Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

The Middle Minoan Slipway for Ships at the Kommos Harbour, and Harbour Development in Prehistoric Crete

View through CrossRef
Revealed at Kommos in 1985, in Southern Crete, was a long, narrow strip of slab paving, dating to a Middle Minoan (henceforth MM) period. It is laid out east–west, and was found below the central courts of superposed MM II Building AA, MM III Building T, and Late Minoan (henceforth LM) III Building P—thus predating them (Shaw and Shaw 2006). At that time the impression was that the pavement was likely a ‘walkway’ for processions, like those found, especially in MM palatial west courts, in Crete (Driessen 2009; Shaw 2015: 14–17). The walkways sometimes connected building groups, as in the case of Malia. At the time of its discovery, the one at Kommos appeared like an appropriate part of what was to become a palatial site, marked by the Minoan Elite architectural style (Shaw 2015). However, now, some years later and after further consideration, this identification must be questioned: while most often MM in origin, walkways can be common at any MM palatial site, but only one such pavement is known at Kommos. Also, walkways occur most often on flat expanses such as the West Courts of palaces. That at Kommos stretches in a straight line towards the water edge, and with a constant slope to and from the water. Such a path might even be more useful for sliding ships to and from the water. But most important, in the case of the example at Kommos, there are shallow gaps, 0.15–0.20 m wide, built into the slab pavement every 2.40 m on centre. Seven such gaps are preserved, labelled 1–7, of which five (2–5, 7) are clearly intentionally aligned. Moreover, outside of Kommos, in Crete, the only walkway with gaps, among the dozens of walkways known, is in the Theatral Area at Phaistos, where the three gaps marked with asterisks are so narrow that they were probably simply drains, if they actually had a purpose.
Title: The Middle Minoan Slipway for Ships at the Kommos Harbour, and Harbour Development in Prehistoric Crete
Description:
Revealed at Kommos in 1985, in Southern Crete, was a long, narrow strip of slab paving, dating to a Middle Minoan (henceforth MM) period.
It is laid out east–west, and was found below the central courts of superposed MM II Building AA, MM III Building T, and Late Minoan (henceforth LM) III Building P—thus predating them (Shaw and Shaw 2006).
At that time the impression was that the pavement was likely a ‘walkway’ for processions, like those found, especially in MM palatial west courts, in Crete (Driessen 2009; Shaw 2015: 14–17).
The walkways sometimes connected building groups, as in the case of Malia.
At the time of its discovery, the one at Kommos appeared like an appropriate part of what was to become a palatial site, marked by the Minoan Elite architectural style (Shaw 2015).
However, now, some years later and after further consideration, this identification must be questioned: while most often MM in origin, walkways can be common at any MM palatial site, but only one such pavement is known at Kommos.
Also, walkways occur most often on flat expanses such as the West Courts of palaces.
That at Kommos stretches in a straight line towards the water edge, and with a constant slope to and from the water.
Such a path might even be more useful for sliding ships to and from the water.
But most important, in the case of the example at Kommos, there are shallow gaps, 0.
15–0.
20 m wide, built into the slab pavement every 2.
40 m on centre.
Seven such gaps are preserved, labelled 1–7, of which five (2–5, 7) are clearly intentionally aligned.
Moreover, outside of Kommos, in Crete, the only walkway with gaps, among the dozens of walkways known, is in the Theatral Area at Phaistos, where the three gaps marked with asterisks are so narrow that they were probably simply drains, if they actually had a purpose.

Related Results

The high-resolution COASTAL CRETE ocean forecasting system 
The high-resolution COASTAL CRETE ocean forecasting system 
<p>The coastal area of Crete is an area of increasing interest due to the recent hydrocarbon exploration and exploitation activities in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea ...
Minoan Stone Vases as Evidence for Minoan Foreign Connexions in the Aegean Late Bronze Age
Minoan Stone Vases as Evidence for Minoan Foreign Connexions in the Aegean Late Bronze Age
This article presents the evidence for the distribution of Late Minoan stone vases outside Crete. This class of evidence has not been discussed previously and as the amount of mate...
The COASTAL CRETE downscaled forecasting system
The COASTAL CRETE downscaled forecasting system
<p>The island of Crete is known to be at the crossroads of historic sea routes that served as conveyors of trade, knowledge and culture throughout history, linking so...
Kommos
Kommos
Abstract Kommos was lightly settled as early as the Late Neolithic/Early Minoan period, especially on the sloping side of the small southernmost hills known as To...
Megarons and Minoan Hall Systems: A Comparison of the Large Hall Systems in Minoan and Mycenaean Architecture
Megarons and Minoan Hall Systems: A Comparison of the Large Hall Systems in Minoan and Mycenaean Architecture
<p>Scholarship comparing the Minoan Hall System with the Mycenaean ‘megaron’ has in general emphasized either the similarities or differences between the two types of suite. ...
Introduction—Minoan Built Environment: Past Studies, Recent Perspectives, and Future Challenges
Introduction—Minoan Built Environment: Past Studies, Recent Perspectives, and Future Challenges
Architecture and urbanism have been of constant interest to Minoan archaeologists since the beginning of the twentieth century. While there is some scholarly bias to this, with the...
Marvels of the system. Art, perception and engagement with the environment in Minoan Crete
Marvels of the system. Art, perception and engagement with the environment in Minoan Crete
This paper discusses the relationship between art, perception and human engagement with the environment in Minoan Crete through the depiction of landscapes and the ‘natural world’ ...
Modernità MinoicaL'Arte Egea e l'Art Nouveau: il Caso di Mariano Fortuny y Madrazo
Modernità MinoicaL'Arte Egea e l'Art Nouveau: il Caso di Mariano Fortuny y Madrazo
The sensational discovery in the early twentieth century of the prehistoric civilisation of Crete, named Minoan after the mythical king Minos, and the contemporary birth of Modern ...

Back to Top