Excavations of an ancient settlement continue under Kerch. video. A new wave of archaeological excavations in Kerch Kubrick and the steamboat

Archaeologists received an invaluable gift during the construction of the Crimean Bridge. An entire ancient village was discovered on the site on the Kerch side. According to scientists, the settlement dates back to the end of the fifth century BC.

As researchers delve into the mysteries ancient world, builders are adjusting the project. Railroad approach will be moved to preserve the unique estate. This will not affect the delivery deadline in any way.

Literally across the street from modern residential buildings is the outskirts of the ancient world. The estate of the late 5th century BC - the time when the Bosporan kings dominated this territory and worshiped the ancient Greek gods.

The estate was, as it were, separated from the outside world. The windows of all buildings - there were 40 of them - looked out only onto the internal paved courtyards. Judging by the area - about five thousand square meters, aristocrats lived here. This is evidenced by the found fragments of luxurious tiles for that time, and whole scatterings of coins with relief minting. Next to the tables on which grapes were crushed, scientists found Aegean amphorae and well-preserved ceramics - wine cups coated with black varnish, presumably brought from Attica.

“In front of us is a black-glazed saucer, almost whole, the rim is slightly chipped. Imported tableware. At the bottom of this saucer is a scratched name or wish,” says Alexander Bonin, a specialist at the Institute of Archeology of the Russian Academy of Sciences.

It was here, on the approach to the Crimean Bridge, that according to the project a new railway was supposed to pass, a section 18 kilometers long. Archaeologists who were conducting research before construction stumbled upon the ancient monument. Now the route will be moved - the rails will bypass the estate. The developers assure that this will not affect the completion date. Trains on the Crimean Bridge will be launched on time - in December next year. And here scientists will continue excavations - they need to get to the lower layer to find out who was the first owner.

“I don’t know any analogies either in Ukraine or in Russia. In the entire Black Sea region, no one has dug anything like this in rural areas. This is the first time we have had an estate of such size, such complexity of layout and such preservation. There would be no construction railway“We would never have had such opportunities to carry out work on such an area, at such a pace, with so many people,” said Alexander Maslennikov, head of the field research department at the Institute of Archeology of the Russian Academy of Sciences.

A great rarity, scientists say, is that the artifacts have been preserved in almost the same condition in which their owners left them. Archaeologists especially note the skill of the architects.

“The estate is located on a slope. Naturally, during the rains there was a powerful drainage system, and the residents of this estate built a rather complex and extensive drainage system. We have not encountered such a system before,” said Sergei Vnukov, leading researcher at the Institute of Archeology of the Russian Academy of Sciences.

But various antiquities are found regularly during the construction of the Crimean Bridge - in two years, more than one hundred thousand valuable exhibits have already been transferred to museums.

The more construction sites, the more finds. In Crimea, major infrastructure projects have been implemented in recent years - new roads are being developed, power plants are being built, and airports are being reconstructed. Archaeological excavations, which are carried out before construction begins, radically change scientists’ understanding of the history of the peninsula. found out what researchers discovered in 2017.

Legacy of the Golden Horde

Scientists made the most discoveries during the preparation for the construction of the Tavrida highway. The highway will connect Crimean Bridge, Kerch, Simferopol and Sevastopol - that is, it will become the main transport artery of the peninsula. In the meantime, archaeologists are seizing the moment and studying what the earth has hidden for centuries. However, in the Bakhchisarai region it shocked even experienced specialists. Here, in early December, expedition members found a burial in which there were at least 70 headless human skeletons. They tentatively date back to the 10th-13th centuries and date back to the times of the Golden Horde, when the peninsula survived the invasion of the Mongol-Tatars.

“During the excavations on the mound, an unexpected discovery was made. Two ditches were discovered that were literally filled with bones. The remains of more than 70 people, all without skulls, with traces of cuts. The corpses were dumped chaotically. These are victims of mass execution,” explained the head of the Crimean new-building archaeological expedition, leading researcher at the department of classical archeology at the Institute of Archeology of the Russian Academy of Sciences.

Scientists did not find the skulls of the victims. Archaeologists suggest that the heads of the captives were impaled on stakes and put on public display or stacked in pyramids, as was customary among some peoples. “The 12th-14th centuries were harsh times, but this is only an assumption,” Vnukov said. It will be possible to more accurately date the burial ground after analyzing two arrowheads found in the ditches.

Frame: Kryminform / YouTube

Another loud - and not so terrifying - discovery took place in the center of Simferopol in November. On Vorovskogo Street, a group of archaeologists find the remains of ancient engineering communications. Scientists are sure that these are traces of medieval palace complex Kalga Sultan - the second person in the Crimean Khanate.

