BSS 1: Guldager Bilde P., Højte J.M., Stolba V.F. (eds.), The Cauldron of Ariantas. Studies presented to A.N. Sceglov on the occasion of his 70th birthday. Aarhus: University Press (Black Sea Studies, 1) 2003 (original) (raw)
A large quantity of data has been accumulated concerning the spatial organisation of the Archaic Greek Berezan settlement during its 'urbanised' period of existence (i.e. the second half of the 6th century-early 5th century BC). However, a major part of this information, obtained by and from numerous excavations conducted by various scholars since the beginning of the 20th century, was highly fragmented and did not permit a complete picture to be formed of the urban layout of this, the earliest Greek colony in the North Pontic region. Important questions concerning the relative positions of the necropolis, residential areas, public and religious buildings, the location of the urban civic centre on the territory of modern Berezan Island (the ancient peninsula) remained unsolved. Meanwhile, merging old excavation plans with a modern topographical map of the island, and matching the results of old excavations with recent ones, has enabled substantial progress in the study of town-planning in general, 1 as well as offering some suggestions on the subject of the title of this paper.
The research of the Polish-Ukrainian archaeological expedition forms part of the 'Koshary Project', begun in 1998 and aimed at discovering and preserving the cultural heritage of the Ukraine and Greece. The Koshary site is situated over 40km to the east of Odessa on the western side of the Tiligul Liman (ancient Axiakos, as mentioned by Pliny the Elder HN,. It belonged to the Olbian chora and flourished between the early 4th century and the middle of the 3rd century BC. We have excavated an area close to 10,000m 2 so far. The settlement consists of a central part of c. 1875m 2 which formed a small town fortified at the north-west, a 'suburb' with farms and an open cult area (zol'nik). In the necropolis we have explored more than 8000m 2 , finding over 230 graves, sacrificial places and other features. We obtained a vast amount of material and the results have been presented in preliminary reports, articles, lectures and presentations at many international conferences, exhibitions etc. The aim of our research is to determine the character and position of the Koshary settlement as part of Olbia's rural resources (chora) and of the structure of the Olbian state, as well as to define the relations between the Greeks of the Black Sea area and the local tribes, mainly Scythian.
STUDYING OF LOCAL ANCIENT GREEK POTTERY OF OLBIA AND BORYSTHENES (historiographical aspect), 2021
Демей Л., Ступак Д. В. Нові комплексні дослідження Новгород-Сіверської верхньопалеолітичної стоянки Buiskykh A. V., sheVchenko T. M. olbian Perirantheria AksionoV V. s. Reflection of the Family structure of the Population at the Biritual Burial Ground of the saltiv culture in chervona hirka Publication of Archaeological Material RyZhoV s. M., shuMoVA V. o. investigations at the Trypillia settlement near hlybochok Village in cherkasy oblast RAdoMskyi i. s., LeVinZon ye. yu., nechyTAiLo P. o., nechyTAiLo o. k. Materials of the Western Trypilla culture from the settlements of kamianets-Podilskyi, Tatarysky and kubachivka ReidA R. M., heiko A. V., sAPiehin s. V. The Glass Beaker with eclectic Features from Burial no. 112 of the shyshaky cemetery
KOINÈ ET MOBILITÉ ARTISANALE ENTRE LA MÉDITERRANÉE ET LA MER NOIRE DANS L'ANTIQUITÉ Hommage à PIERRE DUPONT à son 70e anniversaire (PONTICA LI SUPPLEMENTUM V). CONSTANŢA, 2018
The article is devoted to the assemblage of finds from the well excavated by the State Hermitage archaeological mission under the direction of K.S. Gorbunova in 1963–1964 on the Berezan island. Transport amphorae are represented by the Samian, Lesbian and Klazomenian production. In addition, fragments of handles belonging to Cypriot basket-handle amphorae appear in the same deposit. The filling of the well contained the significant number of complete and fragmented tableware vessels of the Corinthian, Chian, Attic, North and South Ionian production. The dating of painted pottery fits into the narrow chronological limits of the second – early third quarters of the 6th century BC. The deposit of the well is close to the ’border’ deposits and structures precedent to the early stage of the mass construction of stone-and mudbrick houses in the third quarter of the 6th century BC. Probably, the well is synchronous with the dugouts of the second quarter of that century but it was filled up in the course of the rapid urbanization of the colony in the 540s BC or slightly later.
PREHISTORIC MINING AND METALLURGY AT THE SOUTHEAST BULGARIAN BLACK SEA COAST, 2020
Die Deutsche Nationalbibliothek verzeichnet diese Publikation in der Deutschen Nationalbibliografie, detaillierte bibliografische Daten sind im Internet über http://dnb.d-nb.de abrufbar. Herausgeber der Reihe: Martin Bartelheim und Thomas Scholten Der Text dieses Werkes ist unter der Creative-Commons-Lizenz CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 DE (Namensnennung -Nicht kommerziell -Keine Bearbeitung 3.0 Deutschland) veröffentlicht. Den Vertragstext der Lizenz finden Sie unter https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/de Die Abbildungen sind von dieser Lizenz ausgenommen, hier liegt das Urheberrecht beim jeweiligen Rechteinhaber. Die Online-Version dieser Publikation ist auf den Verlagswebseiten von Tübingen University Press frei verfügbar (open access). http://hdl.handle.net/10900/109816 http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:21-dspace-1098168 http://dx.
New Studies in Black Sea and Balkan Archaeology (2014–2016)
Studia Hercynia, 2017
With this volume of Studia Hercynia, we would like to continue the tradition of the annotated bibliography on Black Sea and Balkan Archaeology started by Jan Bouzek back in 2002 and published intermittently over the years in the journal Eirene. As both of the journals undergo editorial changes, it has been decided to include this type of information in the journal Studia Hercynia, but more importantly, to continue with it also in the future. As with the previous edition of the bibliography, prof. Bouzek was joined by his younger colleagues, who will carry on the tradition. The overall structure of the report remains the same as in the journal Eirene: Conferences and workshops (usually based on the personal experience of the referent), followed by a selection of the latest publications – monographs and edited volumes – dealing with the archaeology and history of the Black Sea and the eastern Balkans. The Studies will be published every two years to sum up the latest progress in the field.
Numerous ancient settlements of various sizes were discovered during our archaeological field survey in Devrek (Paphlagonia) and its environs in 2004. In some of these settlements Late Chalcolithic and Early Bronze Age (EBA) pottery was collected. The majority of the sherds, however, belong to the Hellenistic, Roman and Late Roman periods. Ancient written sources provide plentiful evidence on the western part of the Turkish Black Sea, but far less on the hinterland. The pottery collected by this survey is therefore of significant help in establishing a chronology of this region. These local and imported wares can also demonstrate the area's involvement in interregional exchange from the Hellenistic to the Late Roman period.