CONTACT ZONES of EUROPE from the 3Rd Mill. BC to the 1St Mill. AD International Scientific Conference Humboldt Colleague Moscow, 29 September – 2 October, 2017

CONTACT ZONES of EUROPE from the 3Rd Mill. BC to the 1St Mill. AD International Scientific Conference Humboldt Colleague Moscow, 29 September – 2 October, 2017

CONTACT ZONES OF EUROPE from the 3rd mill. BC to the 1st mill. AD International Scientific Conference Humboldt Colleague Moscow, 29 September – 2 October, 2017 PRELIMINARY PUBLICATION OF CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS CONTENTS / INHALT I. Lectures Dmitry AFINOGENOV (Russia) – Cimmerians in Asia Minor: Once More?................................................5 Irina ARZHANTSEVA (Russia) – “The Guzz Desert”: Ustyurt Plateau – Contact Area of Eurasia…….….6 Alla BUYSKIKH (Ukraine) – Usual and Rear Imports at Borysthenes in Greek Colonization of the North- Western Pontus………………………………………………………………………………..…..7 Victor COJOCARU (Rumänien) – Die Proxenie als Instrument der „Aussenpolitik“ im Kontext der auswärtigen Beziehungen pontischer Staaten..................................................................................8 Altay COŞKUN (Kanada) – Über den Hintergrund der Verbreitung des Kybele-Kultes im Westen des Mittelmeerraumes..........................................................................................................................13 Pavel DONEC (Ukraine) – Grenzland als Synergie- und Dysergiezone.....................................................19 Andrey EPIMAKHOV (Russia) – “Ex oriente lux”? Bronze Age Chariot. Genesis and Evolution of the Tradition…………………………………………………………………………………………24 Peter FUNKE (Deutschland) – Die griechische Poliswelt und ihre Nachbarn in Nordwestgriechenland..30 Oleg GABELKO (Russia) – The “Tylian” Kingdom of the Galatians in Thrace: Searching for a Phantom?.......................................................................................................................................31 Stanislav GRIGORIEV (Russia) – Ural-European Parallels in the Eneolithic and the Bronze Age………37 Lavinia GRUMEZA (Romania) – CRFB R1. Trade, Gifts and Long-Distance Contacts in ‘Sarmatian’ Barbaricum, West of Roman Dacia…………………………………………………………..….41 Heinrich HÄRKE (Germany) – Contact, Conflict, Co-existence: Multiple Monocultures and Dual Contact Zones in the British Isles, 5th – 8th centuries AD………………………………………….……..44 Eszter ISTVÁNOVITS, Valéria KULCSÁR (Hungary) – Sarmatians on the Borders of the Roman Empire. Steppe Traditions and Imported Cultural Phenomena…………………………………….….….46 Askold IVANCHIK (Russia) – ‘Crimean Scythia’ between East and West. Preliminary Results of the RSF-Project....................................................................................................................................54 Elke KAISER (Deutschland), Eugen SAVA (Moldawien) – Die Siedlungen mit „Aschehügeln“ der späten Bronzezeit in der Waldsteppe und Steppe des nordwestlichen Schwarzmeerraums.....................55 Vladimir KASHCHEEV (Russia) – Romans in Greece – Greeks in Rome: Cultural Confrontation and Interaction between the Greek East and the Roman West in the 2nd c. BC……………………...62 Flemming KAUL (Denmark) – Middle Bronze Age Long Distance Exchange through Europe and Beyond. Beads of Egyptian and Mesopotamian Glass Reaching Denmark in 14th Century BC..64 Vladimir KULAKOV (Russland) – Die Prußen und die Welt der Steppen: die Konflikte und Kulturentlehnungen Zusammenfassung........................................................................................72 th th Vakhtang LICHELI (Georgia) – Intellectual Innovations in Georgia (11 – 9 c. BC)…………….…….83 John LUND (Denmark) – Cyprus as a Contact Zone in the 1st Millennium AD……………………..….88 Igor MAKAROV (Russia) – Chersonesus Taurica and the Cities of the Southern Black Sea in Antiquity: Epigraphic Evidence…………………………………………………………………………….96 Vladimir MAZHUGA (Russland) – Umdeutung der Begriffe der Griechischen Philosophie und Rhetorik bei den Römischen Grammatikern zur Zeit des Prinzipats...........................................................97 Vladimir NAPOL’SKIKH (Russland) – Palaeoeuropäische, para-indogermanische und para-uralische Gruppen in der Urgeschichte Zentral- und Ost-Europas (III-I Jts. v. Chr.).................................103 2 Salvatore ORTISI (Germany) – Mobility and Migration in the Roman Border Provinces. The Cultural Identity of Raetia on the Upper Danube……………………………………………….