Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Minoan Stone Vases as Evidence for Minoan Foreign Connexions in the Aegean Late Bronze Age
View through CrossRef
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 material involved is substantial, over a hundred vases, it is here set out as a contribution to the discussion of Minoan foreign connexions in the earlier part of the Late Bronze Age in the Aegean.The vases were made in Crete in Middle Minoan III/Late Minoan I—Late Minoan III A 1, c. 1600–1400 B.C., as is shown by the contexts of parallel vases from sites in the island (see the Catalogue). Most of the exports occur in Aegean contexts of this period; for those from contexts later than c. 1400 B.C. it is most reasonable to believe that they too were exported from Crete at the time of their floruit, containing in use for a time afterwards. In any case most of them are fragments, which indicates that their time of arrival and period of use were earlier than the late date of their contexts. Moreover after c. 1400 B.C. Cretan influence abroad ceased (Desborough 1964, 166–7; cf. Furumark 1950, 263–4 for the end of Minoan contacts with Trianda and Phylakopi), nor is there evidence that stone vases were then made in the island.
Title: Minoan Stone Vases as Evidence for Minoan Foreign Connexions in the Aegean Late Bronze Age
Description:
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 material involved is substantial, over a hundred vases, it is here set out as a contribution to the discussion of Minoan foreign connexions in the earlier part of the Late Bronze Age in the Aegean.
The vases were made in Crete in Middle Minoan III/Late Minoan I—Late Minoan III A 1, c.
1600–1400 B.
C.
, as is shown by the contexts of parallel vases from sites in the island (see the Catalogue).
Most of the exports occur in Aegean contexts of this period; for those from contexts later than c.
1400 B.
C.
it is most reasonable to believe that they too were exported from Crete at the time of their floruit, containing in use for a time afterwards.
In any case most of them are fragments, which indicates that their time of arrival and period of use were earlier than the late date of their contexts.
Moreover after c.
1400 B.
C.
Cretan influence abroad ceased (Desborough 1964, 166–7; cf.
Furumark 1950, 263–4 for the end of Minoan contacts with Trianda and Phylakopi), nor is there evidence that stone vases were then made in the island.
Related Results
Evaluating the Science to Inform the Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans Midcourse Report
Evaluating the Science to Inform the Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans Midcourse Report
Abstract
The Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans (Guidelines) advises older adults to be as active as possible. Yet, despite the well documented benefits of physical a...
Do evidence summaries increase health policy‐makers' use of evidence from systematic reviews? A systematic review
Do evidence summaries increase health policy‐makers' use of evidence from systematic reviews? A systematic review
This review summarizes the evidence from six randomized controlled trials that judged the effectiveness of systematic review summaries on policymakers' decision making, or the most...
Minoan Chronology Reviewed
Minoan Chronology Reviewed
The system of Minoan chronology proposed by the late Sir Arthur Evans remained almost unchallenged for many years. The first hint that it might not be equally valid for all sites i...
Insights into Egyptian Horus Falcon Imagery by Way of Real Falcons and Horus Falcon Influence in the Aegean in the Middle Bronze Age: Part II
Insights into Egyptian Horus Falcon Imagery by Way of Real Falcons and Horus Falcon Influence in the Aegean in the Middle Bronze Age: Part II
Falcons were a part of everyday life in the Aegean but also appear in Minoan-Mycenaean art in cult capacity as attending a goddess, being the possible ba bird of a deceased person,...
STONE FREE RATES OF KIDNEY STONE WAS LOWER THAN THE ONE OF URETER STONE PATIENTS MANAGED BY ESWL AND THE ONE OF URETER STONE MANAGED BY URETEROLITHOTRIPSY
STONE FREE RATES OF KIDNEY STONE WAS LOWER THAN THE ONE OF URETER STONE PATIENTS MANAGED BY ESWL AND THE ONE OF URETER STONE MANAGED BY URETEROLITHOTRIPSY
Objective: To evaluate the stone free rates of kidney and ureter stone patients managed by Extracorporeal Shockwave Lithotripsy (ESWL), and the ureter stone free rate managed by ur...
Some Comments on Interpreting the Dark-Surfaced Handmade Burnished Pottery of the 13th and 12th Century BCE Aegean
Some Comments on Interpreting the Dark-Surfaced Handmade Burnished Pottery of the 13th and 12th Century BCE Aegean
David Small's attempt (JMA this issue) to explain the appearance, at major centers in the late Minoan-Mycenaean world, of dark-surfaced, handmade, and burnished vessels as a respon...
Correlation between body size and stone composition in pediatric stone patients
Correlation between body size and stone composition in pediatric stone patients
Abstract
Purpose
Due to the lack of stone composition data, the relationship between BMI and stone composition in children is rarely reported. Our study encompassed more c...
MYCENAEAN LAPIDARY CRAFTSMANSHIP: THE MANUFACTURING PROCESS OF STONE VASES
MYCENAEAN LAPIDARY CRAFTSMANSHIP: THE MANUFACTURING PROCESS OF STONE VASES
The first substantial corpus of developed and complex stone vases emerged on the Greek mainland in the shaft graves of Mycenae (Middle Helladic III – Late Helladic I) and was certa...

