High on a windswept plateau where Russia, Mongolia, China and Kazakhstan almost meet, the ground stays frozen all year round. For twenty-five centuries, that ice held a secret with great care: a young woman, laid to rest with quiet ceremony, her body preserved so completely that the tattoos on her skin still showed.
When archaeologists lifted her from the permafrost in 1993, they were not simply uncovering an artefact. They were meeting a person — someone who had lived, suffered, and been mourned long before Rome rose or the great cathedrals were dreamed of. Today she is known as the Siberian Ice Maiden, or the Princess of Ukok, and her story is one of the most moving and most contested in modern archaeology.
A grave beneath the frozen plateau
The discovery took place on the remote Ukok Plateau, in the Altai Mountains of southern Siberia, in 1993. There, a team led by the archaeologist Natalia Polosmak excavated a kurgan — an ancient burial mound — that had lain undisturbed for two and a half thousand years.
What made the site so extraordinary was the cold. Water had seeped into the burial chamber and frozen solid, sealing everything inside a block of ice. While bones and treasure survive at many ancient sites, soft tissue almost never does. Here, the permafrost had done what no embalmer could: it had kept the body of the woman inside nearly intact, along with the wooden coffin and the goods buried beside her.
She belonged to the Pazyryk culture, a people connected to the wider world of the Scythians — the famed nomadic horse-peoples of the Eurasian steppe. They left no cities and few written words. Almost everything we know of them, we know from graves like this one. And this grave would prove to be one of the richest windows ever opened onto their world.
The woman in the larch-wood coffin
Inside a coffin carved from a single larch trunk lay the woman herself, thought to have been around twenty-five years old when she died. She had been dressed with evident care: a long woollen skirt, a fine silk blouse, and a tall, elaborate headdress. Around her, the burial spoke of status and belief.
Six horses, saddled and bridled, had been laid to rest with her — a precious offering, and a sign that she held an important place in her community. There were vessels, ornaments, and items for the journey beyond. Everything about the burial suggests she was no ordinary member of her people, though her exact role — priestess, noblewoman, healer, storyteller — remains unknown. We can read the respect with which she was buried far more easily than we can read her name.
Tattoos preserved across the centuries
It is her tattoos that have captured the world’s imagination, and they deserve to be spoken of with care, because they are among the most intimate things to survive from the ancient steppe.
On her skin, still legible after 2,500 years, ran intricate designs picked out in dark blue. The most famous covers her shoulder: a fantastical creature with the beak of a griffin, the head of a deer, and great antlers whose tips blossom into flowers. Other designs flowed down toward her hand. They are among the most complex and beautiful tattoos ever found on a body from such a remote age — not crude marks, but flowing, deliberate art, carried on living skin into the afterlife.
**She wore her art beneath her skin, and the ice kept it for twenty-five centuries — a gallery of meaning we can still see but no longer fully read.**
What the tattoos meant, we cannot say for certain. Among steppe peoples, such markings may have signalled identity, status, or spiritual belief. To look at them now is to feel the distance of the centuries and, at the same time, an unsettling closeness — the recognition of another human being who chose to adorn herself, and was remembered for it.
What her body quietly revealed
In the decades since her discovery, the Ice Maiden has been studied with great gentleness by researchers in Novosibirsk. In 2014, scientists conducted an MRI scan, and her body told them something deeply human.
The imaging suggested that she had been seriously ill. Researchers reported evidence consistent with breast cancer, alongside signs of a bone infection she may have carried since childhood or adolescence. In other words, this young woman had likely lived for years with pain and declining health before she died.
That finding cast new light on one of the objects buried with her: a small container of cannabis. Some researchers have suggested, cautiously, that she may have used it to ease her suffering — a possible glimpse of ancient medicine, and of a community caring for someone who was unwell. We should hold this gently, as a careful interpretation rather than a certainty. But it transforms her from a frozen curiosity into something far more affecting: a real person who hurt, and who was looked after.
A rest that is still contested
The Ice Maiden’s story did not end in the laboratory. For the Indigenous people of the Altai, she is not a specimen but an ancestor — a sacred figure some call the White Lady, a guardian of their land. Many in the region were deeply troubled that her body had been removed at all, and a series of natural disasters in the years that followed were, for some, linked in feeling to that disturbance. Out of respect, these beliefs deserve to be named plainly: to the communities who hold them, her removal was a wound, not a triumph.
There have been formal efforts to have her returned to the earth. A court in Gorno-Altaisk considered and ultimately rejected a demand for her reburial, and she now rests in a specially designed chamber at the National Museum of the Altai Republic, kept in carefully controlled conditions and shown with a measure of solemnity. The debate over where she truly belongs — in a museum, or back in the ground that held her for so long — has no easy answer. It sits at the difficult meeting point of science, heritage, and the dignity owed to the dead.
Why she stays with us
There is a reason the Siberian Ice Maiden moves people far beyond the world of archaeology. She is not a treasure or a trophy. She is a young woman, ill and far from us in time, who was dressed in silk, marked with art, and sent on her way with horses and care by people who loved or honoured her. The ice simply refused to let her be forgotten.
To meet her is to feel, very directly, the thread that runs between us and the deep past — the realisation that grief, beauty, illness and tenderness are not modern inventions but ancient and shared. She reminds us that the people of the steppe were not myths or statistics, but individuals, each with a body and a story.
So here is the thought to sit with, quietly: when the ice gives back a person rather than a relic, what do we owe her — our curiosity, or her peace?




