Preserving the archaeological heritage in the 2010s: The new realities

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Abstract

The paper examines the issue of preserving archaeological heritage in Russia and also looks at the current state of the field and the role that the Russian Academy of Sciences (RAS) and research institutes play in providing expertise, methodological improvement, and practical work to preserve antiquities. There have been a number of positive developments in this area: the overall volume of archaeological work has seen a 5%–15% annual increase, and mandatory archaeological inspection of land plots and rescue excavations at 17th–19th century sites have been introduced. Of special importance were the amendments to Federal Law №73-FZ "On objects of cultural heritage (monuments of history and culture) of the peoples of the Russian Federation." Adopted in 2013–2014, these amendments, together with similar changes to related documents, included norms formulated and suggestions advanced by professional archaeologists. The amended regulations make provisions for the scholarly basis of excavations and for the control researchers have over archaeological fieldwork, as well as for mandatory access for archaeologists to sites currently in private hands. It is noted that research institutions of the RAS in the field of archaeology are deeply involved in many aspects of work dealing with heritage preservation.

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About the authors

N. A. Makarov

Institute of Archaeology RAS

Author for correspondence.
Email: namakarov@pran.ru

Vice President of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Academician of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Director

Russian Federation, Moscow

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2. Nikolai MAKAROV - Vice-President of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Academician of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Director of the Institute of Archeology of the Russian Academy of Sciences

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3. Archaeological sites of Russia affected by field research 2008–2013

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4. Excavations on the site of the cathedral church destroyed in 1954 in the name of the icon of the Blessed Virgin Mary "Life-giving spring" (the territory of the Assumption Monastery - Sarov Desert in the city of Sarov, Nizhny Novgorod Region). In the excavation are the remains of the stone foundation of the mid-18th - mid-19th centuries.

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5. Excavations on Ivanovo Square of the Moscow Kremlin. In the foreground are the remains of manor buildings of the 16th – 17th centuries. In the background is the foundation of the refectory of the Chudov Monastery, built of white-stone gravestones of the 16th – 17th centuries.

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6. The ancient settlement of Manitra, V – III centuries. BC. in Crimea (top view)

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7. A fragment of the terracotta head of a man. Location - Ak-Burun, the Kerch Strait. The find comes from the redeposited cultural layer of the port of ancient Panticapaeum. V century BC. (?)

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