The Painted Plaster Reliefs from Pseira
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Diapositiva 1
Egeo linee generali CRONOLOGIA Età del Bronzo: ca. 3300 – 1050 a.C. • Antico Bronzo: ca. 3300-2100/2000 a.C. • Medio Bronzo: ca. 2100/2000 – 1700 o 1600 a.C. • Tardo Bronzo: ca. 1700 o 1600 a.C. - 1050 a.C. Le fasi di transizione sono in genere di difficile definizione, con forti differenze regionali Sviluppi principali Età del Bronzo: ca. 3300 – 1050 a.C. • Antico Bronzo: ca. 3300-2100/2000 a.C. Cicladi “International Spirit”, continente “Case a Corridoi”, Creta “prepalaziale” • Medio Bronzo: ca. 2100/2000 – 1700 o 1600 a.C. Creta “Primi palazzi”, Cicladi trasformazione e concentrazione insediamento, Continente localismo • Tardo Bronzo: ca. 1700 o 1600 a.C. - 1050 a.C. Prima fase (TB I-II): Creta “Secondi Palazzi”, Continente “periodo delle tombe a fossa” e formazione società micenea, Cicladi “Minoizzazione” Seconda fase: società palaziale micenea in alcune regioni-chiave del continente e a Creta, miceneizzazione dell’Egeo • Creta: prepalaziale AM I-MM IA protopalaziale (primi palazzi) MM IB – II neopalaziale (secondi palazzi) MM III – TM IB monopalaziale o terzo palazzo TM II- IIIA2iniziale Terminologia palaziale finale TMIIIA2 –IIIB discussa post-palaziale TM IIIC • Continente per TB: protomiceneo TEI-IIIA1 palaziale TEIIIA2-B post-palaziale TEIIIC Cicli di complessità Shelemrdine 2008 AB I-II - Il continente greco ha un primo ciclo di sviluppo con forme di complessità emergente (“Case a Corridoi”), ma, alla fine dell’ABII, si assiste a un periodo di crisi e contrazione. AB III – momento di grndi cambiamenti nell’Egeo; nelle Cicladi Lerna, AE II ristrutturazione dell’insediamento. (sopra) e III (lato) MB – TB III – Continente: nuova “partenza” in molte zone, con bassa demografia per gran parte del MB e ripresa intensa alla fine del MB fino alla fase protomicenea (TB I-II) e micenea palaziale (TB IIIA-B) Demografia continenteDemografiaelladico TB IIIB finale (ca. -
The Distribution of Obsidian in the Eastern Mediterranean As Indication of Early Seafaring Practices in the Area a Thesis B
The Distribution Of Obsidian In The Eastern Mediterranean As Indication Of Early Seafaring Practices In The Area A Thesis By Niki Chartzoulaki Maritime Archaeology Programme University of Southern Denmark MASTER OF ARTS November 2013 1 Στον Γιώργο 2 Acknowledgments This paper represents the official completion of a circle, I hope successfully, definitely constructively. The writing of a Master Thesis turned out that there is not an easy task at all. Right from the beginning with the effort to find the appropriate topic for your thesis until the completion stage and the time of delivery, you got to manage with multiple issues regarding the integrated presentation of your topic while all the time and until the last minute you are constantly wondering if you handled correctly and whether you should have done this or not to do it the other. So, I hope this Master this to fulfill the requirements of the topic as best as possible. I am grateful to my Supervisor Professor, Thijs Maarleveld who directed me and advised me during the writing of this Master Thesis. His help, his support and his invaluable insight throughout the entire process were valuable parameters for the completion of this paper. I would like to thank my Professor from the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Nikolaos Efstratiou who help me to find this topic and for his general help. Also the Professor of University of Crete, Katerina Kopaka, who she willingly provide me with all of her publications –and those that were not yet have been published- regarding her research in the island of Gavdos. -
Bibliography of Aegean Prehistory and Related Areas
