Bauer / Glatz / Sherratt | Archaeology of the Early Black Sea Region | Buch | 978-1-138-78054-5 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 272 Seiten, Format (B × H): 152 mm x 229 mm

Reihe: Routledge Studies in Archaeology

Bauer / Glatz / Sherratt

Archaeology of the Early Black Sea Region

Connectivity and Remoteness
Erscheinungsjahr 2026
ISBN: 978-1-138-78054-5
Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd

Connectivity and Remoteness

Buch, Englisch, 272 Seiten, Format (B × H): 152 mm x 229 mm

Reihe: Routledge Studies in Archaeology

ISBN: 978-1-138-78054-5
Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd


The study of the pre-classical Black Sea has historically been both regionally fragmented and peripheral to European, Mediterranean, Eurasian, and Near Eastern archaeological traditions. Unlike the Mediterranean, the Black Sea is traditionally conceived of as a boundary or obstacle to interaction, rather than as a catalyst for cultural contact and exchange. Lacking almost completely from the literature, both theoretically and through archaeological case studies, is the exploration of sea-based connections in this region.

This is the first book to investigate inter-regional contact and interaction in and around the early Black Sea, as well as potential insularity or remoteness from it – both important themes in archaeological research. A central emphasis here lies on the material culture of connections and the significance of local social contexts. Each author in this collection addresses a range of key issues, including archaeological evidence for cultural connectivity or isolation; the means through which interactions took place and the physical parameters enabling/constraining such interactions; and the motivations and effects of inter-regional exchange for the societies concerned. This cutting-edge volume establishes the study of the pre-classical Black Sea as a significant field of research in its own right, demonstrated through some of the best recent research in the field.

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Weitere Infos & Material


1. Connectivity and Remoteness in the Early Black Sea: An Introduction Claudia Glatz, Susan Sherratt, and Alexander Bauer 2. Black Sea Level Changes and Adaptation Strategies of Prehistoric Populations during the Last 30 KA Valentina Yanko­Hombach 3. Cultural Connections on the Late Neolithic Bulgarian Black Sea Littoral: The Site of Krushaka in the Bourgas Region Krassimir Leshtakov 4. Marginal Landscapes and Connected Societies: Assessing Connections of the West-Central Turkish Black Region in the Early to Mid Holocene Bleda Düring 5. Conflict or Coexistence: Steppe and Agricultural Societies in the Early Copper Age of the Northwest Black Sea Area Blagoje Govedarica 6. Black Sea Steppe in the Copper Age: Between the Balkans and the Caucasus Yuri Rassamakin 7. Handmade Burnished Wares of Sinop, Turkey: Evidence of a Bronze Age Black Sea Community? Alexander Bauer 8. Material Connections and the Bronze Age Societies of the West­Central Turkish Black Sea Region Claudia Glatz 9. Space and Distance in the Western Black Sea Area in the Late Bronze Age Bogdan Athanassov 10. Questions Concerning the Black Sea during the Late Bronze/Early Iron Age Transition (late 13th to 7th centuries BC) Susan Sherratt 11. The Necropoleis of the Colchis­Culture Joni Apakidze 12. Cide and its Surroundings During the Iron Age T. Emre Serifoglu 13. Iron Age in Sinop Promontory, Turkey: New Results from the Sinop Regional Archaeological Project Owen Doonan 14. Black Sea Fishing: Local Practices and Interregional Connectivity Antonia Santangelo 15. A Tale of Two Seas: Modelling Ancient Travel in the Black and Caspian Seas Regions Toby Wilkinson 16. The Early Black Sea in Wider Context: A Concluding Discussion Philip L. Kohl


Claudia Glatz is a Lecturer in Mediterranean Archaeology at the University of Glasgow, UK. Her main research interests include archaeological approaches to empire, culture contact, the relationship of craft production and political power, as well as settlement and landscape studies, especially in border and transitional regions. She co-directs the Cide Archaeological Project, a survey on the west-central Turkish Black Sea coast, and the Sirwan Regional Project in the Kurdish Region of Iraq.

Susan Sherratt is a Research Fellow in the Department of Archaeology, Sheffield University, UK, and one of the world’s preeminent experts in the interaction of pre- and protohistoric societies in the Bronze Age Mediterranean and surrounding regions. One of her current research projects is The Linking up of the Mediterranean, 3000-700 BC. She has published extensively on various aspects of early interaction networks, their local and large-scale consequences. Dr. Sherratt is currently involved in fieldwork on the central Turkish Black Sea as a member of the Sinop Regional Archaeological Project.

Alexander Bauer is an Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Queens College and the Graduate Center, CUNY, USA. He co-directs the Sinop Regional Archaeological Project (SRAP) in the Black Sea region of Sinop, Turkey, with the support of the National Endowment for the Humanities and the National Georgraphic Society. His research focus is on Bronze Age cultural interconnections across the Black Sea region, a subject on which he has published several articles. He has organized several conferences and workshops on a variety of topics and has been the Editor-on-Chief of the International Journal of Cultural Property since 2005.



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