
doi: 10.46535/ca.32.1.16
From the latter half of the 13th century, Italian maritime republics, particularly Genoa, Venice, and Pisa, became major political and commercial actors in the Black Sea region. They established a vast trade and communication network that functioned effectively until the late 15th-century Ottoman conquests. Numerous written sources document their trade, military, and religious activities along the eastern periphery of the Mediterranean Sea routes. Material evidence of their daily life in the Northern Black Sea Region, however, as well as information on the integration of different consumer goods from their homelands into exchange processes, and their potential impact on local craft, remains limited. This study explores the circulation of Italian ceramics in the Northern Black Sea area, the impact of Italians ideas on local pottery production and distribution, and the evolution of exchange patterns before and after the Ottoman conquest of the region.
Ottomans, Venetians, [SHS.ARCHEO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Archaeology and Prehistory, exchange patterns, Genoese, Northern Black Sea Region, Vénitiens, Génois, fin du XIIIe-XVIe siècle, la céramique glaçurée italienne, région nord de la mer Noire, Italian glazed pottery, les modèles d'échange, late half of the 13 th -16 th centuries, l'archéologie
Ottomans, Venetians, [SHS.ARCHEO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Archaeology and Prehistory, exchange patterns, Genoese, Northern Black Sea Region, Vénitiens, Génois, fin du XIIIe-XVIe siècle, la céramique glaçurée italienne, région nord de la mer Noire, Italian glazed pottery, les modèles d'échange, late half of the 13 th -16 th centuries, l'archéologie
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