Volume 30 Number 6 Pages 3737-3754 September 2003 ISSN 0028-2812 [email protected] Bibliography of Aegean Prehistory and Related Areas Published monthly, September to May, by the Department of Classics, University of Cincinnati P.O. Box 0226, Cincinnati, Ohio 45221-0226, U.S.A. Editor: Carol Hershenson Assistant Editors: Sarah Dieterle, Jeffrey L. Kramer, Michael Ludwig COMMUNICATIONS From the Editors The editors of Nestor are pleased to welcome readers back from their summer research. We bid farewell to Assistant Editors Yuki Furuya and Ols Lafe, and we thank them for their years of service. Announcements INSTAP Academic Press is happy to announce that all their publications are now distributed exclusively by Oxbow Books/David Brown. To order INSTAP publications, please go to: http://www.oxbowbooks.com/trade.cfm?&Publisher=INSTAP%20Academic%20Press. Information on Imports in the LBA Aegean: Eric H. Cline, former editor of Nestor, would like to announce that he is beginning work on an updated and revised version of his book, Sailing the Wine-Dark Sea: International Trade and the Late Bronze Age Aegean, which has been out of print for nearly a decade. If anyone is aware of published (repeat, published) imports found in LBA contexts within the Aegean area which were either not included or misidentified in his original volume, or which have been discovered or published since the volume appeared in 1994, he would greatly appreciate being contacted with any information. He would also be interested in any references to books or articles which discuss such imports or LBA trade that have appeared since 1994 or which were omitted in his original book. -
1 the Rural Landscape of Neopalatial Kythera
The rural landscape of Neopalatial Kythera: a GIS perspective Andrew Bevan Postprint of 2002 paper in Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 15.2: 217-256 (doi: 10.1558/jmea.v15i2.217). Abstract Intensive archaeological survey on the island of Kythera (Greece) has revealed, in unprecedented detail, a landscape of dispersed rural settlements dating to the mid-second millennium BC. This paper deploys a series of GIS and spatial analysis techniques to illuminate the way this landscape was structured, in terms of social organisation, agriculture and island demography. Discussion begins by quantifying site numbers, size and hierarchy. It then examines patterns of settlement dispersal, highlighting the subsistence strategies probably underpinning such a landscape. Emphasis is placed on reconstructing where possible the dynamics of colonisation and the motivations behind site location. A final section proposes population figures for the island and considers a range of site-level interactions. 1. Introduction This paper engages with the space-time dynamics of a particular prehistoric Mediterranean countryside. It combines a variety of GIS-driven techniques with the results of intensive archaeological survey. Over the last 10 years, there has been an increasing interest in the Mediterranean rural past (e.g. Doukelis and Mendoni 1994; Barker and Mattingly 1999-2000; Horden and Purcell 2000). Research has embraced many academic disciplines, including demography, climatology, geomorphology, ethnography and archaeology, but has frequently occurred under the umbrella of intensive landscape survey. In the Aegean, this has resulted in a host of analyses, including synthetic discussions (van Andel and Runnels 1987; Halstead and Frederick 2000), and period-specific investigations. Amongst the latter, the Neolithic (Cherry et al. -
Middle-Byzantine Bath-Houses in Eastern Crete and Their Changing Functions
land Article From Town to Countryside: Middle-Byzantine Bath-Houses in Eastern Crete and Their Changing Functions Natalia Poulou * and Anastasios Tantsis Department of Archaeology, School of History and Archaeology, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki 54124, Greece; [email protected] * Correspondence: [email protected]; Tel.: +30-693-884-6579 Received: 26 August 2018; Accepted: 10 September 2018; Published: 12 September 2018 Abstract: The article examines the context of a recently discovered double bath-house complex in Loutres, a site near Mochlos on the north shore of eastern Crete. The excavators explore the broader questions posed by the finding, in connection to both its immediate surroundings and its wider periphery. Its relation to the site’s geography, a ravine on the shore, forms the starting point to address issues regarding its