The Iron Age Sanctuary and Settlement at Karystos–Plakari (2012) (original) (raw)
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Eretria is a site of key importance in research on Early Iron Age Greece, whether one is interested in domestic architecture, burial customs, religious practices, trade networks, or craft production. This is due as much to the wealth of discoveries unearthed for more than a century as to the debates and theories they have sparked.
A Companion to the Archaeology of Early Greece and the Mediterranean
Wiley eBooks, 2019
The Greek Landscape Setting Although we are accustomed to envisage Greece from the Mediterranean climate zone around its long coastlines and on the Aegean islands, the landscape is far more varied if we travel both up into the mountains of the south and into the more temperate climates of the north. It remains still true, as Colin Renfrew illustrated in his still invaluable synthesis of later Greek prehistory (1972), that the high cultures of the Early Bronze Age (EBA), Minoan-Mycenaean civilization and the Geometric (G) to high Classical cultures of Greece have their essential distributional focus in the south and the lowlands, but inversely, till recently, archaeological research was far less interested in the development of societies in upland Greece and in the northern provinces. Even today we are mostly best informed about Macedonia, due to the innovative regional work of university and state archaeologists in that region (cf. Andreou, Fotiadis, and Kotsakis 1996), and need to know much more about Thrace and northwest Greece. We already are aware that Neolithic Greece in contrast is most flourishing in the northern plains, while from late Classical times into the Ottoman era northern Greece has also been as significant for urbanism and rural settlement as the south. Various explanations have been proposed for the apparent precocity of the lowland south in the Bronze Age (BA) to high Classical eras:
Sympozjum Egejskie - 8th Conference in Aegean Archaeology
We welcome you to register to attend Sympozjum Egejskie - 8th Conference in Aegean Archaeology!! Please find the registration form at the bottom of this webpage: https://www.archeologia.uw.edu.pl/en/sympozjum-egejskie-8th-conference-in-aegean-archaeology-june-23-25-2021/ Here you can also find the conference programme and the book of abstracts