Research Article

Newly Documented Roman Imperial Rock-Cut Tombs in Tavium

Volume: 14 June 23, 2026
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Newly Documented Roman Imperial Rock-Cut Tombs in Tavium

Abstract

This study examines two rock-cut tombs documented in 2025 on the southwestern slope of Tavium in light of their topographical context, architectural features, and comparative analysis, while also evaluating the associated artifact from the tomb area within this framework. Carved directly into the bedrock and featuring a single-chamber plan, the tombs represent a small-scale chamber-tomb type defined by interior klinai. The tombs are located approximately 1.2 km from the settlement centre on the same rock outcrop. Within the scope of the study, they were documented through on-site observation, measurement, and architectural recording; additionally, their plans, interior arrangements, and states of preservation were analysed in detail. The architectural data were compared first with examples from Yozgat and its surroundings, and subsequently with rock-cut tombs from regions neighbouring Galatia, in order to clarify the position of the Tavium tombs within the surrounding funerary traditions. This comparison was based on plan typology, interior arrangement, and spatial location. Furthermore, an intaglio depicting an eagle, discovered in the tomb area, was examined regarding its technical and iconographic features, and its relationship to the funerary context was evaluated.

Keywords

References

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Details

Primary Language

English

Subjects

Archaeological Science

Journal Section

Research Article

Publication Date

June 23, 2026

Submission Date

January 23, 2026

Acceptance Date

April 9, 2026

Published in Issue

Year 2026 Volume: 14

APA
Altun, S. (2026). Newly Documented Roman Imperial Rock-Cut Tombs in Tavium. Cedrus, 14, 73-96. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20097045
AMA
1.Altun S. Newly Documented Roman Imperial Rock-Cut Tombs in Tavium. Cedrus. 2026;14:73-96. doi:10.5281/zenodo.20097045
Chicago
Altun, Savaş. 2026. “Newly Documented Roman Imperial Rock-Cut Tombs in Tavium”. Cedrus 14 (June): 73-96. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20097045.
EndNote
Altun S (June 1, 2026) Newly Documented Roman Imperial Rock-Cut Tombs in Tavium. Cedrus 14 73–96.
IEEE
[1]S. Altun, “Newly Documented Roman Imperial Rock-Cut Tombs in Tavium”, Cedrus, vol. 14, pp. 73–96, June 2026, doi: 10.5281/zenodo.20097045.
ISNAD
Altun, Savaş. “Newly Documented Roman Imperial Rock-Cut Tombs in Tavium”. Cedrus 14 (June 1, 2026): 73-96. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20097045.
JAMA
1.Altun S. Newly Documented Roman Imperial Rock-Cut Tombs in Tavium. Cedrus. 2026;14:73–96.
MLA
Altun, Savaş. “Newly Documented Roman Imperial Rock-Cut Tombs in Tavium”. Cedrus, vol. 14, June 2026, pp. 73-96, doi:10.5281/zenodo.20097045.
Vancouver
1.Savaş Altun. Newly Documented Roman Imperial Rock-Cut Tombs in Tavium. Cedrus. 2026 Jun. 1;14:73-96. doi:10.5281/zenodo.20097045

Our journal has decided to continue its publication under the Continuous Publication Model as of January 1, 2026. A maximum of 15 articles will be published in the relevant annual volume. As of October 2024, Cedrus accepts articles only in foreign languages.