original use as well as its later transformations. The enquiry leads into considering similar structures with different fates in the area and the connotations regarding their relationship to both the landscape and the settlements to which they belonged. The article goes on to discuss the general issues of the historic context of medieval Crete concerning both the archaeology and the information from the sources. It seems that long-held concepts about the abandonment of seaside settlements due to the so-called “Arab threat” are no longer valid. On the contrary, archaeology proves the continuity of the settlements of eastern Crete, both in Loutres and elsewhere. Moreover, the later use of the bath-houses in the area provides evidence for social changes after the 13th century impacting on both the landscape and its settlements. -
HUNT for the ANCIENT MARINER Armed with High-Tech Methods, Researchers Are Scouring the Aegean Sea for the World’S Oldest Shipwrecks
NEWS FEATURE HUNT FOR THE ANCIENT MARINER Armed with high-tech methods, researchers are scouring the Aegean Sea for the world’s oldest shipwrecks. BY JO MARCHANT rendan Foley peels his wetsuit to the waist and perches on the Archaeologists have precious little information about the seagoing side of an inflatable boat as it skims across the sea just north habits of the Minoan civilization, which erected the palace of Knossos of the island of Crete. At his feet are the dripping remains of on Crete — linked to the Greek myth of the Minotaur. Minoans far B a vase that moments earlier had been resting on the sea floor, exceeded their neighbours in weaponry, literacy and art, and formed its home for more than a millennium. “It’s our best day so “part of the roots of what went on to become European civilization”, far,” he says of his dive that morning. “We’ve discovered two ancient says Don Evely, an archaeologist at the British School at Athens, and shipwrecks.” curator of Knossos. Archaeologists are keen to understand what made Foley, a marine archaeologist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic the Minoans so successful and how they interacted with nearby cultures Institution in Massachusetts, and his colleagues at Greece’s Ephorate such as the Egyptians. of Underwater Antiquities in Athens have spent the day diving near Although researchers have studied scores of Roman ships, finding the cliffs of the tiny island of Dia in the eastern Mediterranean. They a much older Minoan wreck “would add 100% new knowledge”, says have identified two clusters of pottery dating from the first century bc Shelley Wachsmann, an expert in ancient seafaring at Texas A&M Uni- and fifth century ad. -
Online Gaming As Digital Heuristics: the House of the Rhyta at Pseira
Online Gaming as Digital Heuristics: The House of the Rhyta at Pseira MIRIAM G. CLINTON, Rhodes College, TN, USA While 3D modeling has only come into widespread archaeological use in recent years, it is hardly a new or untested approach in the study of architecture. Even so, archaeological 3D modeling has largely been limited to use in illustrations, rather than treated as a part of the scientific method. Using the case study of the Minoan House of the Rhyta at Pseira, this article discusses the results of applying 3D modeling as not only a visualization, but also a hypothesis testing tool. In the summer of 2014, the Minoan Modeling Project undertook a new intensive architectural examination of the Minoan House of the Rhyta at Pseira. The project produced both state and reconstructed 3D models. The 3D reconstruction became the basis of an educational video game designed as a scientific tool to test architectural theories about the use of space. As gamers interact with and circulate through the various rooms in the House of the Rhyta, their movements are tracked and statistically compared with the results of more traditional methods of access and circulation pattern analysis. This article presents preliminary results of this crowdsourced online game study, in addition to discussing strengths and weaknesses of the technique as learned through the process of building the model and game. Key words: Architecture, Minoan Crete, Online Gaming, 3D Reconstruction, Human Use of Space. SDH Reference: Miriam G. Clinton. 2020. Online Gaming as Digital Heuristics: The House of the Rhyta at Pseira. SDH, 4, 2, 160-184. -