Scientists have found, in particular, coins, fragments of pottery and glass from the Crimean Khanate period. The head of the excavations, a researcher at the Institute of Archeology of Crimea, Emil Seydaliev, explained that the palace was discovered thanks to historical sources: “The place was identified quite a long time ago and is known to us from various historical sources. For example, the writings of Peter Simon Pallas. Initially, several pits are planned that can localize the cultural layer.” Scientists said that in one area a ceramic water pipe was preserved, which probably dates specifically to the period of the palace’s existence and could lead to a fountain or kitchen.

According to the director of the Institute of Archeology of Crimea RAS Vadim Maiko, the difficulty is that there is no information about appearance there is no structure: “Neither engravings nor other images of this palace have reached us, although scientists managed to localize its location at the beginning of the 20th century.” The deputy from Crimea promised that this object would be included in the register of monuments cultural heritage.

The oldest Russian bridge

In October, scientists from the Institute of Archeology of the Russian Academy of Sciences discovered the oldest engineering structure in Crimea. He turned out to be a guy a stone bridge, which was found in the Belogorsky district, near the village of Nekrasovo (formerly Melek). An arched single-span bridge was built across the Ashil stream (the left tributary of the Bulganak River), which flowed in this place, but to end of the 19th century century has completely dried up. The structures are made of hewn natural stone. The length of the structure is about 30 meters, the width is about 8 meters, the width of the arch is no more than 2 meters. On the sides of the bridge there was a parapet (a fence made of large hewn stone blocks), which later collapsed.

Macedonian Crypt

In the vicinity of Kerch in April of this year, archaeologists discovered an ancient Greek crypt built during the time of Alexander the Great. “This mound was erected in the second half of the 4th century BC, when Kerch Peninsula The Bosporan kingdom flourished, because the Northern Black Sea region was the main breadbasket of the entire Greek world,” explained Irina Rukavishnikova, the head of the excavations, a researcher at the Scythian-Sarmatian archeology department at the Institute of Archeology.

She added that the discovered burial reaches ten meters in length. “Most likely, a noble person was buried here. In ancient times, the crypt was covered with a mound, which, in turn, contained six more burials from different eras,” Rukavishnikova said. It is reported that a child's burial dating back to the 1st century AD was found on the steps leading to the entrance to the crypt chamber (dromos). A crushed figured vessel, a glass bottle, bronze bells and paste beads, and fragments of a bone box - pyxids were found with the buried person. An urn containing the ashes of a cremated person was found next to this burial.

Bronze and iron nails and fragments of black-gloss ceremonial tableware were found directly in the crypt. In the crypt filling layer, which dates back to the stage of reuse and subburial, there are fragments of a South Pontic pseudo-Kos amphora dating back to the second half of the 1st century BC, fragments of red-glazed pottery, a single-armed lamp, a red clay urn, two faience pendants in the form of a scarab and a demon.

Kubrick and steamboat

However, not only monuments of distant antiquity were discovered. In November, on the Malakhov Kurgan in Sevastopol, road builders accidentally found the personnel quarters of battery number 111 under the command of Lieutenant Commander Alexei Matyukhin, who held the defense of the slopes of Sevastopol Bay during the Great Patriotic War. In the vicinity, four cockpits, two large cellars, as well as three positions of anti-aircraft DShK (mounted heavy machine gun) and two 45-mm cannons in pillboxes were found. Rescuers promised to participate in excavations at the fortification to ensure safety.

In April, off the coast of Crimea, the steamer Boy Federsen (formerly "Kharkov") sank during the Great Patriotic War, which, presumably, was exporting valuables from the occupied German army peninsula. The ship was found by a Russian underwater research expedition between Sevastopol and Cape Tarkhankut. In August 1943, Boy Federsen was traveling as part of a convoy from Crimea, was attacked by Soviet naval aviation, damaged by torpedoes and aerial bombs, and sank.

In just one year, 80 archaeological discoveries were made in the vicinity of the future Tavrida highway alone. Experts say Crimea is a golden age of archaeological research. “This is due to large projects that are currently being implemented. Once upon a time something similar happened during the construction of the North Crimean Canal (in 1961-1971), although now the scale is larger, associated with huge infrastructure projects,” emphasizes Vyacheslav Zarubin, deputy chairman of the Crimean government’s state committee for the protection of cultural heritage. According to him, the Ministry of Culture of the Russian Federation issued 124 permits (open sheets) for archaeological excavations on the peninsula. “It's a lot. In the period up to 2014, there were between 20 and 40 open sheets. There are quite a lot of discoveries, the museum collections are actively replenished. The finds are stored in Crimea, replenishing our Crimean collections; no one takes them anywhere,” a representative of the Crimean government assured. It is likely that new high-profile discoveries will occur in the near future, but we can already say that Crimea has become the archaeological capital of Russia.

