Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-vdxz6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-26T17:12:38.620Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

7 - The Aegean Bronze Age

from Part II - Early Mediterranean Economies and the Near East

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2008

John Bennet
Affiliation:
University of Sheffield
Walter Scheidel
Affiliation:
Stanford University, California
Ian Morris
Affiliation:
Stanford University, California
Richard P. Saller
Affiliation:
Stanford University, California
Get access

Summary

introduction

In this chapter, I explore economic activity in the Aegean Bronze Age (c. 3000–1000 bc). I focus on the “palatial” societies of Late Bronze Age Crete and mainland Greece, but offer an outline of prior developments, on which they were based. I emphasize what might be termed the “core” of the Mycenaean world (mainland Greece from southern Thessaly to the southern Peloponnese, the islands of the Aegean, including Crete, plus much of coastal southwest Anatolia). Such a definition is just as deficient for the Bronze Age as it is for the Early Iron Age and later, since it does not “bound” the world in which inhabitants of the Bronze Age Aegean moved or with which they were in contact, as will become apparent in the discussion of exchange.

It is a commonplace to emphasize the agricultural basis for all ancient societies and, for five millennia, this was true of the Aegean region. The standard western Old World cultigens (wheat, barley, and pulses) and domesticated animals (sheep, goats, pigs, and cattle) arrived by 7000 bc (with or without people), in eastern mainland Greece and on Crete, at least at Knossos. For Crete, lack of evidence for prior human settlement strongly suggests deliberate colonization at that time, probably from southwest Anatolia. The Bronze Age in the Aegean officially begins late in the fourth millennium bc, although metalworking is quite common before this, and regular use of tin bronze relatively rare before the later third millennium. By 3000 bc permanent human populations practicing agriculture had reached all but the tiniest Aegean islands, facilitating the formation of an interaction zone comprising the eastern Greek mainland, the northern Aegean, western Anatolia, and Crete.

Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2007

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Adrymi-Sismani, V. (2000) “Oikia me diadromo apo tin arhaia Iolko,” in To Ergo ton Eforeion Arhaiotiton kai Neoteron Mnimeion tou YP.PO. sti Thessalia kai tin Evruteri Periohi tis (1990–1998): Proti Epistimoniki Synantisi. Volos.Google Scholar
Alcock, S. E. (1991) “Urban survey and the polis of Phlius,” Hesperia 60.Google Scholar
Alcock, S. E. (1994) “Breaking up the Hellenistic world: survey and society,” in Morris, , ed. (1994d).
Alcock, S. E., and Cherry, J. F., eds. (2004) Side-by-Side Survey: Comparative Regional Studies in the Mediterranean World. Oxford.
Allen, S. H. (1998) Finding the Walls of Troy: Frank Calvert and Heinrich Schliemann at Hisarlik. Berkeley.
Andreou, S. (2001) “Exploring the patterns of power in the Bronze Age settlements of northern Greece,” in Branigan, , ed. (2001b).
Aravantinos, V. L., Godart, L., and Sacconi, A., eds. (2001) Thèbes: fouilles de la Cadmée I: les tablettes en linéaire B de la Odos Pelopidou, édition et commentaire. Pisa and Rome.
Aura, Jorro F. (1985–93) Diccionario micénico. Madrid.
Barber, E. W. (1991) Prehistoric Textiles: the Development of Cloth in the Neolithic and Bronze Ages with Special Reference to the Aegean. Princeton.
Barrett, J. C. and Halstead, P., eds. (2004) The Emergence of Civilisation Revisited. Sheffield Studies in Aegean Archaeology 6. Oxford.
Bass, G. (1967) Cape Gelidonya: a Bronze Age Shipwreck. Philadelphia.
Bass, G. (1991) “Evidence of trade from Bronze Age shipwrecks,” in Gale, ed. (1991a).
