Research Article

Seljuk’s Material Culture in Ukraine According to the Results of Historical and Archaeological Research

Volume: 30 Number: 1 May 15, 2021
TR EN

Seljuk’s Material Culture in Ukraine According to the Results of Historical and Archaeological Research

Abstract

As a result of massive historical and archaeological investigations of the last decades of the 20th and 21st centuries, numerous samples of the material cultural heritage of the Seljuks were discovered in Ukraine. The researchers identified the stages of its development, main spheres of influence and features of manifestations. The first stage covers the period from the appearance of Oghuz on the territory of the Southern principalities from the middle of the 11th century to the first half of the 13th century. At this time, Seljuk influence can be traced in the applied art and decorative style of monumental architecture of Kyiv Rus. At the next stage - from the second half of the 13th century to the end of the 15th century, the influence of the Seljuks affected a wide range of material culture in the Black Sea region of the Mongol Empire, the Crimean Khanate, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and Rus. Bright examples of this time are artifacts from the cemetery of Mamay Surok (Zaporizhzhia region), examples of monumental architecture in cities and fortresses of Eastern Podillya, Southern Ukraine and the Crimea (Torhovytsia, Yurkivka, Solkhat). The last discovery of Seljuk architectural style is a stone carving that adorned the wall of the entrance gate of the Tiahyn fortress in the 14th-16th centuries (Kherson region). From the end of the 15th century to the end of the 18th century Seljuk heritage became a part of the material culture in the Northern Provinces of the Ottoman Empire and was widespread in the monuments of the Northern Black Sea Coast. The material culture of the Seljuks became a kind of cultural bridge that combined the achievements of Eurasia, the civilizations of the Middle Ages and early modernism.

Keywords

References

  1. Akchurina-Muftiieva, N. M. (2008), Dekoratyvno-prykladne mystetstvo krymskykh tatar XV - persha polovyna XX s.: (Etapy rozvytku, typolohiia, stylistyka, khudozhni osoblyvosti): monohrafiia / N.M. Akchurina-Muftiieva; [Vidp. vyssh. ucheb. zaved. «Krymsk. inzh.-ped. un-t »; In-t yskusstvovedenyia, folklorystyky i etnolohii im. M. Rylskoho NAN Ukr. ; otv. za vyp. N.R. Karamanov]. Simferopol: Simferopol. hor. pidkazka., 392.: il., Vkl. l. 32 (il).
  2. Arık, R. & Arık, O. (2007), Anadolu Toprağının Hazinesi Çini Selçuklu Ve Beylikler Çağı Çinileri. İstanbul: Kale Grubu Kültür Yayınları.
  3. Avṣar, L. (2012), Kubadabad Çinilerindeki Hapri-Siren Figürünün İzini Sürerken. Akademik Bakiṣ Dergisi. 31, 1- 21.
  4. Beliaeva, S. - Bubenok, O. - Hundohdyev, O. - Dryha, Y. - Mavryna, O. (2018) Ohuzy na rubezhakh Yuzhnoi Rusy / Ynstytut vostokovedenyia ym. A. E. Krymskoho NAN Ukrainy. K, 223.
  5. Beliaiev, L.A. (2016), Islamskyi Skhid i formuvannia materialnoi kultury Moskovskoi Rusi: o metodychnykh pidkhodakh do otsinky, Povolzka arkheolohiia. № 2, 18‒43.
  6. Bokyi, N.M., Kozyr, I.A., Pozyvai, T.D. (2007), Arkheolohichni doslidzhennia zolotoordynnykh pamiatok v baseini Syniukhy, Nove doslidzhennia pamiatok kozatskoi doby v Ukraini. 414-423.
  7. Borysov, A.V. (2020), Davnoruske Porosiia. Systema zaselennia: avtoreferat dysertatsii na zdobutti naukovoho stupenu kandydatury istorychnykh nauk: spets.07.00.04 «Arkheolohiia», NAN Ukrainy, In-t arkheolohii. K., 16.
  8. Bulut, L. (2000), Samsat Ortaçağ Seramikleri (luster ve siraltilar).Izmir: Ege Üniversitesi.

Details

Primary Language

English

Subjects

-

Journal Section

Research Article

Publication Date

May 15, 2021

Submission Date

October 12, 2020

Acceptance Date

March 17, 2021

Published in Issue

Year 2021 Volume: 30 Number: 1

APA
Bilyayeva, S., Karasevych, A., & Kutsenko, S. (2021). Seljuk’s Material Culture in Ukraine According to the Results of Historical and Archaeological Research. Sanat Tarihi Dergisi, 30(1), 231-253. https://doi.org/10.29135/std.809601
AMA
1.Bilyayeva S, Karasevych A, Kutsenko S. Seljuk’s Material Culture in Ukraine According to the Results of Historical and Archaeological Research. STD. 2021;30(1):231-253. doi:10.29135/std.809601
Chicago
Bilyayeva, Svitlana, Anatoliy Karasevych, and Sergei Kutsenko. 2021. “Seljuk’s Material Culture in Ukraine According to the Results of Historical and Archaeological Research”. Sanat Tarihi Dergisi 30 (1): 231-53. https://doi.org/10.29135/std.809601.
EndNote
Bilyayeva S, Karasevych A, Kutsenko S (May 1, 2021) Seljuk’s Material Culture in Ukraine According to the Results of Historical and Archaeological Research. Sanat Tarihi Dergisi 30 1 231–253.
IEEE
[1]S. Bilyayeva, A. Karasevych, and S. Kutsenko, “Seljuk’s Material Culture in Ukraine According to the Results of Historical and Archaeological Research”, STD, vol. 30, no. 1, pp. 231–253, May 2021, doi: 10.29135/std.809601.
ISNAD
Bilyayeva, Svitlana - Karasevych, Anatoliy - Kutsenko, Sergei. “Seljuk’s Material Culture in Ukraine According to the Results of Historical and Archaeological Research”. Sanat Tarihi Dergisi 30/1 (May 1, 2021): 231-253. https://doi.org/10.29135/std.809601.
JAMA
1.Bilyayeva S, Karasevych A, Kutsenko S. Seljuk’s Material Culture in Ukraine According to the Results of Historical and Archaeological Research. STD. 2021;30:231–253.
MLA
Bilyayeva, Svitlana, et al. “Seljuk’s Material Culture in Ukraine According to the Results of Historical and Archaeological Research”. Sanat Tarihi Dergisi, vol. 30, no. 1, May 2021, pp. 231-53, doi:10.29135/std.809601.
Vancouver
1.Svitlana Bilyayeva, Anatoliy Karasevych, Sergei Kutsenko. Seljuk’s Material Culture in Ukraine According to the Results of Historical and Archaeological Research. STD. 2021 May 1;30(1):231-53. doi:10.29135/std.809601