Category
page 1Archaeological collections of the Hermitage Museum
Venus figurines of Mal'ta
paleolithic figurines found in Siberia, Russia
Pazyryk burials
Iron Age barrow tombs mounds - Scythian-type kurgans containing wooden chambers covered over by large cairns of boulders and stones in Altai mounts of South Siberia
Pereshchepina Treasure
migration Period hoard
Kul-Oba
thumb|Electrum vase from the Kul-Oba [[kurgan, 2nd half of 4th century BC. (Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg)]]
thumb|350px|Scythians, drawing of figures on the vase above
thumb|Gold pieces from Kul-Oba
Kul-Oba (; , ; meaning "hill of ash" in Crimean Tatar) is an ancient archaeological site, a Scythian burial tumulus now called the Royal Kurgan, located near Kerch in eastern Crimea, on the right side of the M25 road to Feodosiya.
Venus figurines of Kostenki
Stone Age depictions of the female body
Oglakhty
thumb|Tashtyk culture [[funeral masks in the Hermitage Museum]]
Oglahty (, ) is a mountain range and a burial complex of Tashtyk culture located 60 km north of Minusinsk, Khakassia, Russia, on the right bank of Yenisei River. Oglahty burials are dated to the 1st century BC. The burials were first surveyed in 1903 by A.V. Adrianov. The dryness of the soil and favorable climatic conditions in the burial monument preserved perishable materials including wood, leather, fur, and fabrics. A prominent place among artifacts in the Oglahty complex occupy solid and decorated polychromatic fabrics.
Solokha
''Solokha is also the name of a witch in Rimsky-Korsakov's opera Christmas Eve.
Solokha is also a hamlet at .''
Regina Vasorum
ancient Greek vase
Venus figurines of Gagarino
paleolithic artifacts found in Russia
Stone of Tmutarakan