Beck, C. W. (1966) “Analysis and provenience of Minoan and Mycenaean amber,” GRBS 7.Google Scholar
Beck, C. W., Southard, G. C., and Adams, A. B. (1968) “Analysis and provenience of Minoan and Mycenaean amber, II: Tiryns,” GRBS 9.Google Scholar
Beckman, G. (1996) Hittite Diplomatic Texts. Society for Biblical Literature, Writings from the Ancient World 7. Atlanta.
Bendall, L. M. (2001b) “The economics of potnia in the Linear B documents: palatial support for Mycenaean religion,” in Laffineur, R. and Hägg, R., eds., POTNIA: Deities and Religion in the Aegean Bronze Age. Proceedings of the 8th International Aegean Conference, Göteborg, Göteborg University, 12–15 April 2000.Liège and Austin, TX.Google Scholar
Bendall, L. M. (2003) “A reconsideration of the Northeastern Building at Pylos: evidence for a Mycenaean redistributive center,” AJA 107.Google Scholar
Bennet, J. (1985) “The structure of the Linear B administration at Knossos,” AJA 89.Google Scholar
Bennet, J. (1988a) “Approaches to the problem of combining Linear B textual data and archaeological data in the Late Bronze Age Aegean,” in French, E. B. and Wardle, K. A., eds., Problems in Greek Prehistory: Papers Presented at the Centenary Conference of the British School of Archaeology at Athens, Manchester, April 1986.Bristol.Google Scholar
Bennet, J. (1990) “Knossos in context: comparative perspectives on the Linear B administration of LM 11–111 Crete,” in American Journal of Archaeology 94.Google Scholar
Bennet, J. (1995) “Space through time: diachronic perspectives on the spatial organization of the Pylian state,” in Niemeier, and Laffineur, , eds. (1995).
Bennet, J. (1999a) “The Mycenaean conceptualization of space or Pylian geography … yet again,” in Deger-Jalkotzy, , Hiller, , and Panagl, , eds. (1999).
Bennet, J. (1999b) “Pylos: the expansion of a Mycenaean palatial center,” in Galaty, and Parkinson, , eds. (1999).
Bennet, J. (2001) “Agency and bureaucracy: thoughts on the nature and extent of administration in Bronze Age Pylos,” in Voutsaki, and Killen, , eds. (2001).
Bennet, J. and Driessen, J., eds. (1998–9) A-NA-QO-TA: Studies Presented to J. T. Killen. Minos. Salamanca.
Bennet, J., and Shelmerdine, C. W. (2001). “Not the palace of Nestor: the development of the ‘Lower Town’ and other non-palatial settlements in LBA Messenia,” in Branigan, , ed. (2001b).
Bennett, E. L. Jr. (1992) “A selection of Pylos tablet texts,” in Olivier, , ed. (1992).
Bennett, E. L. Jr. and Olivier, J.-P. (1973) The Pylos Tablets Transcribed, I. Incunabula Graeca 51. Rome.
Bernal, M. (1987) Black Athena: the Afroasiatic Roots of Classical Civilization, I: The Fabrication of Ancient Greece 1785–1985. London.
Bernal, M. (1991) Black Athena: the Afroasiatic Roots of Classical Civilization, 2: The Archaeological and Documentary Evidence. London.
Bevan, A. (2002) “The rural landscape of Neopalatial Kythera: a GIS perspective,” Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 15.Google Scholar
Blackman, D. (2001) “Archaeology in Greece 2000–2001,” JHS-Archaeological Reports 47.Google Scholar
Blegen, C. W. and Rawson, M. (1966) The Palace of Nestor at Pylos in Western Messenia. Volume I: the Buildings and their Contents. 2 vols. Princeton.
Boulotis, C. (1998) “Les nouveaux documents en linéaire A d’Akrotiri (Théra): remarques préliminaires,” BCH 122.Google Scholar
Branigan, K. (2001a) “Aspects of Minoan urbanism,” in Branigan, , ed. (2001b).
