
New Book Release – Egyptian Cults on the Black Sea Coast
The Black Sea is a vast navigable area situated at the crossroads of ancient worlds: the Balkans to the west, the Eurasian steppes to the north, the Caucasus and Central Asia to the east, Asia Minor and Mesopotamia to the south, and Greece to the southwest. In the 6th and 5th centuries BCE, Greek communities settled permanently on its shores, establishing an active and lucrative trade network directly linked to the Mediterranean. At the same time, several kingdoms (notably those of the Bosporus, Pontus, and the Odrysae) developed, fostering close relationships with the Aegean world. It is in this dynamic context that certain Egyptian beliefs reached the coasts of the Pontus Euxinus, taking root there permanently.
The volume Egyptian Cults on the Black Sea Coast, which compiles 11 papers presented in June 2022 in Varna, Bulgaria, during the international conference of the same name, is the culmination of a fruitful project. Written by the foremost specialists in the Pontic area, these articles shed new light on ancient questions, while revealing numerous previously unseen documents that wonderfully illustrate the significant impact of cultural interactions during Antiquity in this part of the world.
Contents :
Sergei Ignatov – Doing things in Egyptian Way.
Laurent Bricault – The Cults of Isis, from ‘Oriental’ to ‘Global’
Vessela Atanassova – Egyptian Cults on the Black Sea Coast
Mikhail Treister – Ptolemaic Finger Rings in North Pontic Area: New Finds and Hypotheses,
Jean-Louis Podvin – Isiaca du Bosphore cimmérien
Natia Phiphia – Isis and Serapis in Ancient Colchis in the Greco-Roman period
Vassil Tenekedjiev – Recently Discovered Hellenistic Dedication to Serapis, Isis and Anubis from Odessos
Mina Tasseva-Bencheva – Ce que le séjour d’Ovide à Tomis nous apprend sur le culte d’Isis au début de l’Empire
Ștefana Cristea – Isis and Sarapis in the context of the civic religion (3rd century CE). Case study – Moesia Inferior (Tomis)
Vanya Lozanova-Stancheva – Orpheus in Egypt
Viktoriia Kotenko – The Egyptian Veil of the Hellenistic Olbia