Papers by Teodora Bogdanova
Baralis A., Nedev D., Bogdanova T., « Ateliers et zones artisanales à Apollonia du Pont et dans les établissements de l’Ouest de la mer Noire », in de Casenove O., Esposito A., Monteix N., Pollini A. (éds), Travailler à l’ombre du temple (...), Centre Jean Bérard, Naples, 2023, p. 211-238. Le « Pont Gauche » constitue le premier espace de colonisation dans la zone pontique. C’est en ef... more Le « Pont Gauche » constitue le premier espace de colonisation dans la zone pontique. C’est en effet le long du littoral occidental, entre Danube et Bug, que les Milésiens implantent leurs plus anciennes colonies avant d’étendre progressivement leur emprise vers le Sud, en direction du Bosphore. Malgré l’ancienneté des recherches menées à Olbia et à Istros, l’occupation de la plupart des sites antiques par l’habitat moderne a longtemps limité nos connaissances à ces deux seules cités. Toutefois, l’essor récent d’une politique patrimoniale assise sur la conduite systématique de fouilles de sauvetage permet d’étendre à présent notre regard à d’autres établissements, comme Apollonia du Pont. Les données acquises sur cette dernière colonie esquissent l’organisation d’une communauté dont l’installation apparaît étroitement liée à l’exploitation des mines de cuivre de la chaîne du Medni Rid avant que les transformations à l’œuvre dans la région et sur son territoire ne lui permettent de diversifier ses activités. Elles complètent un dossier relativement conséquent qui autorise désormais une étude comparative de la structure urbaine de ces trois colonies majeures de mer Noire en analysant la diffusion en leur sein et à leurs abords des ateliers artisanaux.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Dialogues d'histoire ancienne, 2010
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Archaeopress, Oxford., 2021
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
The first chemical results already obtained on representative finds of red-figured vases from Apo... more The first chemical results already obtained on representative finds of red-figured vases from Apollonia decorated in the Kerch style have revealed a non-Attic chemical pattern, thus clearly pointing to the fact that Athens had no monopoly in the manufacture of these somewhat “kitsch” wares smothered in gilt and added colours. Even if most of our samples belonging to the Kerch style are falling together with other black-glazed wares into a geochemical group differing from the local one of common wares, it might well be only for technological requirements. Further lab investigations will now try to determine whether we are faced with another local group or with imports from some other Pontic centre of manufacture, Panticapeum present-day Kerch coming a priori to mind high up among the possible candidates!
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
M. Manoledakis (ed.), The Black Sea in the Light of New Archaeological Data and Theoretical Approaches, Oxford, 2016, p. 153-179, 2016
Since the early works of K. Hablitz on the rural developments surrounding Chersonesos, the Black ... more Since the early works of K. Hablitz on the rural developments surrounding Chersonesos, the Black Sea remains a reference area
for the organization of territories in the ancient Greek colonies. These observations are, however, focused on the northern shores,
leaving other Pontic coasts almost unexplored, with the exception of Istros. Excavations around this city have resulted in the innovative studies of P. Alexandrescu on the relationship between the Milesian colony and its immediate hinterland, raising the question of the internal structure of its chôra. In order to provide a first overview on this topic, the Aix-Marseille University, in cooperation with the National Archaeological Institute of Sofia and the Romanian Academy, launched in 2010 a new research program based on a comparative study of the territories of two Greek settlements: Orgame in Romania and Apollonia Pontica in Bulgaria. Based on a multidisciplinary approach, this programme – now headed by the Louvre Museum and successively granted by the French national research agency and the French Foreign office – has shed light on the variety of situations prevailing on the Western Pontic coast, from the mouth of the Danube to the Thracian coast. Around Apollonia, five years of archaeological excavations and surveys highlighted the several steps followed in the formation of its territory, as well as the internal organization of the city’s closest areas, gradually revealing the origins of its early prosperity.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Dialogue d'Histoire Ancienne n° 40.2 (2014), p. 241-256
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
PhD Thesis Summary by Teodora Bogdanova
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Conference Presentations by Teodora Bogdanova
VI International Congress on Black Sea Antiquities, Constanta, Romania, 2017. Dedicated to Prof. Sir John Boardman to celebrate his exceptional achievements and his 90th birthday. , 2017
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Short papers by Teodora Bogdanova
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Uploads
Papers by Teodora Bogdanova
for the organization of territories in the ancient Greek colonies. These observations are, however, focused on the northern shores,
leaving other Pontic coasts almost unexplored, with the exception of Istros. Excavations around this city have resulted in the innovative studies of P. Alexandrescu on the relationship between the Milesian colony and its immediate hinterland, raising the question of the internal structure of its chôra. In order to provide a first overview on this topic, the Aix-Marseille University, in cooperation with the National Archaeological Institute of Sofia and the Romanian Academy, launched in 2010 a new research program based on a comparative study of the territories of two Greek settlements: Orgame in Romania and Apollonia Pontica in Bulgaria. Based on a multidisciplinary approach, this programme – now headed by the Louvre Museum and successively granted by the French national research agency and the French Foreign office – has shed light on the variety of situations prevailing on the Western Pontic coast, from the mouth of the Danube to the Thracian coast. Around Apollonia, five years of archaeological excavations and surveys highlighted the several steps followed in the formation of its territory, as well as the internal organization of the city’s closest areas, gradually revealing the origins of its early prosperity.
PhD Thesis Summary by Teodora Bogdanova
Conference Presentations by Teodora Bogdanova
Short papers by Teodora Bogdanova
for the organization of territories in the ancient Greek colonies. These observations are, however, focused on the northern shores,
leaving other Pontic coasts almost unexplored, with the exception of Istros. Excavations around this city have resulted in the innovative studies of P. Alexandrescu on the relationship between the Milesian colony and its immediate hinterland, raising the question of the internal structure of its chôra. In order to provide a first overview on this topic, the Aix-Marseille University, in cooperation with the National Archaeological Institute of Sofia and the Romanian Academy, launched in 2010 a new research program based on a comparative study of the territories of two Greek settlements: Orgame in Romania and Apollonia Pontica in Bulgaria. Based on a multidisciplinary approach, this programme – now headed by the Louvre Museum and successively granted by the French national research agency and the French Foreign office – has shed light on the variety of situations prevailing on the Western Pontic coast, from the mouth of the Danube to the Thracian coast. Around Apollonia, five years of archaeological excavations and surveys highlighted the several steps followed in the formation of its territory, as well as the internal organization of the city’s closest areas, gradually revealing the origins of its early prosperity.