Broodbank, C. (1999b) “Kythera survey: preliminary report on the 1998 season,” BSA 94.Google Scholar
Broodbank, C. (2000) An Island Archaeology of the Early Cyclades. Cambridge.
Broodbank, C. (2004) “Minoanisation,” PCPhS 50.Google Scholar
Broodbank, C. and Strasser, T. F. (1991) “Migrant farmers and the Neolithic colonization of Crete,” Antiquity 65.Google Scholar
Brown, A., ed. (2001) Arthur Evans’s Travels in Crete 1894–1899. British Archaeological Reports International Series 1000. Oxford.
Buckland, P. C., Dugmore, A. J., and Edwards, K. J. (1997) “Bronze Age myths? Volcanic activity and human response in the Mediterranean and north Atlantic regions,” Antiquity 71.Google Scholar
Cambitoglou, A. and Papadopoulos, J. (1993) “The earliest Mycenaeans in Macedonia,” in Zerner, , ed. (1993).
Carlier, P. (1984) La royauté en Grèce avant Alexandre. Strasbourg.
Carlier, P. (1995) “Qa-si-re-u et qa-si-re-wi-ja,” in Niemeier, and Laffineur, , eds. (1995).
Carlier, P. (1998) “Wa-na-ka derechef. Nouvelles réflexions sur les royautés mycéniennes,” BCH 122.Google Scholar
Catling, H., Cherry, J. F., Jones, R. E., and Killen, J. T. (1980) “The Linear B inscribed stirrup jars and west Crete,” BSA 75.Google Scholar
Cavanagh, W. G., Crouwel, J., Catling, R., and Shipley, G., eds. (1996) Continuity and Change in a Greek Rural Landscape: The Laconia Survey II. London.
Cavanagh, W. G., and Mee, C. B. (1998) A Private Place: Death in Prehistoric Greece. Studies in Mediterranean Archaeology 125. Jonsered.
Chadwick, J. (1976) The Mycenaean World. Cambridge.
Chadwick, J. (1990) The Decipherment of Linear B. 2nd edn. Cambridge.
Chadwick, J., Godart, L., Killen, J. T., Olivier, J.-P., Sacconi, A., and Sakellarakis, I. A. (1987–98) Corpus of Mycenaean inscriptions from Knossos I–IV. Rome and Cambridge.
Cherry, J. F. (1981) “Pattern and process in the earliest colonization of the Mediterranean islands,” Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 47.Google Scholar
Cherry, J. F. (1983) “Frogs around the pond: perspectives on current archaeological survey projects in the Mediterranean region,” in Keller, D. R. and Rupp, D. W., eds., Archaeological Survey in the Mediterranean Area.Oxford: British Archaeological Reports International Series 155.Google Scholar
Cherry, J. F. (1988) “Pastoralism and the role of animals in the pre- and protohistoric economies of the Aegean,” in Whittaker, , ed. (1988).
Cherry, J. F. (1994) “Regional survey in the Aegean: the ‘new wave’ (and after),” in Kardulias, , ed. (1994).
Cherry, J. F. (2003) “Archaeology beyond the site: regional survey and its future,” in Papadopoulos, J. K. and Leventhal, R. M., eds., Theory and Practice in Mediterranean Archaeology: Old World and New World Perspectives.Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Cherry, J. F., and Davis, J. L. (2001) “‘Under the sceptre of Agamemnon’: the view from the hinterlands of Mycenae,” in Branigan, , ed. (2001b).
Cline, E. H. (1994) Sailing the Wine-Dark Sea: International Trade and the Aegean Late Bronze Age. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports International Series 591.
Cline, E. H. and Harris-Cline, D., eds. (1998) The Aegean and the Orient in the Second Millennium. Liège and Austin, TX: Aegaeum.Google Scholar
Cosmopoulos, M. B. (2001) The Rural History of Ancient Greek City-States: The Oropos Survey Project. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports International Series 1001.
