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Escaping The Labyrinth The Cretan Neolithic In Context Valasia Isaakidou Valasia Isaakidou

  • SKU: BELL-29647120
Escaping The Labyrinth The Cretan Neolithic In Context Valasia Isaakidou Valasia Isaakidou
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Escaping The Labyrinth The Cretan Neolithic In Context Valasia Isaakidou Valasia Isaakidou instant download after payment.

Publisher: Oxbow Books Limited
File Extension: PDF
File size: 5.96 MB
Pages: 302
Author: Valasia Isaakidou; Valasia Isaakidou
ISBN: 9781842172919, 1842172913
Language: English
Year: 2008

Product desciption

Escaping The Labyrinth The Cretan Neolithic In Context Valasia Isaakidou Valasia Isaakidou by Valasia Isaakidou; Valasia Isaakidou 9781842172919, 1842172913 instant download after payment.

Beneath the Bronze Age 'Palace of Minos', Neolithic Knossos is one of the earliest known farming settlements in Europe and perhaps the longest-lived. For 3000 years, Neolithic Knossos was also perhaps one of very few settlements on Crete and, for much of this time, maintained a distinctive material culture. This volume radically enhances understanding of the important, but hitherto little known, Neolithic settlement and culture of Crete. Thirteen papers, from the tenth Sheffield Aegean Round Table in January 2006, explore two aspects of the Cretan Neolithic: the results of recent re-analysis of a range of bodies of material from J.D. Evans' excavations at EN-FN Knossos; and new insights into the Cretan Late and Final Neolithic and the contentious belated colonisation of the rest of island, drawing on both new and old fieldwork. Papers in the first group examine the idiosyncratic Knossian ceramic chronology (P. Tomkins), human figurines from a gender perspective (M. Mina), funerary practices (S. Triantaphyllou), chipped stone technology (J. Conolly), land and-use and its social implications (V. Isaakidou). Those in the second group, present a re-study of LN Katsambas (N. Galanidou and K. Mandeli), evidence for later Neolithic exploration of eastern Crete (T. Strasser), Ceremony and consumption at late Final Neolithic Phaistos (S. Todaro and S. Di Tonto), Final Neolithic settlement patterns (K. Nowicki), the transition to the Early Bronze Age at Kephala Petra (Y. Papadatos), and a critical appraisal of Final Neolithic 'marginal colonisation' (P. Halstead). In conclusion, C. Broodbank places the Cretan Neolithic within its wider Mediterranean context and J.D. Evans provides an autobiographical account of a lifetime of insular Neolithic exploration.

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