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Excavation

  • Byuven Kasaba Settlement
  • Sveshtari
  •  
  • Bulgaria
  • Razgrad
  • Isperih
  • Sveshhari

Tools

Credits

  • The Italian Database is the result of a collaboration between:

    MIBAC (Ministero per i Beni e le Attività Culturali - Direzione Generale per i Beni Archeologici),

    ICCD (Istituto Centrale per il Catalogo e la Documentazione) and

    AIAC (Associazione Internazionale di Archeologia Classica).

  • AIAC_logo logo

Summary (English)

  • ARCHAEOLOGICAL EXCAVATIONS IN SBORYANOVO (Diana Gergova – dianagergova@gmail.com, Radoslav Vasilev, Yavor Ivanov) The geodetic surveying provided data for the existence of even parceled terrains surrounded with stone walls. They have an area of 12 ha and were related to the farming activities carried out by the inhabitants of the settlement. Seven buildings were identified inside the settlement, which was surrounded with stone walls and has an area of 2700 sq. m. The exploration of the Early Mediaeval single-nave chapel was completed. Its foundations were built of uneven stones and its entrance is from the western side. In 2004, a square-cut stone, presumably used for an altar table, was discovered in the apse and a bronze cross-encolpion containing a relic of cedar wood was found. In 2006, a house with two rooms was explored near the chapel. It is partly dug into the ground and its walls are faced with stones. There is an oven with partly preserved stone vault situated in the center of the building. The exploration of the single-room building situated in the northern periphery of the settlement was completed. The building is partly dug into the ground with walls faced with stones and has an area of 30 sq. m. Four pairs of postholes from the supporting construction, an oven in the northern corner and parts of millstone were discovered. The iron slag found in the building allows us to suppose that this was probably a forge. A building with stone foundations and two rooms, presumably with farming function, was discovered to the east of the gate on the southwestern wall of the settlement. The constructions of the buildings that stood on the stone foundations were probably of timber. The small number of finds: pottery, few bone awls and flint plates, show that the settlement dates to the 9th – 11th centuries and that the inhabitants probably abandoned it.

Director

  • Diana Gergova - Archaeological Institute with Museum
  • Radoslav Vasilev - Archaeological Institute with Museum
  • Yavor Ivanov - Archaeological Institute with Museum

Team

Research Body

  • Archaeological Institute with Museum

Funding Body

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