Cullen, T., ed. (2001) Aegean Prehistory: A Review. Boston.
Cunningham, T. and Driessen, J. (2004) “Site by site: combining survey and excavation data to chart patterns of socio-political change in Bronze Age Crete,” in Alcock, and Cherry, , eds. (2004).
D’Agata, A. L. (2000) “Interactions between Aegean groups and local communities in Sicily in the Bronze Age: the evidence from pottery,” SMEA 42.Google Scholar
Dakouri-Hild, A. (2001) “Plotting fragments: a preliminary assessment of the Middle Helladic settlement in Boeotian Thebes,” in Branigan, , ed. (2001b).
Dalfes, H. N., Kukla, G., and Weiss, H., eds. (1997) Third Millennium BC Climate Change and Old World Collapse. Berlin: NATO Scientific Affairs Division ASI Series Volume 1.49.
Davis, J. L. and Bennet, J. (1999) “Making Mycenaeans: warfare, territorial expansion, and representations of the other in the Pylian kingdom,” in Laffineur, R., ed., POLEMOS. Le contexte guerrier en Egée à l’âge du Bronze.Liège and Austin: Aegaeum 19.Google Scholar
Day, P. M. (1988) “The production and distribution of storage jars in Neopalatial Crete,” in French, E. B. and Wardle, K. A., eds., Problems in Greek Prehistory.Bristol.Google Scholar
Day, P. M. (1997) “Ceramic exchange between towns and outlying settlements in Neopalatial East Crete,” in Hägg, , ed. (1997).
Day, P. M. and Haskell, H. W. (1995) “Transport stirrup jars from Thebes as evidence of trade in Late Bronze Age Greece,” in Gillis, C., Risberg, C., and Sjöberg, B., eds., Trade and Production in Premonetary Greece.Jonsered.Google Scholar
Day, P. M. and Wilson, D. E. (2002) “Landscapes of memory, craft and power in Pre-Palatial and Proto-Palatial Knossos,” in Hamilakis, ed. (2002).
Day, P. M., Wilson, D. E., and Kiriatzi, E. (1997) “Reassessing specialization in Prepalatial Cretan ceramic production,” in Laffineur, and Betancourt, , eds. (1997).
De Fidio, P. (1992) “Mycènes et Proche-Orient, ou le théorème des modèles,” in Olivier, , ed. (1992).
De Fidio, P. (1998–9) “On the routes of Aegean Bronze Age wool and weights,” in Bennet, and Driessen, , eds. (1998–9).
Deger-Jalkotzy, S. (1978) E-QE-TA: Zur Rolle des Gefolgschaftwesens in der Sozialstruktur mykenischer Reich. Vienna.
Demakopoulou, K. and Divari-Valakou, N. (1994–5) “New finds with Linear B inscriptions from Midea,” Minos 29–30.Google Scholar
Driessen, J. M. (1990) An Early Destruction in the Mycenaean Palace at Knossos: A New Interpretation of the Excavation Field-Notes of the South-East Area of the West Wing. Leuven: Acta Archaeologica Lovaniensia, Monograph 2.
Driessen, J. M. (1997) “Le palais de Cnossos au MR II–III: combien de destructions?,” in Driessen, J. and Farnoux, A., eds., La Crète mycénienne.Athens: BCH supplement 30.Google Scholar
Driessen, J. M. (2000) The Scribes of the Room of the Chariot Tablets. Salamanca: Minos Supp. volume 15.
Driessen, J. M. (2001a) “Centre and periphery: some observations on the administration of the kingdom of Knossos,” in Voutsaki, and Killen, , eds. (2001).
Driessen, J. M. (2001b) “History and hierarchy: preliminary observations on the settlement pattern of Minoan Crete,” in Branigan, , ed. (2001b).
Driessen, J. and Macdonald, C. (1997) The Troubled Island. Minoan Crete Before and After the Santorini Eruption. Liège and Austin: Aegaeum.
