BSS 1
The Cauldron of Ariantas, Studies Presented to A.N. Sceglov on the Occasion of His 70th Birthday

Edited by Pia Guldager Bilde, Jakob Munk Højte &
Vladimir F. Stolba
Aarhus University Press 2003
In this book 23 scholars from Ukraine, France, Great Britain, Russia, and
Denmark celebrate the 70th birthday of the archaeologist, A.N. Sceglov, who is
one of the senior professors at the St Petersburg State University.
Sceglov is a pioneer in the investigation and history of ancient Crimea,
as well as a widely recognized authority in the study of northern Black Sea
antiquities. The Tarchankut expedition established by Sceglov in 1959 explored a
number of sites in the remote chora of Tauric Chersonesos. Panskoye I ranks
among the most prominent of them, and Sceglov has devoted more than 30 years of
his life to this unique and exceptionally well-preserved Greek settlement.
The contributions to this publication shed new light on a vast range of
Black Sea issues: from the earliest settlements and their functions to the
formation of a Russian science of classical antiquities. In focus are the
important Greek cities Histira, Olbia, Chersonesos, and Herakleia Pontike, their
material culture and relationship to their own rural territory and to their
non-Greek neighbours.
Until now most research in this area has been
conducted solely by Russians and published in Russian, but now the rest of the
world can get a glimpse of the Black Sea area during antiquity.
Table of contents and download of pdf-files
Cover
Colophon (p. 1-4)
Contents (p. 5-6)
Preface (p. 7-10)
Bibliography of
Alexander Nikolaevič Ščeglov
Compiled by Lev M.
Vseviov (p. 11-27)
Jaroslav V.
Domanskij & Konstantin K. Marčenko
Towards
Determining the Chief Function of the Settlement of Borysthenes (p. 29-36)
Marina Ju.
Vachtina
Archaic Buildings of
Porthmion (p. 37-54)
George Hinge
Scythian and Spartan Analogies in Herodotos’
Representation:
Rites of Initiation and Kinship Groups (p. 55-74)
Nadežda A. Gavriljuk
The Graeco-Scyhtian
Slave-trade in the 6th and 5th Centuries BC (p. 75-85)
Alexandru
Avram
An Istrian Dedication to Leto (p. 87-91)
Anna S. Rusjaeva
The Main Development of
the Western Temenos of Olbia in the Pontos (p. 93-116)
Valentina V. Krapivina
Bronze Weights from
Olbia (p. 117-130)
Galina M.
Nikolaenko
The Chersonesean Chora in Light of the New
Investigations in the Herakleian Peninsula (1991-2003) (p. 131-144)
Sergej
Ju. Saprykin
The Chersonesean Farmhouse on Land-plot no.
49 on the Lighthouse Point (p. 145-163)
Pia Guldager
Bilde
Wandering Images: From Taurian (and Chersonesean)
Parthenosto (Artemis) Tauropolos and (Artemis)
Persike (p. 165-183)
Vitalij M. Zubar’ &
Evelina A. Kravčenko
Interpretation of a Group of
Archaeological Sites in the Vicinity of Tauric
Chersonesos (p. 185-195)
David Braund
The Bosporan Kings and Classical Athens: Imagined Breaches
in a Cordial Relationship (Aisch. 3.171-172; [Dem.]
34.36) (p. 197-208)
Evgenij A.
Molev
Bosporos and Chersonesos in the 4th-2nd Centuries
BC (p. 209-215)
Jurij A.
Vinogradov
Two Waves of Sarmatian Migrations in the
Black Sea Steppes during the Pre-Roman Period (p.217-226)
Sergej D.
Kryžickij
On the Problem of the Reliability of
Reconstructions of Greek Architecture in the Northern
Black Sea Region (p. 227-237)
Pierre Dupont
Crucible or Damper? (p. 239-245)
Sergej Ju.
Monachov
Amphorae from Unidentified Centres in the North
Aegean (p. 247-259)
Vladimir I. Kac
A New Chronology for the Ceramic Stamps of Herakleia
Pontike (p. 261-278)
Vladimir F.
Stolba
Some Reflections on the Amphora Stamps with the Name of Amastris (p. 279-301)
Irina V.
Tunkina
The Formation of a Russian Science of Classical
Antiquities of Southern Russia in the 18th and Early 19th century (p. 303-364)
Jakob Munk Højte
The Statue Bases of
Claudius. A Reassessment of The Portraiture of Claudius by Meriwether Stuart (p. 365-388)
Index Locorum (p. 389-394)
Contributors (p. 395-397)