K původu slovanského pluhu
- Title:
- K původu slovanského pluhu
On the origin of Slavonic plough
O proischoždenii slavjanskogo pluga
À propos de l'origine de la charrue slave
Zur Herkunft des slawischen Pfluges - Creator:
- Šach, František
- Identifier:
- https://cdk.lib.cas.cz/client/handle/uuid:958203a0-cf31-4ccc-baca-9a4b8505057e
uuid:958203a0-cf31-4ccc-baca-9a4b8505057e - Subject:
- ethnography in agricultural research, agricultural history, traditional tools of agriculture, ploughs, and Slavonic ploughs
- Type:
- model:article and TEXT
- Format:
- bez média and svazek
- Description:
- The Romans may have known the ridge plough which turns over the soil to one side, but under the natural conditions in which they lived they did not require it and thus did not themselves possess it. Thus the Germans could not have passed on a Roman-Germanic plough to the Western Slavs. In this sense the results of the latest research correct the conclusions of L. Niederle on this matter. All the more remarkable, however, is his final supposition that the origin of the plough. i.e. a tilling implement provided with a asymmetrical mouldboard, must be sought in the East. This is supported by the number of asymmetrical ploughshares (pre-supposing a mouldboard), and the even more frequent horizontally attached symmetrical ploughshare with small coulter, assigned to the period from the 5lh to the beginning of the13th century, found on sites indicating the road from Southern Russia across Southern Poland to Czechoslovakia. This is a territory whose natural conditions demand cultivation by ridge plough. The existence of this ancient cultural highway is confirmed too by several typological similarities in the construction of the tilling implements. Thus practically in the same territory we find in recent tilling implemenls the type of plough with double stilt sole, further with the forward leaning sheat both in ards and ploughs of quadrangular construction and finally even wilh the beam parallelly attached lo the heel of the sole by its bent hindmost part. The discovery in the peat-bog at Sergeyev of the wooden plough, preserved in the museum at Chernigov, provides very strong support for Niederle’s idea. It consists of naturally grown piece of oak, is of the sole-type with arched beam. The massive construction where the conic sole passes into the beam is somewhal broader on the right side. Its right edge is hollowed inlo a paraboloid shape widening towards the back. This plane, finished above by a sharp ridge, represents the beginnings of the mouldboard. B. A. Shramko assigned the Sergeyev plough to the middle of the first millenary B. C. and Článek zahrnuje poznámkový aparát
- Language:
- Czech
- Rights:
- http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
policy:public - Coverage:
- 7-14
- Source:
- Národopisný věstník československý | 1966 Volume:1 (34) | Number:1 (34)
- Harvested from:
- CDK
- Metadata only:
- false
The item or associated files might be "in copyright"; review the provided rights metadata:
- http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
- policy:public