Города и степи Крыма в XIII-XIV вв. по археологическим свидетельствам

Nomadic Comans or Kipchaks, who are called the Polovcians in Russian chronicles, conquered the steppes of the Northern Black Sea littoral, which had been in the possessions of the Pechenegs in the middle of the 11th century. On the Crimean plain the Comas - Polovcians made their burials in mounds of...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Материалы по археологии, истории и этнографии Таврии
Date:2003
Main Author: Айбабин, А.И.
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: Кримське відділення Інституту сходознавства ім. А.Ю. Кримського НАН України 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:https://nasplib.isofts.kiev.ua/handle/123456789/170138
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Journal Title:Digital Library of Periodicals of National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine
Cite this:Города и степи Крыма в XIII-XIV вв. по археологическим свидетельствам / А.И. Айбабин // Материалы по археологии, истории и этнографии Таврии: Сб. научн. тр. — 2003. — Вып. X. — С. 277-306. — Бібліогр.: 87 назв. — рос.

Institution

Digital Library of Periodicals of National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine
_version_ 1862714613703901184
author Айбабин, А.И.
author_facet Айбабин, А.И.
citation_txt Города и степи Крыма в XIII-XIV вв. по археологическим свидетельствам / А.И. Айбабин // Материалы по археологии, истории и этнографии Таврии: Сб. научн. тр. — 2003. — Вып. X. — С. 277-306. — Бібліогр.: 87 назв. — рос.
collection DSpace DC
container_title Материалы по археологии, истории и этнографии Таврии
description Nomadic Comans or Kipchaks, who are called the Polovcians in Russian chronicles, conquered the steppes of the Northern Black Sea littoral, which had been in the possessions of the Pechenegs in the middle of the 11th century. On the Crimean plain the Comas - Polovcians made their burials in mounds of earlier barrows. In those graves there was a horse skeleton or a staffed horse lying near a human skeleton, the cranium of which was oriented to the east (PI. 1,2,7, 8,25). The author dates these burials back to the end of the 11th -13th centuries. According to the written and archaeological sources, in the period when the Codex Cumanicus was compiled, i.e. in the 13th century - the 1330s, Krym-Solkhat, Soldaia, Vosporo (Kerch) and Kaffa were large trading cities, in contrast to depopulated Cherson. All the aforementioned cities had, among others. Coman population. There were Catholic monasteries in each of the four cities. One of these cloisters could collect linguistic material for the Codex Cumanicus.
first_indexed 2025-12-07T17:52:37Z
format Article
fulltext
id nasplib_isofts_kiev_ua-123456789-170138
institution Digital Library of Periodicals of National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine
issn 2413-189X
language Russian
last_indexed 2025-12-07T17:52:37Z
publishDate 2003
publisher Кримське відділення Інституту сходознавства ім. А.Ю. Кримського НАН України
record_format dspace
spelling Айбабин, А.И.
2020-07-07T10:24:57Z
2020-07-07T10:24:57Z
2003
Города и степи Крыма в XIII-XIV вв. по археологическим свидетельствам / А.И. Айбабин // Материалы по археологии, истории и этнографии Таврии: Сб. научн. тр. — 2003. — Вып. X. — С. 277-306. — Бібліогр.: 87 назв. — рос.
2413-189X
https://nasplib.isofts.kiev.ua/handle/123456789/170138
Nomadic Comans or Kipchaks, who are called the Polovcians in Russian chronicles, conquered the steppes of the Northern Black Sea littoral, which had been in the possessions of the Pechenegs in the middle of the 11th century. On the Crimean plain the Comas - Polovcians made their burials in mounds of earlier barrows. In those graves there was a horse skeleton or a staffed horse lying near a human skeleton, the cranium of which was oriented to the east (PI. 1,2,7, 8,25). The author dates these burials back to the end of the 11th -13th centuries. According to the written and archaeological sources, in the period when the Codex Cumanicus was compiled, i.e. in the 13th century - the 1330s, Krym-Solkhat, Soldaia, Vosporo (Kerch) and Kaffa were large trading cities, in contrast to depopulated Cherson. All the aforementioned cities had, among others. Coman population. There were Catholic monasteries in each of the four cities. One of these cloisters could collect linguistic material for the Codex Cumanicus.
ru
Кримське відділення Інституту сходознавства ім. А.Ю. Кримського НАН України
Материалы по археологии, истории и этнографии Таврии
Археология
Города и степи Крыма в XIII-XIV вв. по археологическим свидетельствам
Towns and Steppes of the Crimea in the 13th - 14th Centuries According to Archaeological Data
Article
published earlier
spellingShingle Города и степи Крыма в XIII-XIV вв. по археологическим свидетельствам
Айбабин, А.И.
Археология
title Города и степи Крыма в XIII-XIV вв. по археологическим свидетельствам
title_alt Towns and Steppes of the Crimea in the 13th - 14th Centuries According to Archaeological Data
title_full Города и степи Крыма в XIII-XIV вв. по археологическим свидетельствам
title_fullStr Города и степи Крыма в XIII-XIV вв. по археологическим свидетельствам
title_full_unstemmed Города и степи Крыма в XIII-XIV вв. по археологическим свидетельствам
title_short Города и степи Крыма в XIII-XIV вв. по археологическим свидетельствам
title_sort города и степи крыма в xiii-xiv вв. по археологическим свидетельствам
topic Археология
topic_facet Археология
url https://nasplib.isofts.kiev.ua/handle/123456789/170138
work_keys_str_mv AT aibabinai gorodaistepikrymavxiiixivvvpoarheologičeskimsvidetelʹstvam
AT aibabinai townsandsteppesofthecrimeainthe13th14thcenturiesaccordingtoarchaeologicaldata