The Vrokastro Survey Project, 1986-1989 Research Design and Preliminary Results (Plates 75-79)
THE VROKASTRO SURVEY PROJECT, 1986-1989 RESEARCH DESIGN AND PRELIMINARY RESULTS (PLATES 75-79) HE PEAK OF VROKASTRO towers 313 meters abovethe Bay of Mirabello in east- ILern Crete (P1. 75:a). On its summit and north slope in 1910 and 1912 Edith Hall ex- cavated a Late Bronze and Early Iron Age settlement.1Vrokastro remains one of the few excavatedsites belongingto this transitionalperiod; it is importantfor its size, length of occu- pation, and varietyof artifacts,tomb types, and burials.2Because excavation took place early in this century, data concerningthe site and its environmentare understandablyfragmen- tary. The goal of the VrokastroSurvey Projectis to place this settlementwithin a regional context in orderto understandbetter how it functionedand relatedto its environment.3 The study area flanks the Bay of Mirabello from the Istron River valley (P1. 75:b) on the west to a small plain west of Gournia (Figs. 1, 2, 3). The southernlimits extend from the village of Prina, at the southwest corner, across the Meseleri basin (P1. 75:c), to the moun- tain of Stauromenoson the east (P1. 75:d). The Istron River valley and gorge north of Prina (P1. 75:e) form the western boundary, and the eastern boundary lies at the watershed be- tween the Xeropotamos (P1. 75:f) and Gourniapotamosrivers (Fig. 3). The mountain of Vrokastro and the Kopranes range rise steeply from the coast to en- close an area of upland hills and fields. South of these fields anothermountain range extends from Kolumbous (P1. 76:a) to Mount Schinauria, at an elevation of 698 meters (P1. 76:b). -
The Minoan Shipwreck at Pseira, Crete Frontispiece
The Minoan Shipwreck at Pseira, Crete Frontispiece. Yiorgos Klontzas in 2003 with the first hole-mouthed jar 1( , 03/22) found at the site of the Pseira ship- wreck. Photo E. Hadjidaki-Marder. PREHISTORY MONOGRAPHS 65 The Minoan Shipwreck at Pseira, Crete by Elpida Hadjidaki-Marder with contributions by Philip P. Betancourt, Thomas M. Brogan, Joanne E. Cutler,† Heidi M.C. Dierckx, Eleni Nodarou, and Todd Whitelaw Published by INSTAP Academic Press Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 2021 Design and Production INSTAP Academic Press, Philadelphia, PA Printing and Binding HF Group – Acmebinding, Charlestown, MA Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Hadjidaki-Marder, Elpida, 1948- author. | Betancourt, Philip P., 1936- contributor. Title: The Minoan shipwreck at Pseira, Crete / by Elpida Hadjidaki-Marder with contributions by Philip P. Betancourt [and five others]. Description: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania : INSTAP Academic Press, 2021. | Series: Prehistory monographs ; Volume 65 | Includes bibliographical references and index. | Summary: «The first Minoan shipwreck found near Crete was discovered in 2003 off the islet of Pseira on the northeastern coast of Crete. It was excavated between 2004 and 2009 by the Greek Archaeological Service, directed by Elpida Hadjidaki-Marder. The Minoan ship sank around 1725/1700 BC. The recovered cargo constitutes the largest known corpus of complete and almost complete clay vessels from a single Middle Minoan IIB deposit in several categories. The 140 artifacts recovered from the area of the wreck include 46 oval-mouthed and other amphorae, 41 spouted jugs used for transport, and 11 hole-mouthed jars. The activity of each season is described, followed by a catalog with extensive discussion of the pottery, a petrographic analysis, and catalogs of weights and stone tools. -
First Evidence of a Lake at Ancient Phaistos (Messara
