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Koukounaries I Mycenaean Pottery From Selected Contexts Robert B Koehl

  • SKU: BELL-50202294
Koukounaries I Mycenaean Pottery From Selected Contexts Robert B Koehl
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Koukounaries I Mycenaean Pottery From Selected Contexts Robert B Koehl instant download after payment.

Publisher: Archaeopress Archaeology
File Extension: PDF
File size: 34.5 MB
Pages: 416
Author: Robert B. Koehl
ISBN: 9781789698749, 178969874X
Language: English
Year: 2021

Product desciption

Koukounaries I Mycenaean Pottery From Selected Contexts Robert B Koehl by Robert B. Koehl 9781789698749, 178969874X instant download after payment.

The excavations on the Koukounaries Hill, Paros, Greece, conducted under the direction of Demetrius U. Schilardi for the Archaeological Society at Athens from 1976 to 1992, revealed a 12th century B.C.E. Mycenaean building, an Iron Age settlement, and an Archaic sanctuary. Koukounaries I: Mycenaean Pottery from Selected Contexts presents the pottery from five areas inside the building: three large storerooms, the main east-west corridor, and a small shrine, as well as the pottery from a limited reoccupation after the building’s fire destruction and abandonment. The ceramics from the main occupation phase comprise the largest and best-preserved domestic assemblage from the 12th century B.C.E. in the Cyclades and offer important evidence for the continuation of Mycenaean culture after the destruction of the mainland palatial citadels. The small deposits of pottery from the reoccupation phase, provide important stratigraphic evidence for defining the Late Helladic IIIC ceramic sequence. The volume also considers the function of the individual spaces within the building, based largely on the patterns of shape distributions and quantities, with the statistics for each context presented in a series of appendices. Other issues area also explored, including the evidence for itinerant potters, the trade in antique vases, and the place of origin of the settlers who founded and inhabited the Mycenaean building on the summit of the Koukounaries Hill.

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