Is this fiction or did it really happen in history?

I heard this story a long time ago, but I could not figure out if it was fiction or real, perhaps you can help me?

I have already googled and Binged with no luck except some tombs in Bulgaria come close with a tribe called Thracians, but no where near the numbers I have heard.

There was a King that when he died he required all of his subjects, wives, children, slaves, army, horses, chariots, gold, silver and jewels to be buried with him.

It was a long time ago 500bc or before that even in what is now Germany or Russia or it could be Bulgaria.

Anyone know this tribe or Kings name?

Can’t possibly be true. If all his subjects are buried with him, who does the burying?

General contractors.

Are there any historical records of what was happening in Germany or Russia or Bulgaria in 500 bc?

You might be thinking of the Varna Necroplolis which isn’t a single burial site, but an early cemetry.

Another possibility is the Tomb of Ghengis Khan which fits neatly with the massed burial of slaves, wives etc. It’s also quite possibly mythical.

I want to be buried that way.
Others have said I can’t have that.
Nonsense!–I say.

If Ghengis Khan, so khan I!

But you khan always get what you wan.

Probably you could find a conquering army who’d oblige…

But you war cry sometimes, and get what you bleed.

This was a tradition in China in 500BC and earlier. The terracotta warriors were a later alternative to actual human sacrifice-

http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/transcripts/chinas-terracotta-warriors-program-transcript/840/

Well, if we want to go that way, Pharaohs also used to be buried with tons of bling and the occasional host of servants. Then there’s the Indian custom of suttee, by which the widow was expected to hop on her husband’s cremation pyre.

But I’ll admit not to have heard about that kind of thing in Europe. Grave goods, sure, plenty of that going around, but funerary sacrifice ?

yup.
Vikings killed off the deceased’s thralls (slaves), & were buried, or, possibly, burned, with the deceased.

Several have been found.

There is an extant account of an eyewitness to one of these ceremonies - a rather horrified Arabic traveller named Ibn Fadlan.

Only one woman was killed in that ritual, though.

The sex and the sacrifice make sence in a primitive way, but why the hell would you want to be buried with charred chunks of rotting sweaty horse?

The Royal Tombs of Ur fit the bill.

Why, because it wouldn’t do for a badass warrior to proudly go fight in the afterwars of the afterlife without a proper afterhorse :).

I don’t get the sex part myself though, be it from the girl’s point of view (“I really loved my master, so I’m gonna let his tribe run a train on me”) or his mates (“I really liked him, so I’m going to prove it by fucking his chickadee”). Does not really compute, though as far as funerary customs go I suppose showing up to boink the maid beats being expected to bring a casserole.

BTW, thanks Bosda & Malthus. Ignorance fought !

Moving from Cafe Society to General Questions.

I remember a similar scene in “The Epic of Gilgamesh,” which I think is considered largely factual.

Again according to wikipedia for what it is worth:

Although suttee doesn’t satisfy OP’s quest for wholesale massacre ( :eek: ) it may be worth pointing out that the Vedic custom may derive from their Indo-European speaking ancestors: Suttee has been deduced from Sredny Stog burials ca 4000 BC in the East European steppes, as well as at later sites in the Hungarian plains associated with intruders from the steppes.
(I thought I’d read of Copper Age suttee even farther West; Googling I find only a (pdf) paper on human sacrifices in Iron Age Western Europe.)