The Maroneia Archaeological Project explores the medieval remains and inhabitants of the city of Maroneia in Thrace, northern Greece from the ninth to the fifteenth century CE. It focuses on the district of the ancient and medieval port of Maroneia, today the site of Hagios Charalambos, and investigates what objects people used in their houses, religious spaces, open spaces, streets, stores and workshops. It is a story of the largely unknown residents of an important Byzantine harbor told through the objects they left behind before their relocation and founding of the early modern village of Maroneia on the nearby slopes of Mount Ismaros. Bits and pieces of this story are discovered and joined back together in the archives and archaeological finds from the excavations of Hagios Charalambos conducted in the twentieth century and now preserved at the Ephorate of Antiquities of Rhodopi in Komotini. Our goal is to understand the living conditions in this Byzantine port-town and trace the links with the outer world, as these evolved through political, socio-cultural, and environmental changes over time.