……….104 Dmitriy PANCHENKO (Russia) – New Cultural Elements of European Origin in the Dark Ages Attica.105 Natalia PETLYUCHENKO (Ukraine) – Kontaktzone: Das Definitionsproblem in Geisteswissenschaften.................................................................................................................109 Aleksandr PODOSSINOV (Russland) – Der Einfluss der griechischen Zivilisation auf die Bräuche und Sitten der „barbarischen“ Skythen in den Augen griechischer Autoren (insbesondere Strabo)..110 Tadeusz SARNOWSKI (Poland) – Funny Side of Contact Zones between the Barbarians, Greeks and Romans. Peregrinatio Taurica of the Roman Švejk from Novae………………………………116 Nikita SAVELIEV (Russia) – Southern Urals in the 1 Millennium BC as a Special Contact Zone in the Far East of Europe…………………………………………………………………………………..119 Svetlana SHARAPOVA (Russia) – Contacting Europe and Nomadic World: the Life and Life-style of the Sargat Forest-steppe Population in the Trans-Urals and Western Siberia……………………..126 Tatyana SMEKALOVA (Russia) – New Results of Natural Science Investigations at Late Scythian Sites in the Crimean Foothills…………………………………………………………………………..132 Katja SPORN (Germany) – Athens as Contact Zone: On the Spread and Meaning of Attic and Atticizing Grave Reliefs in Classical Greece…………………………………………………………...…141 th Petr STEFANOVICH (Russia) – “Transfer of Knowledge” in Northern and Eastern Europe in the 10-11 Centuries: a Phenomenon of "the Grand Retinue"……………………………………………..142 Niklay SUDAREV (Russia) – Greeks and “Barbarians” as Seen Through Research of the Bosporus Necropoleis……………………………………………………………………………………..147 Olga TOMASHEVICH (Russia) – A Temple of “The Mistress of the Sea” that was Far from the Shore (The Iseum in Beneventum).................................................................................................................148 nd st Mikhail TREISTER (Germany) – Parthian Imports in the Asian Sarmatia (2 –1 Centuries BC)……..151 Christoph ULF (Austria) – Rethinking Cultural Contacts –Revised……………………………………160 Jeanette VARBERG (Denmark) – The Glass Road – Late Bronze Age Glass Beads in Denmark, Germany and Romania……………………………………………………………………………………168 Mikhail VEDESHKIN (Russia) – “A Barbarian by birth, yet a Hellen in everything else”: the Image of a Pious Barbarian in the Works of Late Roman Pagans………………………………………….175 Denis ZHURAVLYOV (Russia) – Greek Colonization on the Taman Peninsula……………………...…182 II. Posters Alexandra ABRAMOVA (Russia) – Osteological Characteristic of Meotes Inhabiting the Kuban Region in th rd the Period Between the 4 Century BC and the 3 Century AD…………………………...….183 Anastasiya AGDZHOYAN (Russia) – The Heritage of the Ancient Greek Colonization and Turk-speaking Nomads in the Gene Pool of Crimea………………………...…………………………………185 th th Anzhela BATASOVA (Russia) – A Polis at the Asiatic Bosporus in the 6 and Early 5 Century BC: a Territorial Aspect……………………………………………………………………………….186 Ekaterina BULAKOVA (Russia) – The “Textile” Ceramics as a Marker of Cultural Contacts of the Population of Eurasia in Bronze Age…………………………………………………………..191 Tatyana EGOROVA (Russia) – Imported Black-Glazed Ceramics on the Territory of the European Bosporus in 6th – 2th Centuries BC……………………………………………………………..194 3 Marie-Hélène GRUNWALD (Deutschland) – Das römische Kastell Echzell in der Wetterau am Obergermanischen Limes............................................................................................................195 Tatyana IL’INA (Russia) – Hermonassa in Late Antiquity: between Romans and Barbarians………....196 Aleksey IVANOV (Russia) – Formation of the Elite Among the Settled Barbarians of the Kuban Region in Ancient Times…………………………………………………………………………….….197 Aleksey KAZARNITSKIY (Russia) – Scythian Neapolis Population according to Data of Physical Anthropology………………………………………………………………………………..….204 Natalia KULIKOVA (Poland) – Natural Terminologies in the Aulus Cornelius Celsus’s Treatise De Medicina: Linguistic Interpretation…………………………………………………………….209 Valeria KUVATOVA (Russia) – Alexandrian Origin of the Roman Iconography of the Happy Afterlife…………………………………………………………………………………………210 Christoph LINDNER (Deutschland) – Ein Germane in der römischen Legion. Der Helm des L. Sollionius Super……………………………………………………………………………………………215 Piotr MĄCZYŃSKI, Jerzy LIBERA (Poland) – Symbols of Prestige – Flint Daggers in the Light of a Functional Analysis…………………………………………………………………………….216 Piotr MĄCZYŃSKI, Beata POLIT (Poland) – Methods of Using Flint Raw Materials in the Crimea in the Roman Influence Period……………………………………………………………………….222 Aleksey NECHVALODA, Elena NECHVALODA (Russia) – South Ural as a Contact Area. Skulls and Artifacts: South Ural Nomads of the Early Iron Age according to Anthropological Reconstruction……….……………………………………………………………………...…226 Barbara NIEZABITOWSKA-WIŚNIEWSKA (Poland) – Between East and West – the Multicultural Settlement Complex in Ulów (Eastern Poland) in the Light of Intercultural Contacts and Interdisciplinary Research………………………………………………………………..….…233 Beata POLIT (Poland) – Metal Bracelets from Late Scythian Culture Child Graves in the Crimea……234 Joanna PORUCZNIK (Poland) – Olbia Pontike and its chora – a Guestion of the Self-definition of Urban and Rural Societies……………………………………………………………………………..240 Vladimir SHELESTIN (Russia) – Hettite and Hurrian Traditions in Europe?..........................................244 Vitaliy SINIKA (Moldova) – Economic

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