been found. Houses were rectangular with large floor areas of about 150 to 200 m². Some settlements appear to have been occupied only briefly, and just two of them appear to have been fortified.
Burials The Abashevo culture is primarily represented by various
kurgan cemeteries. Kurgans were surrounded by a circular ditch, and the grave pit had ledges at its edges. The body was either contracted on the side, or supine with raised knees, with legs flexed. Its funerary customs appear to have been derived from the Poltavka culture. Its
inhumation practices in
tumuli are similar to the
Yamnaya culture and Fatyanovo–Balanovo culture. Flat graves are a component of the Abashevo culture burial rite, as in the earlier Fatyanovo culture. The kurgans of the Abashevo culture are to be distinguished from the flat graves of the Fatyanovo–Balanovo culture. A well-known Abashevo kurgan in
Pepkino contained the remains of twenty-eight males who appear to have died violent deaths. Grave offerings are scant, little more than a pot or two usually made with crushed-shell temper. Some graves show evidence of a birch bark floor and a timber construction forming walls and roof. High-status Abashevo graves contain silver and copper ornaments, and weapons. Crucibles for smelting copper and moulds for casting were found in some graves, most likely funerals reserved to bronzesmiths.
Clothing High-status Abashevo women are notable for wearing a distinctive type of headband with pendants made of copper and silver. These headbands are unique to the Abashevo culture, and are probably an ethnic marker and symbol of political status. The diadems of the Abashevo women are very similar to those of elite women in
Mycenaean Greece.
Elena Efimovna Kuzmina cites this as evidence of cultural synchronization between these ancient cultures.
Ceramics Abashevo ceramics display influences from the Catacomb culture, which was located further south. Its ceramics in turn influence those of the Sintashta culture.
Metal The Abashevo culture was an important center of metallurgy, as the southern Urals provided a major source of local copper. There is evidence of copper smelting, and the culture engaged in copper mining activities, which stimulated the formation of Sintashta metallurgy. About half of Abashevo metal objects are of copper, while the other half is of bronze. Silver-bearing ores were also extracted, from which silver ornaments were made. Abashevo metal types, such as knives were very similar to those of the Catacomb culture and the Poltavka culture.
Economy . The economy of the Abashevo culture was mixed agriculture. Cattle, sheep, pig and goats, as well as other domestic animals were kept. Stone grinders and metal sickles are evidences of agriculture. Horses were evidently used, inferred by cheek pieces typical of neighboring steppe cultures and Mycenaean Greece. According to Elena Kuzmina (2007) the first controlling of chariots with cheek-pieces can be attributed to the Abashevo and
Multi-cordoned ware cultures. The population of Sintashta derived their stock-breeding from Abashevo. Abashevo cattle was of the
Ukrainian Grey type, and this cattle had previously been raised among earlier Neolithic cultures of the
Pontic steppe and along the
Danube. This type of cattle was later adopted by the Sintashta culture and the Srubnaya culture.
Warfare Archaeological evidence suggests that Abashevo society was intensely warlike. Mass graves reveal that inter-tribal battles involved hundreds of warriors of both sides, which indicates a significant degree of inter-regional political integration. Warfare appears to have been more frequent in the late Abashevo period, and it was in this turbulent environment in which the Sintashta culture emerged. ==Linguistics==