Thracology

Thracology is the scientific study of Ancient Thrace and Thracian antiquities and is a regional and thematic branch of the larger disciplines of ancient history and archaeology. A practitioner of the discipline is a Thracologist. Thracology investigates the range of ancient Thracian culture (language, literature, history, religion, art, economics and ethics) from 1000 BC up to the end of Roman rule in the 4th–7th centuries AD. Modern Thracology (as opposed to an antiquarian interest in the land of Thrace) started with the work of Wilhelm Tomaschek in the late 19th century.

Thracology in Bulgaria

In the second part of the 20th century, Bulgarian historian Alexander Fol founded the Institute of Thracology in the Bulgarian Academy of Science. With subsequently ever-increasing Thracian tombs unearthing, the study of the Ancient Thracian civilization was able to proceed with greater academic rigor.

Thracology in Romania

Since Dacians are considered a branch of the Thracians by most mainstream research[1] and historical sources,[2] Romanian historians and archaeologists have also been heavily involved in Thracology since at least the 19th century. The related term Thraco-Dacology also exists, alluding to Thraco-Dacian, and one of the first uses is from around 1980, in the Romanian government archive.[3]

But since other theories sustain that Daco-Thracian relation is not as strong as originally thought,[4][5] Dacology[6] may evolve as an independent discipline from Thracology. Unfortunately, the terms Dacology/Dacologist have been negatively affected by the association with Protochronism and risk to be severely compromised, prompting some reputable Romanian researchers to call themselves Thracologists instead of Dacologists, even in the context of their research being focused more on Dacians than on Thracians, and even without necessarily promoting a strong connection between the two peoples.[4]

The Romanian Thracology Institute I.G Bibicescu, part of Romanian Academy and based in Bucharest, was founded in 1976, after the 2nd International Congress of Thracology held in September of same year in Bucharest.[7] One of his first directors was the thracologist Dumitru Berciu (1907–1998).

Thracologists

Researchers who have been noted in the field of Thracology include:

International Congress of Thracology

The International Congress of Thracology was organised by the Institute of Thracology at the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences. It has been held regularly since 1972 when it was founded by Alexander Fol. Fol himself became the chairman of the congress, and emphasized an international approach to the study of Thracology.

NumberHosted inDateTheme
1Sofia, BulgariaJuly 1972
2Bucharest, RomaniaSeptember 1976
3Vienna, AustriaJune 1980
4Rotterdam, NetherlandsSeptember 1984
5Moscow, Soviet Union1988
6Palma de Mallorca, Spain1992
7Constanţa, Tulcea, Mangalia, RomaniaMay 1996Thracians and Myceneans
8Sofia and Yambol, BulgariaSeptember 2000Thracians and the Aegean
9Chişinău, MoldaviaSeptember 2004Thracians and the Circumpontic World
10Komotini and Alexandroupolis, GreeceOctober 2005
11Istanbul, TurkeyOctober 2010
12Târgoviște, RomaniaSeptember 2013The Thracians and their Neighbors in the Bronze and Iron Ages
13Kazanlak, BulgariaSeptember 2017Ancient Thrace: Myth and Reality

Thracians and Myceneans

On September 21–26, 1984, the Fourth International Congress of Thracology was held in the Museum Boymans-van Beuningen in Rotterdam, Netherlands. The Congress was organized by the Henri Frankfort Foundation, which is a private institution whose main purpose is to augment the study of Mediterranean pre-history and proto-history. The opening of the symposium began on September 24 and was addressed by the Minister of Education and Science Dr. W. J. Deetman. "Thracians and Mycenaeans" was the theme name for the symposium, which held discussions pertaining to the potential ethnic, cultural, religious, and linguistic interrelations between proto-Thracians and proto-Greeks (i.e. Myceneans). It was believed that such interrelations had to exist since both groups have lived in the same geographic area in the past. According to Alexander Fol, the concept of "Mycenean Thrace" was first developed in 1973 in order to explain the relative cultural unity between the Thracians and the Myceneans.[9]

gollark: Overlay glasses can do that.
gollark: Again, if people would be happy with an autocrafting system/item maanager with inventory delivery but no browser access, I have in fact already made one.
gollark: Those are some ridiculously large numbers.
gollark: Autocrafting is already half-implemented in Wyvern.
gollark: I'd do all that except the browsery part.

See also

Notes

  1. "Dacia" Encyclopædia Britannica online
  2. Strabo VII.3.2
  3. RA42 1980, p. 181.
  4. Olteanu.
  5. Georgiev (1960) 39-58
  6. Vulpe 1980, p. 95.
  7. Archäologien Europas: Geschichte, Methoden und Theorien By Peter F. Biehl, Alexander Gramsch, Arkadiusz Marciniak
  8. SCL 1983, p. 267.
  9. Best & De Vries 1989.

References

  • Best, Jan; De Vries, Nanny (1989). Thracians and Mycenaeans. Boston, Massachusetts: E.J. Brill Academic Publishers. ISBN 90-04-08864-4.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Olteanu, Sorin. "Linguae Thraco-Daco-Moesorum" (in Romanian and English). Retrieved 3 January 2010.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Vulpe, Radu (1980). Actes du IIe Congrès international de thracologie: Linguistique, ethnologie (ethnographie, folkloristique et art populaire), anthropologie (in Romanian, English, and French). Bucharest: Editura Academiei.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • "Revista arhivelor". Revista arhivelor. Romania: Arhivele Statului. 42. 1980.
  • "Dacia: Revue d'archéologie et d'histoire ancienne". Studii şi Cercetǎri Lingvistice (in Romanian). Bucureşti, Romania: Academia Română. 34 (3–6). 1983.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.