Orgame/Argamum Archaeological Excavation

6/2/16

Grecs en pays gète: Réseaux d'échanges et médiation culturelle en Mer Noire

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Les précipitions exceptionnelles qu’a connues le nord de la France ces dernières semaines ont entrainé de nombreuses inondations...
2/28/16

Dobrogea. Entre terre et mer, l'empreinte du temps et des hommes

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2/20/14

Photogrammetry for Cultural Heritage Summer School

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Date: 22-27 September 2014 Venue: Argamum (necropolis area), Jurilovca, Tulcea county, Romania Photogrammetry for Cultural Heritage is ...
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11/17/11

Grecs en pays gète: Regard croisé sur les rites funéraires

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Les ateliers franco-roumains d’archéologie se sont tenus pour la première fois en 2008 au Musée d’Histoire Nationale et d’Archéologie ...
9/18/11

Geophysical Field Camp in Jurilovca

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During the period 29 July – 7 August 2011, Bucharest Student Chapter (BSC) (a student association affiliated with the University of Buchare...
8/28/11

Orgame 2011: The Archaeological Field Experience in Romania

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Nicole Aszalos: “On the first day of excavations I found a really nice curved piece of pottery and when I washed it that weekend, there was...
8/23/11

THE ORGAME NECROPOLIS. Excavation programme 2011

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Archaeological excavations in the necropolis of ancient Orgame /Argamum started in 1988 and since then have been carried out annually with s...
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About Orgame/Argamum

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Orgame/Argamum
Blog created and administrated by: Dr. Vasilica Lungu (excavation director of Orgame necropolis), Dr. Alexandra Dolea, Dr. Alina Mușat-Streinu and Dr. Marius Streinu. Orgame/Argamum is one of the most important archaeological sites along the Black Sea coast. The pattern of habitation for the area lasts, with small periods of interruption, almost two millennia. The archaeological discoveries fully illustrate this interval, starting about the 13th century and divided into the following periods: Bronze Age (13th century B.C); Early Iron Age (10th – 8th centuries B.C.); Archaic and Classical (7th – 4th centuries B.C.); Hellenistic (3rd – 2nd centuries B.C.); Early Roman (2nd – 4th centuries A.D.) and Late Roman (4th – 7th centuries A.D.).
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