Duhoux, Y. (1976) Aspects du vocabulaire économique mycénien (cadastre – artisanat – fiscalité). Amsterdam.
Earle, T. (2002)Bronze Age Economics: the Beginnings of Political Economies. Boulder, CO.
Endfield, G. H. (1997) “Myth, manipulation and myopia in the study of Mediterranean soil erosion,” in Sinclair, A., Slater, E. and Gowlett, J., eds., Archaeological Sciences 1995.Oxford: Oxbow Monograph.Google Scholar
Feuer, B. A. (1983) The Northern Mycenaean Border in Thessaly. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports International Series.
Finley, M. I. (1957) “The Mycenaean tablets and economic history,” Economic History Review 10.Google Scholar
Firth, R. J. (2000–1) “A review of the find-places of the Linear B Tablets from the palace of Knossos,” Minos 35–36.Google Scholar
Fitton, J. L. (1996) The Discovery of the Greek Bronze Age. London.
Forsén, J. and Forsén, B., eds. (2003) The Asea Valley Survey: An Arcadian Mountain Valley from the Palaeolithic Period until Modern Times. Stockholm.
Foster, E. D. (1977) “An administrative department at Knossos concerned with perfumery and offerings,” Minos 16.Google Scholar
French, D. H. (1980) “The Roman road-system of Asia Minor,” ANRW II.7.2Google Scholar
French, E. B. (2002) Mycenae, Agamemnon’s Capital: the Site in its Setting. Stroud.
Friedrich, W. L. (2000) Fire in the Sea. The Santorini Volcano: Natural History and the Legend of Atlantis. Cambridge.
Galaty, M. L. and Parkinson, W. A., eds. (1999) Rethinking Mycenaean Palaces: New Interpretations of an Old Idea. Los Angeles: Monumenta Archaeologica.
Gale, N. H., ed. (1991a) Bronze Age Trade in the Mediterranean. Jonsered: Studies in Mediterranean Archaeology.
Godart, L. (1992) “Les collecteurs dans le monde égéen,” in Olivier, , ed. (1992).
Godart, L. and Olivier, J.-P. (1976–85) Recueil des inscriptions en linéaire A, I–V. Paris: Études Crétoises.
Graziadio, G. (1998) “Trade circuits and trade-routes in the Shaft Grave period,” SMEA 40.Google Scholar
Grove, A. T. and Rackham, O. (2001) The Nature of Mediterranean Europe. An Ecological Essay. New Haven and London.
Hägg, R. ed. (1997) The Function of the “Minoan Villa.” Stockholm.
Haldane, C. (1993) “Direct evidence for organic cargoes in the Late Bronze Age,” World Archaeology 24.Google Scholar
Hallager, B. P. and McGeorge, P. J. P. (1992) Late Minoan III Burials at Khania. Göteborg: Studies in Mediterranean Archaeology.
Hallager, E. (1996) The Minoan Roundel and Other Sealed Documents in the Neopalatial Linear A Administration. Aegaeum. Liège/Austin.
Halstead, P. (1977) “The Bronze Age demography of Crete and Greece – a note,” BSA 72.Google Scholar
Halstead, P. (1981) “From determinism to uncertainty: social storage and the rise of the Minoan palace,” in Sheridan, A. and Bailey, G., eds., Economic Archaeology.Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, International Series 96.Google Scholar
Halstead, P. (1994) “The north-south divide: regional paths to complexity in prehistoric Greece,” in Mathers, C. and Stoddart, S., eds., Development and Decline in the Mediterranean Bronze Age.Sheffield.Google Scholar
Halstead, P. (1995a) “Late Bronze Age grain crops and Linear B ideograms *65, *120 and *121,” BSA 90.Google Scholar
Halstead, P. (1995b) “Plough and power: the economic and social significance of cultivation with the ox-drawn ard in the Mediterranean,” Bulletin on Sumerian Agriculture 8.Google Scholar
Halstead, P. (1996) “The development of agriculture and pastoralism in Greece: when, how, who and what?,” in Harris, D. R., ed., The Origins and Spread of Agriculture and Pastoralism in Eurasia.London.Google Scholar
Halstead, P. (1998–9) “Texts, bones and herders: approaches to animal husbandry in Late Bronze Age Greece,” in Bennet, and Driessen, , eds. (1998–9).
