negatives reports
Ancient city of Chersonesos
 - North area
 - South area
 - West area
 - North-East area
 - South-East area
 - Central area
 - Citadel
 - Harbour area
 - Undetermined area
Necropoleis
 - Northern
 - Western
 - Near Karantinnaya bay
 - Undetermined necropolis
Chora
 - Heraclean peninsula
Environs
 - City Environs
 - Remote Environs
Museum
 - Exhibitions
 - Staff
 - Everyday life
Unidentified
Ancient city of Chersonesos
 - North area
 - South area
 - West area
 - North-East area
 - South-East area
 - Central area
 - Citadel
 - Harbour area
 - Undetermined area
Necropoleis
 - Northern
 - Western
 - Near Karantinnaya bay
 - Undetermined necropolis
Chora
 - Heraclean peninsula
Environs
 - City Environs
 - Remote Environs
Museum
 - Exhibitions
 - Staff
 - Everyday life
Unidentified

Ancient city of Chersonesos


The site of the ancient city of Tauric Chersonesos is located on a large promontory between two bays, Karantinnaya (Russian for Quarantine) and Pesochnaya (Sandy) within the limits of the present-day city of Sevastopol. It covers the area of about 45 hectares. The investigations of the ancient city started in 1827 and continued throughout the nineteenth and twentieth century, with short intervals. By the early twenty-first century, the excavations have uncovered about one-third of the ancient city: defensive walls and towers, churches and public spaces like theater, water reservoir, the so-called mint, thermae (baths), etc. The most important result of the excavations in the ancient city is the discovery of the city layout according to Hippodamean plan: grid of residential quarters of the same size composed by parallel and perpendicular streets. Although modern division of the ancient city into areas is conventional, it is used in archaeological documents.

The division of the ancient city into the areas is a convention; it is made for better orientation of the visitors (real and virtual) in Chersonesos territory. This zoning is performed according to existing tradition which is mentioned in scholarly and popular literature. At the same time, we should mention that there still is a certain confusion as to the numeration of longitudinal and transverse streets (and even of curtain walls and residential quarters), so we have to follow more or less common system of their designation.  

 

Later Roman Lamps: with vine on shoulder to the left, with rosette to the rightShards of black slip VESSELS with applied and scratched ornamentationLater Roman Lamps: with rosette to the left, with Medusa's head to the right
Fragments of round-bottom BOWLS with applied and scratched ornamentation1hards of red-slip VESSELS with relief decoration
Showcase in the Warehouse of Local AntiquitiesShowcase with vessels from necropolis excavated in 1910Fragment of altar with garland and bucranea
Fragment of altar with garland and bucraneaFragment of altar with garland and bucraneaFragment of altar with garland and bucraneum
Fragment of GRAVESTONE with relief and inscriptionEPIGRAPHYCoins of Chersonesos, Graeco-Roman period
Early Roman lamps, fifth to seventh centuryTop fragment of GRAVESTONE with inscriptionBEADS (two strings)
EPIGRAPHYДетский костяк в амфореMarble fragment with remains of inscriptions in six lines


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