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Римські бронзові черпаки у варварів Північного Причорномор’я

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dc.contributor.author Симоненко, О.В.
dc.date.accessioned 2024-10-17T17:29:33Z
dc.date.available 2024-10-17T17:29:33Z
dc.date.issued 2023
dc.identifier.citation Римські бронзові черпаки у варварів Північного Причорномор’я / О.В. Симоненко // Археологія. — 2023. — № 4. — С. 53-73. — Бібліогр.: 43 назв. — укр. uk_UA
dc.identifier.issn 0235-3490
dc.identifier.other DOI: https://doi.org/10.15407/arheologia2023.04.053
dc.identifier.uri http://dspace.nbuv.gov.ua/handle/123456789/199595
dc.description.abstract У статті розглянуто всі відомі знахідки римських бронзових черпаків у сарматських та пізньоскіфських пам’ятках на територіях України, Молдови, Румунії. Проведено типологічне визначення знахідок за відомими класифікаційними схемами, обґрунтовано датування та здійснено їх міжкультурний порівняльний аналіз. uk_UA
dc.description.abstract The paper examines all known finds of Roman bronze casseroles from the Sarmatian and Late Scythian burials in the territories of Ukraine, Moldova, and Romania. The items were classified according to relevant typological schemes, the dating of the finds was substantiated and a cross-cultural comparative analysis was carried out. Bronze casseroles, which were part of the equipment of a Roman legionary, are probably the most numerous type of Roman metal vessels found in the Sarmatian and Late Scythian burials. The typology and chronology of Roman bronze casseroles is well developed, and they are a reliable chronological marker. Roman bronze casseroles from the Sarmatian and Late Scythian burials of modern Ukraine, Moldova, and Romania have been studied in several works, but a comparative analysis of these vessels among the Sarmatians and Late Scythians of the Northern Pontic region has not yet been conducted and is one of the tasks of this work. Ten bronze casseroles have been discovered in the Sarmatian graves in modern Ukraine, Moldova and Romania and seven ones in the Late Scythian burials in the Crimea. The Sarmatian assemblages with Roman casseroles of Eggers types 137—144 in the Northern Pontic region are dated from the second half of the 1st to the mid-2nd centuries AD. It should be noted that the majority of similar vessels from Asian Sarmatia were also found in the graves dated mainly to the second half of the 1st — the first third of the 2nd centuries AD. There is a version that such casseroles got to the Sarmatians after the Bosporus-Roman war of 45—49 AD. A somewhat different picture is observed among the Late Scythians. All assemblages with Roman casseroles are dated since the mid-1st century AD (Ust-Alma, grave no. 720, Eggers type 133) until the last quarter of the same century (the rest of the assemblages of Ust-Alma and Belbek IV burial grounds). Sarmatian graves with casseroles have been accompanied by various and often expensive grave goods. The burials of the Late Scythian necropoli with bronze vessels also belonged to the wealthy members of the community. The assortment of Sarmatian and Late Scythian imported casseroles is somewhat different — the Sarmatians had no early casseroles of Eggers types 133—136, and the Late Scythians had no Gödåker type casseroles (Eggers type 144). There are no casseroles in the Late Scythian burials of the Lower Dnipro region, all finds are concentrated in the Crimea. uk_UA
dc.language.iso uk uk_UA
dc.publisher Інститут археології НАН України uk_UA
dc.relation.ispartof Археологія
dc.subject Публiкацiї археологiчного матерiалу uk_UA
dc.title Римські бронзові черпаки у варварів Північного Причорномор’я uk_UA
dc.title.alternative Roman Bronze Casseroles among the Barbarians of the Northern Pontic Region uk_UA
dc.type Article uk_UA
dc.status published earlier uk_UA
dc.identifier.udc 904.2(262.5-194.2)"652"


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