'Taurica' (, ) also known as ''Tauris'', ''Taurida'', ''Tauric Chersonese'', and ''Chersonesus Taurica'' was the name of
Crimea in
Antiquity.
Etymology of the name
The Greeks named the region after its inhabitants, the
Tauri. As the Tauri inhabited only mountainous regions of southern Crimea at first the name Tauris was used only to this southern part, but later it was extended to name the whole peninsula.
Sometimes Taurica is referred to as ''Tauric Chersonese'' or ''Chersonesus Taurica''. This name is Greek for the "Tauric peninsula" (''Chersonese'' literally means "peninsula"). This variant of the name should not be confused with the city of
Chersonesos.
Greek legends about Tauris
According to
Greek legends, Tauris is the place to which
Iphigeneia was sent after
Artemis rescued her from the human sacrifice her
father was about to perform. The goddess swept the young princess off to Tauris where she became a priestess at the
Temple of Artemis. Here, she was forced by the Taurian king Thoas to perform human sacrifices on any foreigners who came ashore.
''See the plot of
Iphigeneia in Tauris for more details.''
Chronology

The Scythian treasure of
Kul-Oba, in eastern Crimea.
Taurica was inhabited by a variety of peoples. The inland regions were inhabited by
Scythians and the mountainous south coast by the
Taures, an offshoot of the
Cimmerians. Greek settlers inhabited a number of colonies along the coast of the peninsula, notably the city of
Chersonesos near modern
Sevastopol.
In the
2nd century BC eastern part of Taurica became part of the
Bosporan Kingdom, before being incorporated into the
Roman Empire in the
1st century BC.
The land of Tauris and its rumored customs of killing Greeks are also described by
Herodotus in his
histories, Book IV, 99-100 and 103.

Greek colonies along the north coast of the Black Sea in the 5th century
BC.
De Facto Roman Province
:''See
Charax, Crimea''.
During the First, Second, and Third Centuries CE, Taurica was host to Roman legions and colonists in
Charax, Crimea. The Charax colony was founded under
Vespasian with the intention of protecting
Chersonesos and other Bosporean trade emporiums from the
Scythians. The Roman Colony was protected by a
vexillatio of the
Legio I Italica; it also hosted a detachment of the
Legio XI Claudia at the end of the 2nd century. The camp was abandoned by the Romans in the mid-3rd century. This De Facto province would have been controlled by the
Legatus of one of the Legions stantioned in Charax.
Modern name
Taurica was eventually renamed by the
Crimean Tatars, from whose
language the Crimea's modern name derives. The word "Crimea" comes from the Crimean Tatar name 'Qırım', via
Greek Krimeia (Κριμαία).
Russian governorate
After the annexation of Crimea in
1783 the newly-installed Russian authorities made an attempt to revive the ancient name, and the former lands of the Crimean Khanate were organized into the
Taurida Governorate. But this name was used only in the official documents and "Crimea" remained a common name for the country.
Following the
1917 October Revolution, the Taurida Governorate was briefly reformed as the ''Taurida Soviet Socialist Republic'' (
Russian: Советская Социалистическая Республика Тавриды - ''Sovetskaya Sotsialisticheskaya Respublika Tavridy'') in early
1918 before being overrun by the
World War I Central Powers. After the reassertion of
Soviet control in
1921, the governorate was divided between the peninsular
Crimean Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic under the
Russian SFSR and the mainland portions which were incorporated into the
Ukrainian SSR.
''See
Taurida Governorate for more details.''
Modern use of the name
Since 1921 the name Taurida has no official status in Crimea and is used almost only in historical context. However, some institutions of the republic still use it, e.g. Taurida National University (the main university in Crimea).
See also
★
Charax, Crimea
★
Colonies in antiquity
References
★
The Roman site at Charax
★
Lost Roman City
★
Roman Ukraine
★
Taurica
★
Taurica History