In 2020—2021, during excavations in the Civil Courtyard of the Akkerman Fortress,
a collection of 26 bone items was collected, which are being published in the following
article. The objects come from the layers and complexes mainly of the Modern (16th —
18th centuries) and Roman times and according to their functional purpose belong to
several categories. The household items and the items for games (buckle fragments of
knife handles, hookah mouthpieces, gambling or divination astragals, and a button),
weapon products (rings for pulling back the bowstring), and work tools, facing plates,
blanks and production waste are singled out. Items made of bone and horns are one of the
main categories of material for the reconstruction of various aspects of the economy,
everyday life and spiritual life of the ancient population. The analysed bone and horn
objects are a small part of the collection of bone artefacts from the Tyras-Bilhorod
excavations of the antique and modern periods, but they provide insight into the
production of specialised crafts and manufacturing of bone products in individual
households. Despite the small number of finds, the collection includes such categories
of material as raw materials, blanks, production waste and finished items, which is one
of the signs of the bone-cutting production presence directly on the territory of the
city. Characterising the raw material base of the bone-cutting production, we should
point out that the material for manufacturing was bones and horns of animals that were
bred or obtained by the inhabitants of the city — a horse, a domestic bull, a sheep, a
European deer and roe deer, as well as bone rays of the pectoral fins of sturgeon.
During production, the peculiarities of the structure of bone raw materials were taken
into account, which made it possible to use the shape of the bone/horn the best possible
way to manufacture a specific object/tool. Certain types of bone objects existed in a
rather wide chronological range (astragals for the game, plates — covers of knife
handles etc.) The obtained results are important for the reconstruction of the
bone-cutting and complement the existing ideas about the daily life of the inhabitants
of Tyras-Bilhorod in the Roman and Modern times.