Halstead, P. (2004) “Life after Mediterranean polyculture: the subsistence subsystem and the emergence of civilisation revisited,” in Barrett, and Halstead, , eds. (2004).
Halstead, P. and Barrett, J. C., eds. (2004) Food, Cuisine and Society in Prehistoric Greece. Oxford: Sheffield Studies in Aegean Archaeology.
Halstead, P. and O’Shea, J., eds. (1989) Bad Year Economics. Cultural Responses to Risk and Crisis. Cambridge.
Hamilakis, Y. (1996) “Wine, oil and the dialectics of power in Bronze Age Crete: a review of the evidence,” Oxford Journal of Archaeology 15.Google Scholar
Hamilakis, Y. (1997–8) “Consumption patterns, factional competition and political development in Bronze Age Crete,” BICS 42.Google Scholar
Hamilakis, Y. (1999) “Food technologies/technologies of the body: the social context of wine and oil production and consumption in Bronze Age Crete,” World Archaeology 31.Google Scholar
Hamilakis, Y., and Konsolaki, E. (2004) “Pigs for the gods: animal burnt sacrifices at a Mycenaean sanctuary,” Oxford Journal of Archaeology 23.Google Scholar
Hansen, J. M. (1985) “Palaeoethnobotany in Greece: past, present and future,” in Wilkie, N. C. and Coulson, W. D. E., eds., Contributions to Aegean Archaeology: Studies in Honor of William A. McDonald.Minneapolis, MN.Google Scholar
Hansen, J. M. (1988) “Agriculture in the prehistoric Aegean: data versus speculation,” AJA 92.Google Scholar
Harding, A. and Hughes-Brock, H. (1974) “Amber in the Mycenaean world,” BSA 69.Google Scholar
Hart, G. R. (1965) “The grouping of place-names in the Knossos tablets,” Mnemosyne 18.Google Scholar
Hawkins, J. D. (1998) “Tarkasnawa king of Mira: ‘Tarkondemos,’ Boǧazköy sealings and Karabel,” Anatolian Studies 48.Google Scholar
Helck, W. (1995) Die Beziehungen Ägyptens und Vorderasiens zur ÄgÄis bis zur 7. Jahrhundert V. Chr. 2nd edn. Darmstadt.
Helms, M. W. (1988) Ulysses’ Sail: An Ethnographic Odyssey of Power, Knowledge, and Geographical Distance. Princeton.
Heltzer, M. (1988) “Sinaranu, Son of Siginu, and the trade relations between Ugarit and Crete,” Minos 23.Google Scholar
Heltzer, M. (1989) “The trade of Crete and Cyprus with Syria and Mesopotamia and their eastern tin-sources in the xviii–xvii centuries bc,” Minos 24.Google Scholar
Hiller, S. (1987) “Discussion,” in HÄgg, and Marinatos, , eds. (1987): 38.
Hirschfeld, N. (1992) “Cypriot marks on Mycenaean pottery,” in Olivier, , ed. (1992).
Hirschfeld, N. (1993) “Incised marks (post-firing) on Aegean wares,” in Zerner, , ed. 1993.
Hirschfeld, N. (1996) “Cypriots in the Mycenaean Aegean,” in Miro, et al., eds. (1996), vol. I.
Hope, Simpson R. (1981) Mycenaean Greece. Park Ridge, NJ.
Hope, Simpson R. and Dickinson, O. T. P. K. (1979) A Gazetteer of Aegean Civilisation in the Bronze Age, Vol. I: The Mainland and Islands. Göteborg: Studies in Mediterranean Archaeology 52.
