Serpent's Wall


Serpent's Wall is an ancient system of earthen earthworks located in the middle Dnieper Ukraine that stretch across primarily Kiev Oblast, Ukraine. They seem to be similar in purpose and character to Trajan's Wall situated to the southwest in Bessarabia. The remaining ancient walls have a total length of 1,000 km and constitute less than 20% of the original wall system.
According to a legend, the earthworks are results of ancient events when a mythical hero Kozmodemian in order to slay gargantuan Dragon harnessed it in a giant plow and furrowed. The Dragon bit the dust and from plowing there were left furrows on both sides of which towered immense chunks of earth that among people were named as Serpent's Wall.
The ancient walls were built between the 2nd century BC and 7th century AD, according to carbon dating. There are three theories as to what peoples built the walls: either the Sarmatians against the Scythians, or the Goths of Oium against the Huns, or the Early East Slavs against the nomads of the southern steppes. In Slavic culture, the warlike nomads are often associated with the winged dragon, hence the name.
On the right bank of Dnieper between its tributaries Teteriv and Ros the remnants of wall create six lines elongated from west to east. One Serpent's Wall was passed over the left bank of Dnieper and its tributary Sula.
The 1974-85 explorations has established that Serpent's Wall is a remnant of wooded earth fortifications built at the end of 10th and the first half of 11th centuries, smaller part in the 12th century, to protect middle Dnieper Ukraine and Kiev from pechenegs and cumans.

Gallery