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1,000-year-old remains of 'elite woman' in silk cloak found in abandoned fortress in Mongolia

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An "elite grave" discovered in the remnants of an abandoned fortress in Mongolia contains the remains of a woman dressed in a yellow, silk cloak and offers insight into the inner workings of burial and trade practices in an empire that flourished 1,000 years ago.

Archaeologists found the burial accidentally while surveying a site in northeastern Mongolia. The fortress, known as Khar Nuur, was built sometime between the 10th and 12th centuries, during the Kitan-Liao (also spelled Khitan) Empire, which controlled large portions of central and eastern Mongolia at the time. The fortress was part of a "long wall" that stretched across the countryside, according to a study published in the September issue of the journal Archaeological Research in Asia.

After the empire collapsed in 1125, it was followed by the Mongol (Mongolian) Empire, which originated in 1206 and was led by Genghis Khan (also known as Chinggis Khan). The fortress itself "stands as a poignant symbol of identity, memory, and power in a time of transition," according to a statement from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

"The focus of our research is a wall-line, about 800 km [500 miles] long, and the forts and other structures that are associated with it," study co-author Gideon Shelach-Lavi, a professor of East Asian studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, told Live Science in an email. "The initial discovery of this grave was a surprise and so was the fact that the grave was not looted (most graves in this area were looted in antiquity)."

The tomb was hidden inside an enclosure of one of the fortress's walls. Radiocarbon dating of the "well-preserved" skeleton revealed that the deceased was a woman who died between the ages of 40 and 60. She was buried in a coffin, wearing a yellow, silk robe, and she had additional silk textiles placed beneath her head, which was covered in a birchbark headdress.

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"The richness of the grave, not only in term[s] of the amount of grave goods but also their diversity, suggest[s] that the elderly woman buried in it belonged to an elite class and was an important figure in the local society," Shelach-Lavi said. "The grave itself is relatively small but the number of artifacts found is large in [comparison] to other graves of the same period."

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