L . D. Dmytrov和A. I. Furmanska发掘的中世纪比尔霍罗德拜占庭陶瓷

IF 0.3 0 ARCHAEOLOGY Arkheologiia Pub Date : 2023-09-07 DOI:10.15407/arheologia2023.03.045
I. B. Teslenko, L. V. Myronenko
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引用次数: 0

摘要

研究的重点是拜占庭陶器及其考古背景,这些考古背景来自Bilhorod (Bilhorod- dnistrovskyi,敖德萨州,乌克兰)的发掘,由L. D. Dmitrov于1945年,1947年,1949年,1950年和A. I. Furmanska于1953年领导,保存在乌克兰国家科学院考古研究所的科学库中。首先,作者着重分析了发掘现场的地层资料和陶瓷材料来源的文化层和建筑层的年代学。对钱币发现的分析表明,从13世纪末到15世纪中叶,研究地区存在住宅建筑。最新的日期特别有趣,因为之前人们认为,quarter在15世纪初就不存在了。然后,根据原材料的视觉可检测特征,从这些发掘的拜占庭进口陶瓷中确定了五个技术组的陶器,并指定了它们的时间位置、分布区域和可能的车间位置。第一类与Novy Svet (NS)类群相似(图3),属于异质同心圆Sgraffito (Sgraffito with Concentric Circles)风格族。这种陶器在黑海北部地区传播的高峰是在13世纪的最后三分之一到14世纪初之间。黑海和地中海地区的许多作坊都生产过这种陶瓷,但NS组的起源尚未查明。第二组餐具在形态和风格上变化很大(图4;5: 5 - 9;6: 1 - 8,11;7;8: 1 - 3)。它可能起源于长期运作的陶器中心,至少从13世纪末到15世纪中叶。一些装饰系列(SCC,有8字形的人物,字母组合,墨绿色的细条画和其他)可以作为13世纪末到15世纪中期不同时期的时间指标。考古研究的结果至少介绍了一些风格系列,这些风格系列允许将其起源与君士坦丁堡的陶瓷作坊联系起来,这些陶瓷作坊的遗迹是在土耳其伊斯坦布尔法提赫区Eminönü区的Sirkeci附近发现的。上面所提到的一切都是最有趣的,因为它提供了数据,以澄清这些讲习班活动的年表和其未来前景的不同类型的产品。第三组(EIW风格家族)和第五组(厨房釉面器皿)的陶瓷(图5:1 - 4和8:5)也有精确的年表,因此可以作为14世纪下半叶(15世纪初)和13世纪末(14世纪后三分之一世纪)考古背景的测年指标。这两个群体的起源尚不清楚。
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Ceramics of Medieval Bilhorod Byzantine Ware from the Excavations of L D. Dmytrov and A. I. Furmanska
The focus of the study is Byzantine pottery together with its archaeological context from the excavations of Bilhorod (Bilhorod-Dnistrovskyi, Odesa Oblast, Ukraine), led by L. D. Dmitrov in 1945, 1947, 1949, 1950, and A. I. Furmanska in 1953, which is kept in the Scientific Repository of the Institute of Archaeology of the NAS of Ukraine. First of all, the authors concentrated on the analysis of the stratigraphic data at the excavation site and the chronology of its cultural layers and building horizons, from which the ceramic material originates. An analysis of the numismatic finds showed the existence of residential buildings in the studied area from the end of the 13th century until about the middle of the 15th century. The latest date is particularly interesting, because it was previously thought that the quarter ceased to exist at the beginning of the 15th century. Then, based on the visually detectable features of the raw materials, there were identified five technological groups of earthenware pottery in the Byzantine imported ceramics from these excavations and specified their chronological position, area of distribution, and possible localisation of their workshops. The first of them is similar to the Novy Svet (NS) group (fig. 3). It belongs to the heterogenous SCC (Sgraffito with Concentric Circles) stylistic family. The peak of the spread of such pottery in the Northern Black Sea region was between the last third of the 13th — the beginning of the 14th century. Such ceramics were produced in many workshops of the Black Sea and the Mediterranean, but the origin of the NS group has not been clarified yet. The second group of tableware morphologically and stylistically quite varied (fig. 4; 5: 5—9; 6: 1—8, 11; 7; 8: 1—3). It probably originated from the pottery centres that functioned for a long time, at least from the late 13th to the mid-15th century. Some of decorative series (SCC, with 8-shaped figures, monograms, with thin strips of dark green painting and others) can be used as chronological indicators for different periods of time between late 13th to the mid-15th centuries. The results of archaeometrical study are introduced at least for some of the stylistic series that allowed associating its origin, with the ceramic workshops of Constantinople the remains of which were found in the Sirkeci neighborhood in the Eminönü quarter of the Fatih district in Istanbul, Turkey. All the mentioned above was the most interesting, because it provided data for clarifying both the chronology of the activity of these workshops and the different types of its wares in future perspectives. The ceramics of the third (the EIW stylistic family), and the fifth (kitchen glazed ware) groups (fig. 5: 1—4 and 8: 5) had also a precise chronology and so could be used as indicators for dating the archaeological contexts within the second half of the 14th — the beginning of the 15th century and the end of the 13th — the second third of the 14th century respectively. The origin of both groups is yet to be explicated.
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CiteScore
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发文量
26
审稿时长
16 weeks
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Research at the suburbs in Chernihiv in 2022 Balka Kantserka: technological aspects of pottery production Female Burial of Cherniakhiv Culture with a Red Slip Jar of Provincial Roman Production from the Shyshaky Cemetery Letters of K. K. Kościuszko-Waluszyński to K. V. Bolsunovskyi (According to the Scientific archive of The National Museum of The History of Ukraine) Ceramics of Medieval Bilhorod Byzantine Ware from the Excavations of L D. Dmytrov and A. I. Furmanska
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