First evidence of a lake at Ancient Phaistos (Messara Plain, South-Central Crete, Greece): Reconstructing paleoenvironments and differentiating the roles of human land-use and paleoclimate from Minoan to Roman times Matthieu Ghilardi, David Psomiadis, Valérie Andrieu-Ponel, Maxime Colleu, Pavlos Sotiropoulos, Fausto Longo, Amedeo Rossi, Vincenzo Amato, Françoise Gasse, Laetitia Sinibaldi, et al. To cite this version: Matthieu Ghilardi, David Psomiadis, Valérie Andrieu-Ponel, Maxime Colleu, Pavlos Sotiropoulos, et al.. First evidence of a lake at Ancient Phaistos (Messara Plain, South-Central Crete, Greece): Reconstructing paleoenvironments and differentiating the roles of human land-use and paleocli- mate from Minoan to Roman times. The Holocene, London: Sage, 2018, 28 (8), pp.1225-1244. 10.1177/0959683618771473. hal-01871064 HAL Id: hal-01871064 https://hal-amu.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01871064 Submitted on 10 Sep 2018 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. HOL0010.1177/0959683618771473The HoloceneGhilardi et al. 771473research-article2018 -
IOTA References Réf
IOTA_References List of IOTA References Réf. DXCC Description of IOTA Reference Coordonates AFRICA AF-001 3B6 Agalega Islands (=North, South) 10º00–10º45S - 056º15–057º00E Amsterdam & St Paul Islands (=Amsterdam, Deux Freres, Milieu, Nord, Ouest, AF-002 FT*Z 37º45–39º00S - 077º15–077º45E Phoques, Quille, St Paul) AF-003 ZD8 Ascension Island (=Ascension, Boatswain-bird) 07º45–08º00S - 014º15–014º30W Canary Islands (=Alegranza, Fuerteventura, Gomera, Graciosa, Gran Canaria, AF-004 EA8 Hierro, Lanzarote, La Palma, Lobos, Montana Clara, Tenerife and satellite islands) 27º30–29º30N - 013º15–018º15W Cape Verde - Leeward Islands (aka SOTAVENTO) (=Brava, Fogo, Maio, Sao Tiago AF-005 D4 14º30–15º45N - 022º00–026º00W and satellite islands) AF-006 VQ9 Diego Garcia Island 35º00–36º35N - 002º13W–001º37E Comoro Islands (=Mwali [aka Moheli], Njazidja [aka Grande Comore], Nzwani [aka AF-007 D6 11º15–12º30S - 043º00–044º45E Anjouan]) AF-008 FT*W Crozet Islands (=Apotres Isls, Cochons, Est, Pingouins, Possession) 45º45–46º45S - 050º00–052º30E AF-009 FR/E Europa Island 22º15–22º30S - 040º15–040º30E AF-010 3C Bioco (Fernando Poo) Island 03º00–04º00N - 008º15–009º00E AF-011 FR/G Glorioso Islands (=Glorieuse, Lys, Vertes) 11º15–11º45S - 047º00–047º30E AF-012 FR/J Juan De Nova Island 16º50–17º10S - 042º30–043º00E AF-013 5R Madagascar (main island and coastal islands not qualifying for other groups) 11º45–26º00S - 043º00–051º00E AF-014 CT3 Madeira Archipelago (=Madeira, Porto Santo and satellite islands) 32º35–33º15N - 016º00–017º30W Saint Brandon Islands (aka -
The Mycenaean Settlements in the Sparta Plain and the Ancient Traditions
THE MYCENAEAN SETTLEMENTS IN THE SPARTA PLAIN AND THE ANCIENT TRADITIONS by RICHARD HOPE SIMPSON INTRODUCTION In this note I assess the main Mycenaean settlements discovered in and around the Sparta plain and also try to interpret the ancient testimonia related to them. It is both customary and correct to present the more definite (i.e. the archaeological) evidence first and separately in such cases, before any speculative attempts to assign ancient names to particular sites. For this reason my note is divided into two parts, the first confined to the (more objective) archaeological data, and the second consisting of arguments based on these data combined with indications derived from the ancient traditions. The interpretation of the latter is by nature more subjective, involving more diverse and complex factors, especially the historical and topographical, in addition to deductions from the ancient material found at the sites. I. THE MYCENAEAN SITES AND THEIR SIZES: THE ROLE OF SURVEY Excavations in the Sparta plain have been of small scale, except for those of the British School at Ancient Sparta and at the site of the Menelaion (the final report of H.W. Catling's excavations is in preparation)!. For estimates of the sizes of most of the Mycenaean settlements in and around the plain we must therefore rely mainly on results obtained by survey. For the Menelaion and its vicinity, in addition to the preliminary excavation reports, we now have the data from the intensive Laconia Survey (LS i. 43, 51; LS ii. 289, 401-5), and for Kouphovouno the intensive site sUIvey (Cavanagh, Mee and Renard 2004).