Country of Towns


In the archaeology of Russia, the Country of Towns is a tentative term for a territory in the southern Trans-Urals where a number of middle Bronze Age fortified settlements of the Sintashta culture were found in the 1970s and 1980s.
Since the discovery of the Sintashta culture, aerial photography has revealed that there is a compactly grouped number of town-type settlements in the northern steppe of the southern Trans-Urals, within an area bounded roughly 350~400 km north-south and 120~150 km east-west between Magnitorgorsk and Chelyabinsk. Therefore, in the 2000s, the principal investigator of this area, Gennady Zdanovich, grouped them under the tentative term "Country of Towns". Since then, while some archaeologists recognize this term as a metaphor, others insist on the literal understanding.
A colleague of Zdanovich, Fyodor Petrov, criticizes Zdanovish's views on the described territory as a unique compact object and considers the apparent compactness as an artifact of the incomplete and uncritical archaeological research. He mentions that earlier Zdanovich himself reported even more compact archaeological groupings of this type. He also writes that there are more Sintashta-type settlements discovered in Orenburg Oblast, so that when taken into an account, they would significantly blur the "clearly defined" boundaries of the "Country of Towns".