Воронов Ю. Н., Бгажба О. Х. Материалы по археологии Цебельды : (итоги исследований Цибилиума в 1978–1982 гг.) / Академия наук Грузинской ССР, Абхазский институт языка, литературы и истории им. Д. И. Гулиа ; рецензенты: докт. ист. н. А. Е. Куправа, канд. ист. н. М. Н. Гунба ; редактор издательства Л. Г. Ахалкаци ; художественный редактор И. В. Сихарулидзе.
Тбилиси : Издательство «Мецниереба», 1985. — 113, [2] с., ил.
Издательская мягкая шрифтовая обложка ярко-жёлтого цвета с заглавием и выходными данными чёрной краской. Слегка увеличенный формат 60×90/16 (около 145×220 мм). Тираж 1 000 экземпляров. Выходные сведения и часть служебных данных параллельно на русском и грузинском языках.
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Voronov Yu. N., Bgazhba O. Kh. Materials on the Archaeology of Tsebelda : Results of the Tsibilium Investigations of 1978–1982 / Academy of Sciences of the Georgian SSR, D. I. Gulia Abkhazian Institute of Language, Literature and History ; reviewers: Dr. A. E. Kuprava, Cand. M. N. Gunba ; in-house editor L. G. Akhalkatsi ; art editor I. V. Sikharulidze.
Tbilisi : Metsniereba Publishing House, 1985. — 113, [2] pp., illustrations.
Publisher's bright yellow printed paper wrappers, title and imprint lettered in black. Slightly enlarged format 60×90/16 (approximately 145×220 mm). Print run of 1,000 copies. Imprint and supporting bibliographical data given in parallel Russian and Georgian.
Condition: good
A scarce academic monograph on the archaeology of the Tsibilium (Цибилиум, modern Tsebelda) — a major late-antique and early-medieval Apsilian fortress and necropolis complex situated in the foothills of the Caucasus, in present-day Abkhazia, occupying a strategically critical position commanding the Kodori Gorge and the principal routes from the Black Sea littoral into the high mountain passes. The volume presents the results of five seasons of joint excavation (1978–1982) by two of the central figures in late-Soviet Abkhaz archaeology. Yuri Nikolaevich Voronov (1941–1995) was the leading specialist on the archaeology of the eastern Black Sea littoral, the founder of academic archaeology in Abkhazia, and — from 1992 — a deputy chairman of the Abkhaz government; he was assassinated in Sukhumi in September 1995 in a political killing whose circumstances remain unresolved, a fact that has lent his publications additional bibliographical weight. Oleg Khukhutovich Bgazhba (b. 1939), son of the philologist Khukhut Bgazhba, is an archaeologist and historian whose work on early Caucasian metallurgy and material culture has shaped Abkhaz historiography across the late-Soviet and post-Soviet decades. Tsibilium had emerged by the 1970s as the principal site for understanding Apsilian ethnogenesis: its richly furnished cremation and inhumation graves of the third to seventh centuries A.D., yielding Roman and Byzantine imports, locally produced weaponry, fibulae, ceramic and gold and silver dress-accessories, document the integration of the Apsilae into the Roman provincial system and the subsequent transition into the Byzantine theme structure. With detailed catalogue, drawings and plates, the volume is one of the principal published sources for the material. Issued by the Georgian SSR's Metsniereba press in a print run of only 1,000 copies, distributed almost exclusively through Soviet academic channels and badly affected by the loss of Sukhumi institutional libraries during the 1992–1993 war, copies are now scarce on the international market and the work is consulted heavily by specialists in late antiquity, Caucasian studies and Black Sea archaeology.