{"title":"陶里达中央博物馆金帐汗国时期釉质陶器:一件藏品归属的尝试","authors":"E. Seidaliev, Dzhemile E. Seidalieva","doi":"10.37279/2413-189x.2021.26.282-307","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"A significant collection of ceramic wares excavated at the ancient town of Solkhat in 1925–1928 under the supervision of A. S. Bashkirov, U. A. Bodaninskii, and I. N. Borozdin is lost. In 2017, the Central Museum of Tavrida organized a temporary exhibition entitled The Crimea in the Golden Horde Period. The Crimean Yurt of the Golden Horde: The Legacy of the Vanished Empire, particularly presenting the materials originating from the excavations at the ancient town of Solkhat. Among other artefacts, there were three ceramic items of the origin still not quite clear. Probably these items belonged to the collection originating from the 1920s–1930s excavations, since they were transferred to the museum collection in the Post-War Period in result of liquidation of some museum in Staryi Krym. In total, the collection in question contains 343 items in fragments or archaeologically complete forms. The collection is rather quite comprising 240 imported items. This publication presents about 50 fragments of glazed ceramic ware: table ware is the most numerous category (99.4%). A significant part of the imported ware in this collection suggests that it originated from the excavations of either a caravanserai or the architectural and archaeological complex of the madrasah-mosque of Khan Uzbek. It is also supported by fragmentary records in U. Bodaninskii’s 1928 journals. According to the primary analysis of the collection and analysis of written sources on the history of archaeological researches of Solkhat in the 1920s, there are reasons to suppose that the museum materials in question are related to the archaeological excavations by the All-Union Association for Oriental Studies and the Bakhchisarai Museum of Turkic-Tatar Culture in Staryi Krym. Perhaps following the repressions against the participants and leaders of 1925–1928archaeological researches, the museum depository in Staryi Krym was liquidated and its materials were transferred to the Central Museum of Taurida.","PeriodicalId":41183,"journal":{"name":"Materialy po Arkheologii Istorii i Etnografii Tavrii-Materials in Archaeology History and Ethnography of Tauria","volume":"1 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Glazed Ware from the Golden Horde Period in the Central Museum of Taurida: An Attempt of Attribution of a Collection\",\"authors\":\"E. Seidaliev, Dzhemile E. Seidalieva\",\"doi\":\"10.37279/2413-189x.2021.26.282-307\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"A significant collection of ceramic wares excavated at the ancient town of Solkhat in 1925–1928 under the supervision of A. S. Bashkirov, U. A. Bodaninskii, and I. N. Borozdin is lost. In 2017, the Central Museum of Tavrida organized a temporary exhibition entitled The Crimea in the Golden Horde Period. The Crimean Yurt of the Golden Horde: The Legacy of the Vanished Empire, particularly presenting the materials originating from the excavations at the ancient town of Solkhat. Among other artefacts, there were three ceramic items of the origin still not quite clear. Probably these items belonged to the collection originating from the 1920s–1930s excavations, since they were transferred to the museum collection in the Post-War Period in result of liquidation of some museum in Staryi Krym. In total, the collection in question contains 343 items in fragments or archaeologically complete forms. The collection is rather quite comprising 240 imported items. This publication presents about 50 fragments of glazed ceramic ware: table ware is the most numerous category (99.4%). A significant part of the imported ware in this collection suggests that it originated from the excavations of either a caravanserai or the architectural and archaeological complex of the madrasah-mosque of Khan Uzbek. It is also supported by fragmentary records in U. Bodaninskii’s 1928 journals. According to the primary analysis of the collection and analysis of written sources on the history of archaeological researches of Solkhat in the 1920s, there are reasons to suppose that the museum materials in question are related to the archaeological excavations by the All-Union Association for Oriental Studies and the Bakhchisarai Museum of Turkic-Tatar Culture in Staryi Krym. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
1925年至1928年,在A. S. Bashkirov、U. A. Bodaninskii和I. N. Borozdin的监督下,在索尔哈特古镇出土的一批重要陶瓷制品丢失了。2017年,塔夫里达中央博物馆举办了一场名为“金帐汗国时期的克里米亚”的临时展览。金帐汗国的克里米亚蒙古包:消失帝国的遗产,特别展示了来自索尔哈特古镇发掘的材料。在其他文物中,有三件陶瓷物品的来源尚不清楚。这些物品可能属于20世纪20年代至30年代发掘的收藏品,因为它们在战后时期由于斯塔伊克里姆的一些博物馆的清算而被转移到博物馆收藏。总的来说,有问题的藏品包括343件碎片或考古完整的物品。这个收藏品相当多,包括240件进口物品。本出版物展示了大约50个釉面陶瓷碎片:餐具是数量最多的类别(99.4%)。这批进口陶器的重要部分表明,它们要么来自商队驿站的发掘,要么来自乌兹别克汗清真寺的建筑和考古建筑群。这也得到了U. Bodaninskii 1928年期刊中零碎记录的支持。根据对20世纪20年代索尔哈特考古研究历史的文献资料收集和分析的初步分析,有理由认为所涉及的博物馆资料与全联盟东方研究协会和位于斯塔伊克里姆的巴赫奇萨莱突厥-鞑靼文化博物馆的考古发掘有关。也许是在1925 - 1928年考古研究的参与者和领导者遭到镇压之后,斯塔里克里姆的博物馆储藏室被清算,其材料被转移到陶里达中央博物馆。
Glazed Ware from the Golden Horde Period in the Central Museum of Taurida: An Attempt of Attribution of a Collection
A significant collection of ceramic wares excavated at the ancient town of Solkhat in 1925–1928 under the supervision of A. S. Bashkirov, U. A. Bodaninskii, and I. N. Borozdin is lost. In 2017, the Central Museum of Tavrida organized a temporary exhibition entitled The Crimea in the Golden Horde Period. The Crimean Yurt of the Golden Horde: The Legacy of the Vanished Empire, particularly presenting the materials originating from the excavations at the ancient town of Solkhat. Among other artefacts, there were three ceramic items of the origin still not quite clear. Probably these items belonged to the collection originating from the 1920s–1930s excavations, since they were transferred to the museum collection in the Post-War Period in result of liquidation of some museum in Staryi Krym. In total, the collection in question contains 343 items in fragments or archaeologically complete forms. The collection is rather quite comprising 240 imported items. This publication presents about 50 fragments of glazed ceramic ware: table ware is the most numerous category (99.4%). A significant part of the imported ware in this collection suggests that it originated from the excavations of either a caravanserai or the architectural and archaeological complex of the madrasah-mosque of Khan Uzbek. It is also supported by fragmentary records in U. Bodaninskii’s 1928 journals. According to the primary analysis of the collection and analysis of written sources on the history of archaeological researches of Solkhat in the 1920s, there are reasons to suppose that the museum materials in question are related to the archaeological excavations by the All-Union Association for Oriental Studies and the Bakhchisarai Museum of Turkic-Tatar Culture in Staryi Krym. Perhaps following the repressions against the participants and leaders of 1925–1928archaeological researches, the museum depository in Staryi Krym was liquidated and its materials were transferred to the Central Museum of Taurida.