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Journal articles on the topic 'Scythian Neapolis'

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1

Ivantchik, Askold I. "The Scythian Kingdom in the Crimea in the 2nd Century BC and Its Relations with the Greek States in the North Pontic Region." Ancient Civilizations from Scythia to Siberia 25, no. 2 (2019): 220–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15700577-12341351.

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Abstract The new data that have become available in the last two decades show that the Scythian Kingdom with its capital in Neapolis Scythica, which existed in the Crimea in the 2nd century BC, was much closer to Hellenistic states ruled by barbarian dynasties than to nomadic kingdom of the Scythians of the 4th century BC. At the same time, these data allow us to return in part to the old view formulated by Rostovtzeff about continuity between the Scythia of the 4th century BC and the Late Scythian Kingdom, which most researchers have rejected during the last thirty years. It turned out that t
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2

Antonov, Egor. "Late Scythians’ Houses in North-West Crimea in the Second Half of 1st Century BC — First Quarter of 1st Century AD." Stratum plus. Archaeology and Cultural Anthropology, no. 3 (June 20, 2023): 165–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.55086/sp233165177.

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The article summarizes the data known about home layouts in North-West Crimea during the peak of the late Scythians’ settlements. The layouts of a number of houses (Kara-Tobe, South Donuzlav settlement) are introduced for the first time. These layouts are the first to be compared with each other and with the previously published layouts. Such comparison demonstrates that the number of planning schemes in late Scythians North-West Crimea was limited, besides, they changed over the time. In that way, Г-shaped house layouts that had prevailed during the previous stage (about 110 BC — middle 1 st
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3

Makarov, Igor A. "On the Epitaph for Argotas from Neapolis Scythica." Ancient Civilizations from Scythia to Siberia 25, no. 2 (2019): 205–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15700577-12341350.

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Abstract This article contains a re-publication of a verse epitaph found in Neapolis Scythica (SEG 53, 775). After correcting a number of readings and restorations of the editio princeps, the author demonstrates that lines 4-8 contain a description of the deceased Argotas and not of King Skiluros, as the scholars publishing the inscription had suggested. There are no grounds for treating the φιλο[φροσύνη] Ἑλλάνων mentioned in the text as evidence of Argotas’ Greek origin. Thus there is no reason for viewing him as a figure similar to Posideos, son of Posideos, known to us from Neapolis epigrap
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4

Rudych, T. O. "LATE SCYTHIANS: THE FORMATION OF THE POPULATION ACCORDING TO THE ANTHROPOLOGICAL MATERIAL." Archaeology and Early History of Ukraine 36, no. 3 (2020): 476–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.37445/adiu.2020.03.35.

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In this paper, craniological materials from late Scythian monuments were considered in a wide range of Scythian, Sarmatian groups and series from ancient necropolises. Statistical analysis was performed using several methods of multidimensional statistics. According to the results of the analysis it can be said that the population from the Lower Dnieper settlements and the Late Scythian cemeteries of Crimea is the common anthropological massif which is biologically connected with people from the ancient environment and people from certain Scythian populations.
 Due to its mixed population
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5

Dashnevskaia, Ol'ga D. "Graffiti on the Walls of Buildings in Scythian Neapolis." Anthropology & Archeology of Eurasia 51, no. 1 (2012): 7–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.2753/aae1061-1959510101.

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6

Treister, Mikhail Yu. "Gepaipyris II? Once More about the Silver Plate from Scythian Neapolis." Ancient Civilizations from Scythia to Siberia 19, no. 1 (2013): 33–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15700577-12341246.

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Abstract This article is devoted to the study of a silver plate with an inscription of Queen Gepaipyris, found in the excavations of Scythian Neapolis in 1959. It has up to now been thought that the plate belonged to the Bosporan Queen Gepaipyris, ruling in AD 37-38, and was probably a diplomatic gift during negotiations with the Scythians. The analysis of the shape of the plate, its stylistic features and the composition of its decoration give grounds for dating the plate from Neapolis (Cat. No. 1, Fig. 1) within a broad framework of the second half of the 2nd and first half of the 3rd centur
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7

Kazarnitsky, Alexei A. "Craniology and the Funerary Rite of the Population of Scythian Neapolis." Ancient Civilizations from Scythia to Siberia 23, no. 2 (2017): 210–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15700577-12341317.

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Abstract This article describes an attempt of the comparison between data assembled by archaeologists and physical anthropologists relating to group burials in earth catacombs of the Eastern Necropolis at Scythian Neapolis. A coincidence was identified between variability trends in craniometric and some archaeological features. This was interpreted as evidence for the presence in the urban population of at least two initial groups of different origin, which preserved certain differences in some of the details of the funerary rite used.
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8

Sikoza, D. N., and E. S. Dzneladze. "FEMALE BURIALS OF MYKOLAIVKA BURIAL GROUND." Archaeology and Early History of Ukraine 31, no. 2 (2019): 355–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.37445/adiu.2019.02.28.

