I. Caloi, Crete in the Protopalatial period: a ceramic view, in I. Caloi - G. Doudalis (eds.), Protopalatial Pottery. Relative Chronology and Regional Differences in Middle Bronze Age Crete, AEGIS 27, Louvain-la-Neuve 2024, pp. 503-514. (original) (raw)
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Protopalatial Pottery Relative Chronology and Regional Differences in Middle Bronze Age Crete
Protopalatial Pottery Relative Chronology and Regional Differences in Middle Bronze Age Crete, 2024
Pouring and drinking vessels in Ceremonial Area 2 of the Petras necropolis 165 Metaxia Tsipopoulou 12. Mochlos 'in-between': ceramic trends and the building of cultural interconnected landscapes in the Protopalatial period 187 Georgios Doudalis 13. Defining MM IIB in the Mirabello region: the Alatzomouri Pefka deposit 205
Protopalatial Pottery. Relative Chronology and Regional Differences in Middle Bronze Age Crete, 2024
The Middle Minoan settlement at Apodoulou is located in Gournes, 1 km northwest of the modern village, on the southwest foothills of Psiloritis mountain, at the south end of Amari valley. It occupies the southern slope of a hill, covering an area of about 3500 m². The archaeological excavations conducted by the Greek-Italian expedition in the years 1985-2003 brought to light six houses, of which House A was fully excavated. As part of a broad study concerning pottery production and consumption at the Middle Minoan settlement of Apodoulou, four categories of vessels were distinguished: tableware, storage/transport vessels, vessels for cooking and food preparation, and vessels for diverse uses. Furthermore, excavation data, stratigraphy, architectural remains, and pottery study allowed us to distinguish three ceramic phases at the settlement. It seems that the Μiddle Minoan complex was built at the beginning of the ΜΜ ΙΙB period on an earlier installation and was abandoned at the end of ΜΜ ΙΙB, due to destruction by earthquake and fire. Trial sections under the pavements of the final MM IIB phase provided remains of earlier walls and pottery dated to MM IB, MM IIA, and MM IIB period. Τhe ΜM IIIA pottery coming from the upper levels is scarce, a fact that probably testifies a limited and temporary resettlement of the area after the original destruction of the MM IIB settlement. The presentation of pottery production from the MM settlement at Apodoulou aims to highlight different but also interrelated issues, such as the character of the ceramic production, the historical trajectory of the settlement through the sequences of its deposits during the Protopalatial period, and finally its relationship to the administration centers at Phaistos and Monastiraki in Amari valley.
In I. Caloi and G. Doudalis (eds.), Protopalatial Pottery. Relative Chronology and Regional Differences in Middle Bronze Age Crete (Louvain-la-Neuve: Presses Universitaires de Louvain) 355-369. Aegis 27., 2024
The Kamares Cave is the highest known Minoan mountain sanctuary, located at an elevation of 1524 m above sea level on the south side of the Ida mountain range in Central Crete. This paper provides a detailed discussion of the characteristics of MM IB, MM IIA, and MM IIB pottery from the cave in an effort to trace developments in pottery production and, briefly, issues of greater or lesser regionalism Central Crete.