In May - June 2017, the Crimean new-building archaeological expedition of the Institute of Archeology of the Russian Academy of Sciences (head of the expedition - Doctor of Historical Sciences S.Yu. Vnukov) carried out excavations of the Hospital mound in the city of Kerch (Fig. 1, 2). The research was carried out as part of a project to preserve monuments historical heritage falling into the construction zone. The excavations of the mound were led by a researcher at the Institute of Archives of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Ph.D. I.V. Rukavishnikova, reports the press service of the Institute of Archeology of the Russian Academy of Sciences. The Hospital Kurgan is located in the south-eastern part of Kerch in the Solnechny microdistrict, east of the Heroes of Stalingrad Highway. It is named after the former military hospital located nearby. Hospital is the largest in the chain of mounds on the central rock ridge of Yuz-Oba (One Hundred Hills - Tatar) in Kerch. The height of its soil embankment (Fig. 1) was more than 7 m, the diameter was 70 m, total area monument - approx. 13,700 sq. m. The central stratigraphic profile of the mound showed the complex structure of its mound and several periods of its formation. The mound was built in several stages, which are associated with various burial structures of the mound. In addition, in all stratigraphic sections, traces of numerous predatory diggings and trenches that damaged the mound embankment were recorded at different times. Read: Research has shown that the earliest are two burials in stone boxes (Fig. 4, right) with slab ceilings, located side by side on the same level along the north-south line. One of the boxes contained a single intact burial, the other was completely robbed in antiquity, apparently twice. In an intact burial (Fig. 5), a poorly preserved human skeleton was discovered in a wooden sarcophagus (Fig. 8), decorated with plaster ornamental overlays. The deceased was accompanied by numerous objects related to sports. These are more than 10 alabasters - special vessels for oil, which was used during training and competitions, a strigel - a sickle-shaped scraper, used to cleanse the athlete’s body of oil, sweat and dirt, as well as for massage after competitions. 150 astragalus dice were also found there. Particularly noteworthy is the painted red-figure wine jug - pelik (Fig. 9), the so-called Kerch style. Judging by these finds, in the 2nd half of the 4th century. BC. a young male athlete was buried here. The first, relatively small mound was built over these two early burials. On it, to the south and north of the burials, 2 stone altars-eskharas were installed (Fig. 7). Not far from them, fireplaces and pits with the remains of funeral feasts, performed in memory of the dead, were also discovered. Numerous fragments of painted red-figure vessels of the 4th century were found in them. BC. and other ceramics. Among them are fragments of a red-figure crater (a vessel for mixing wine and water) with images of maenads and satyrs. Read: After some time, apparently at the end of the 4th century. before. AD, a grandiose stone tomb was added to the early mound (Fig. 4), placed on the ancient surface. It was covered with an additional embankment. The tomb is an ancient crypt with a long corridor-dromos, which led to a rectangular burial chamber measuring 5.20 x 4.80 m with a stepped ceiling. The length of the dromos is about 20 m; it expands towards the entrance. The entrance to the dromos apparently faced the surface of the new mound and was designed as a stepped portal. It is laid with torn stones (Fig. 3). The inner walls of the chamber and the dromos corridor were covered with thin smoothed plaster. The later, higher mound mound, which covered the crypt, was erected in several stages as the construction of the structure progressed. This made it easier to lay the top rows of masonry walls and floors. Each level of the mound was separated from the one above it by a layer of stone chips formed during the laying of the next row of masonry of the tomb. In some places, the base of the new embankment was reinforced with a special roller made of limestone chips. Numerous fragments of containers and table vessels from the 4th–3rd centuries were found in the mound. BC. Apparently, another funeral altar-eschara, discovered in the western field of the late embankment, belongs to this crypt. Later, the crypt was repeatedly robbed, and it was also dismantled for stone. As a result, it was very badly destroyed. Nevertheless, certain architectural details of the rich decoration of the tomb have been preserved: a fragment of a frieze decorated with ovals, a pilaster capital, an architectural plaster decoration covered with blue paint. The filling also contained fragments of ceramics dating back to the 4th century. BC. and the Middle Ages. In the western part of the mound, two later burials in the basement, dating back to the turn of the era, were also discovered. For some time, the destroyed crypt stood open. One of these periods includes the most interesting schematic drawings (Fig. 6), applied to the plaster with ocher and soot, apparently in the 3rd–5th centuries. AD Battle scenes, ships, solar symbols, etc. are depicted. The style of the images is reminiscent of those in the Sabazid crypt in Kerch. Restorers from the State Hermitage and the Kerch Museum-Reserve took part in the conservation work. Read: The remains of a temporary dwelling with a hearth, built in an already destroyed dromos, date back to the Middle Ages. The small settlement “Hospital” located nearby is associated with the mound. There is reason to believe that the builders of this mound lived there. Thus, the Hospital mound is a complex multi-temporal burial complex, the main burials in which were made in the 2nd half of the 4th century. BC. The destroyed crypt discovered in it was apparently not inferior to the best examples of Hellenistic Bosporan funerary architecture and contained the burial of a representative of the top of the local society. Also of great interest are the later drawings on the walls of the crypt. Excavations of mounds of this size have not been carried out in Crimea for more than 120 years. For the first time they were carried out comprehensively, at the modern scientific level. In addition to archaeologists, anthropologists, paleozoologists, palynologists, restorers and others took part in the work. They received important information about the funeral rite of representatives of the Bosporan nobility, the funeral structures of Bosporus and the technology of their construction, about the material culture of the Bosporan kingdom in the Hellenistic era, in Roman and medieval times.

