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Minoan Stone Vases as Evidence for Minoan Foreign Connexions in the Aegean Late Bronze Age
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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.
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