Panticapaeum

Panticapaeum was an ancient Greek colony founded about 2600 years ago on the Cimmerian Bosporus, at the site of present-day Kerch city in the Crimea (Ukraine). The word 'Panticapaeum' could be translated as 'Fish Road'. Panticapaeum became the capital of the Bosporan Kingdom, which arose in the 5th century BC. City was a large wine-making, fishing and trade center of that time. It was heavily damaged in Saumacus revolt and Diophantus capture of the city at the end of the 2nd century BC and by an earthquake in 70 BC. Panticapaeum was rebuilt under Roman rule, and by the 1st century AD had regained its commercial importance. It began to decline in the 3rd century as tribal raids disrupted the trade in the Black Sea and the Mediterranean Basin. Panticapaeum was destroyed by the Huns in 370. Later a town arose at the site, which in the Middle Ages became known as Bosporus. Today archeological expeditions systematically excavate the site of Panticapaeum in Kerch. Alternative spelling:
  • Pantikapaeum
  • Pantikapey
  • Panticapey

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
1754 in architecture
1700s in architecture
post it note
1660s in architecture
alexandrine parakeet
1768 in architecture
rudolf trumpy
astrid lindgren memorial award
1740s in architecture
leblanc process
1690s in architecture
1640s in architecture
autolysis
wiesner building
1769 in architecture
dasa sahitya
divinyls
1809 in architecture
1891 in architecture
1780 in architecture
david kennedy (guitarist)
pathophysiology
polar music prize
1789 in architecture
mirabilis (plant)
mirabilis (company)
1630s in architecture
houston stewart chamberlain
renal medulla
cell site
capturing the friedmans
banausos
franklin township, marion county, indiana
voiceless consonant
umm
eric ericson
1670s in architecture
eastern continental divide
elliot aronson
louis i of anjou
j. elvis weinstein
miriam makeba
1610s in architecture
josh weinstein