Rescue archaeological excavations of the ancient mound "Cement Slobodka-1"(mound No. 4) were completed in Kerch on the site of the future Tavrida highway. The excavations were carried out by employees of the Institute of Archeology of the Russian Academy of Sciences under the leadership of Ph.D. I.V. Rukavishnikova. Archaeologists have discovered a vaulted crypt of the Bosporan nobility of the 4th-3rd centuries. BC. and several burials of the 2nd century BC. - first centuries AD The crypt was moved to the territory of the Kerch fortress for use as a museum.
Photos are clickable, with geographical coordinates and linking to a Yandex map, 06.2017.

1. Video interview with the head of the excavations, Irina Rukavishnikova, for the Kerch-Net channel. The sound is very bad due to the strong wind, so you need to listen closely

2. View of the Cement Slobodka-1 mound from the south. A crypt between gazelles and a bulldozer. It can be seen that the Tavrida highway passes right through the mound, the photographer is standing on the future road

4. And here is the actual upper part of the crypt

5. The vaulted crypt was repeatedly robbed and destroyed, and was also reused

6. The upper part of the crypt was destroyed by fortifications from the time of the Great Patriotic War, and horse bones were also found here. Many mounds were used for military purposes, as observation points and firing points

7. The crypt of the late 4th - early 3rd century BC, belonged to the Bosporan nobility. But like many, it was reused. In the photo, archaeologists have reached the level of the secondary burial; the owner of the crypt still has to dig and dig. Pieces of a South Pontic pseudo-Kos amphora from the second half of the 1st century were found here. BC, fragments of red glaze ceramics, a single-arm lamp, a red clay urn, two faience pendants in the form of a scarab and a demon

8. Human bones and ceramic fragments

9. Far away from the house in Nizhny Solnechny microdistrict

10. View from the mound towards the Crimean Bridge

11. Industrial zone for bridge construction

14. View of the dromos (entrance corridor) and the stones covering the entrance to the crypt

15. Six more burials from different eras were found around the crypt, two of them were cremation burials

16. On the staircase of the dromos a child’s burial from the Roman period of the 1st century AD was found. Next to the remains are a crushed vessel, a glass bottle, bronze bells and beads. Here also lay a pyxis (a round jewelry box) and a funeral urn with ashes

19. View from the crypt along the future highway "Tavrida" towards the excavations of the Bronze Age settlement Gospitalny-2, the mound and the settlement Gospitalny-1, about which there will be separate articles

20. After the completion of the excavations, it was decided to move the crypt to the territory of the Kerch fortress and make it a museum. Next in the photo is the crypt in the process of being transferred. Several rows of blocks have already been transported. The crypt markings are clearly visible for subsequent collection in a new location

21. The crypt is completely cleared and the floor slabs are clearly visible. You can compare with photo 18, the crypt is one block lower

22. View of the entrance to the crypt and dromos

30. Marking for assembly. Later, when the crypt had already been transported to the fortress but had not yet been assembled, a funny thing happened with the markings. In Kerch there were heavy rains with hail and the markings began to smudge, so archaeologists had to urgently take measures to protect and restore them

Excavations continue in the village of Podmayachnoye near Golubinaya Bay ancient settlement Gleiki-2. This expedition was already carried out last year. The expedition is conducted under the leadership of Professor, Doctor of Historical Sciences, Head of the Department of Primitive Traditional Society of the Institute of Archeology of Crimea of ​​the Russian Academy of Sciences Alexander Evgenievich KISLOY. Gleiki-2 is one of the oldest settlements in Crimea. During the excavations, many artifacts were discovered there. So, for example, back in 2016, the burial of a young warrior with a large grater on his shoulder was discovered in the settlement, and last year an archaeologist managed to find elements of three boats of different models. Read: “The uniqueness of this settlement is that we don’t know such a different culture in Crimea. There is a set of artifacts that makes up the cultural fund. These are ceramics, products and we do not know from such a material cultural layer. Nowhere else, in any settlement in Crimea, do we know such ceramics with such a culture, with such a form,” Alexander Evgenievich said in an interview. This year, the expedition is trying to find even more structures that may have remained from ancient times.

An archaeological expedition near Kerch pleases researchers with new finds