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54 female burials from Late Scythian Nikolaevka burial ground of Kherson district are analyzed in the paper. They were excavated by Erast Symonovich expedition during 1960—1970.
 The analysis of materials from female burials showed that Nikolaevka burial ground was in use during all chronological period of local Lower Dnieper variant of the Late Scythian culture. Female burials reflected the periods of origin, heyday and decline of this burial ground.
 The funerary rite and grave goods are typical for the Late Scythian culture, and have analogies among the materials of the Zolotaya B
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9

Puzdrovskii, Alexander. "A Tomb of Early Roman Period from the Region of Scythian Neapolis." Ancient Civilizations from Scythia to Siberia 11, no. 1-2 (2005): 85–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/1570057054352907.

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10

Zaytsev, Yuriy, Iryna Shkribliak, and Vitaly Bezborodykh. "New Late-Scythian Necropolis Tanageldy in the Piedmont Crimea." Stratum plus. Archaeology and Cultural Anthropology, no. 3 (June 30, 2021): 297–320. http://dx.doi.org/10.55086/sp213297320.

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This is the first publication of the archaeological material obtained from the research of the necropolis Tanageldy of 2nd—1st centuries BC in the Piedmont Crimea. The expedition of the Scythian Neapolis Museum-Reserve in 2017 explored 3 collective ground crypts on the necropolis’s territory which belongs to a large settlement complex of ancient times in the city of Kara-Tau. Observations obtained in the course of a detailed anthropological analysis of the buried are curious. Mainly young women, adolescents and children were buried in the underground crypts, the bones of many of them reflect t
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11

Воронятов, С. В., and В. В. Кропотов. "A BRACELET OF THE EAST EUROPEAN ENAMELED ORNAMENTS STYLE FROM THE SCYTHIAN NEAPOLIS NECROPOLIS." Краткие сообщения Института археологии (КСИА), no. 267 (October 4, 2022): 198–206. http://dx.doi.org/10.25681/iaras.0130-2620.267.198-206.

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Статья посвящена републикации браслета стиля восточноевропейских выемчатых эмалей (вторая половина II - IV в. н. э.) из подбойной могилы № 3 Восточного могильника Неаполя Скифского. Данное украшение нетипично для позднескифской культуры Предгорного Крыма и, возможно, сочетает в себе смешение двух ювелирных стилей. Фибулы и краснолаковые сосуды, сопровождавшие находку, позволяют датировать браслет первой половиной III в. н. э. Комплекс с этим уникальным изделием является важным хронологическим репером, уточняющим общую датировку украшений стиля восточноевропейских выемчатых эмалей, характерных
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12

И.И., Шкрибляк. "СКИФСКИЕ ДРЕВНОСТИ ЦЕНТРАЛЬНОГО КРЫМА V–IV вв. до н. э.: ИССЛЕДОВАНИЯ ПОСЛЕДНИХ ДЕСЯТИЛЕТИЙ". Краткие сообщения Института археологии (КСИА), № 275 (13 листопада 2024): 257–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.25681/iaras.0130-2620.275.257-274.

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В статье приводится краткий обзор открытых с 2009 г. скифских по гребальных комплексов в Центральном Крыму в ходе ежегодных археологических работ музея-заповедника «Неаполь Скифский». Все комплексы – это подкурган ные грунтовые и каменные сооружения V–IV вв. до н. э. Несмотря на многочис ленные ограбления курганов, для каждого памятника определена относительно узкая датировка, основанная на анализе амфорной тары, предметов вооружения и типологии каменных погребальных конструкций. Для региона характерна зна чительная вариативность основных погребальных сооружений, среди которых встречаются грун
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13

Khudaverdyan, A. Yu, A. A. Yengibaryan, R. Sh Matevosyan, N. G. Alekhanyan, and A. A. Khachatryan. "Physical type of the Armenian Highlands populations in antiquity (based on osteometrical materials from urban and rural settlements)." VESTNIK ARHEOLOGII, ANTROPOLOGII I ETNOGRAFII, no. 1(52) (February 26, 2021): 118–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.20874/2071-0437-2021-52-1-11.

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The paper is concerned with the analysis of osteometrical data from the antique populations of the Armenian Highlands, i.e. anthropological materials of burials dated to the 1st–3rd c. AD. We analyse the differences in an-thropological characteristics between urban and rural population of Armenia in antiquity. In total, 78 individuals of both sexes have been examined using traditional osteological methods. The study involved visual examination of the skeletons, images, descriptions and radiography. For the intergroup comparison, canonical analysis based on the averaged intergroup correlation m
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14

Nazarova, T., and T. Rudych. "THE POPULATION OF OLBIA IN THE FIRST CENTURIES AD BASED ON THE MATERIALS OF ANTHROPOLOGY." Archaeology and Early History of Ukraine 53, no. 4 (2024): 163–77. https://doi.org/10.37445/adiu.2024.04.11.

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Anthropological materials date from the Greco-Roman period of Olbia (1st—3rd centuries AD). Most of the finds can be dated to the 1st—2nd centuries AD, there are the assemblages with a narrower dating — the 2nd century. The main part of the series consists of bone remains from the western part of the Olbia necropolis where, according to the researchers, wealthy people were buried. Several skeletons from the northern part of the Olvian necropolis were involved in analysis. The material comes from the burial structures of different types: earthen crypts, regular graves, niche graves. The materia
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15

Dzneladze, O. S., D. M. Sikoza, and O. V. Symonenko. "SWORDS OF THE LATE SCYTHIAN NECROPOLIS CHERVONY MAYAK." Archaeology and Early History of Ukraine 47, no. 2 (2023): 150–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.37445/adiu.2023.02.10.

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The edged weapons are rather frequently occurring at the Late Scythian necropolises though there is a certain disproportion between Crimean and Lower Dnieper sites in favor of the first. The Chervony Mayak necropolis in Lower Dnieper region provides a representative series of various weapons with the edged one inclusive. Ten swords and their fragments were found in the Chervony Mayak necropolis. One of them came from tumulus grave, nine from the graves of burial ground and another one have been found accidently in the gully near the necropolis.
 The edged weapons were found in the followi
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16

Kozlenko, R. A. "NEW TAMGA SIGNS AND ELEMENTS OF SARMATIAN ARMAMENT AND EQUIPMENT FROM OLBIA." Archaeology and Early History of Ukraine 36, no. 3 (2020): 327–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.37445/adiu.2020.03.20.

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The series of new tamga signs from the latest excavations in Olbia, among which there are unique signs for the Sarmatian nomadic world are published in the paper. The tamgas are deposited on limestone which was found at a new site T-4 placed on the Terraced city of Olbia. Some signs have analogies on the marble lion from Olbia, in Scythian Neapolis, on the «plate-encyclopedia» from Panticapaeum, and on the territory of Asian Sarmatia. The period of existence of these tamgas in Olbia can be attributed to the second half of the 1st — the 2nd centuries AD. This was the time of close military-poli
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17

Radyush, Oleg. "Origin and Attribution of the Items in Eastern European Champlevй Enamels Style (Late 2nd – 4th Centuries) Found South-Eastward of the Main Dnieper Area". Nizhnevolzhskiy Arheologicheskiy Vestnik 23, № 4 (2024): 75–114. https://doi.org/10.15688/nav.jvolsu.2024.4.4.

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This article examines the origin and attribution of ornaments in Eastern European style found to the south and east of the main Dnieper area of such artifacts. Previously unknown artifacts are introduced into scientific circulation. Development of local barbarian jewelry styles in Eastern Europe reached its peak in the late 2nd – mid-3rd centuries AD. Most known enameled finds belong to this time period, although some types of items can be traced back to the late 4th to early 5th centuries. Archaeological finds from closed complexes in the Northwestern Black Sea region, the Crimea, the North C
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18

Хапаев, В.В. "Санкт-Петербургская пресса об изучении древностей Юга России в 1825–1827 годах". ПРИЧЕРНОМОРЬЕ. История, политика, культура. 2017 Серия А. Античность и Средневековье, № XXII(VII) (2017): 23–35. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.849011.

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<em>В статье изучены материалы санкт-петербургских периодических изданий: газеты «Северная пчела», журналов «Сын Отечества» и «Северный архив». Автор приходит к выводу, что столичная пресса предоставляет, как правило, уникальную информацию о создании первых археологических музеев в Одессе и Керчи, пополнении их фондов, в том числе за счет ценностей, ввезенных из региона Средиземноморья, о первых раскопках археологических памятников Крыма, этнографических наблюдениях корреспондентов. При отсутствии практики составления археологических отчетов в изучаемый период, публикации в прессе отчасти их з
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19

Rusiaieva, Maryna. "Terracotta goddess busts with corymbs from Olbia Pontica of the Hellenistic period." Text and Image: Essential Problems in Art History, no. 1 (2021): 5–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.17721/2519-4801.2021.1.01.

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Four terracotta busts of a woman with unique attributes were unearthed in Olbia during excavations of 1936 and 1959. The attributes include a cone-shaped bowl on the head, corymbs in the hair, a taenia on the forehead and floral décor. For a long time, scholars considered the woman a personification of goddess Demeter. At the beginning of the 21st century, the Danish scholar Pia Guldager Bilde was the first to change this attribution to Ariadne, Dionysus’ wife, based on five small fragments of similar busts found during N. O. Leipunskaia’s excavations in the sector of the «Lower town: North» (
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