Horden, P. and Purcell, N. (2000) The Corrupting Sea. A Study of Mediterranean History. Oxford.
Hughes-Brock, H. (1998) “Greek beads of the Mycenaean period (ca. 1650 – 1100 bc): the age of the heroines of Greek tradition and mythology,” in Sciama, L. D. and Eicher, J. B., eds., Beads and Beadmakers: Gender, Material Culture and Meaning.Oxford.Google Scholar
Iakovides, S. (1983) Late Helladic Citadels on Mainland Greece. Leiden.
Iakovides, S. (2001) Gla and the Kopais in the 13th Century. Athens.
Jameson, M. H., Runnels, C. N., and Andel, T. H. (1994) A Greek Countryside.v The Southern Argolid from Prehistory to the Present. Stanford.
Jansen, A. G. (2002) A Study of the Remains of Mycenaean Roads and Stations of Bronze-Age Greece. New York.
Jones, G. (1987) “Agricultural practice in Greek prehistory,” BSA 82.Google Scholar
Jones, R. E. (1986) Greek and Cypriot Pottery: A Review of Scientific Studies. London: Fitch Laboratory Occasional Papers 1.
Karageorghis, V. and Stampolidis, N. C., eds. (1998) Eastern Mediterranean: Cyprus – Dodecanese – Crete 16th – 6th cent. BC. Athens.
Karnava, A. (2007) “Written and stamped records in the Late Bronze Age Cyclades: the sea journeys of an administration,” in Brodie, N. J., Doole, J., Gavalas, G., and Renfrew, C., eds., Orizon: a Colloquium on the Prehistory of the Cyclades. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Kassianidou, V. and Knapp, A. B. (2004) “Archaeometallurgy in the Mediterranean: the social context of mining, technology, and trade,” in Blake, E., and Knapp, A. B., eds., The Archaeology of Mediterranean Prehistory.Oxford.Google Scholar
Kilian, K. (1988) “The emergence of the wanax ideology in the Mycenaean palaces,” Oxford Journal of Archaeology 7.Google Scholar
Kilian-Dirlmeier, I. (1997) Das mittelbronzezeitliche Schachtgrab von Ägina. Mainz.
Killen, J. T. (1963) “Some adjuncts to the SHEEP ideogram on Knossos tablets,” Eranos 61.Google Scholar
Killen, J. T. (1964) “The wool industry of Crete in the Late Bronze Age,” BSA 59.Google Scholar
Killen, J. T. (1966) “The Knossos Lc (CLOTH) tablets,” BICS 13.Google Scholar
Killen, J. T. (1976) “Linear B a-ko-ra-ja/-jo,” in Morpurgo-Davies, A., and Meid, W., eds., Studies in Greek, Italic, and Indo-European Linguistics.Innsbruck: Innsbrucker Beiträge zur Sprachwissenschaft 16.Google Scholar
Killen, J. T. (1979) “The Knossos Ld(1) tablets,” in Risch, and Mühlestein, , eds. (1979).
Killen, J. T. (1984a) “The textile industries at Pylos and Knossos,” in Shelmerdine, and Palaima, , eds. (1984).
Killen, J. T. (1985) “The Linear B tablets and the Mycenaean economy,” in Davies, A. Morpurgo and Duhoux, Y., eds., Linear B: A 1984 Survey.Louvain-la-Neuve.Google Scholar
Killen, J. T. (1998a) “The Pylos Ta tablets revisited,” BCH 122.Google Scholar
Killen, J. T. (1998b) “The rôle of the state in wheat and olive production in Mycenaean Crete,” Aevum 72.Google Scholar
Killen, J. T. (2004) “Wheat, barley, flour, olives and figs on Linear B tablets,” in Halstead, and Barrett, , eds. (2004).
Killen, J. T. (2007) “Economy”, in Duhoux, Y. and Davies, A. Morpurgo, eds., A Companion to Linear B: Mycenaean Greek Texts and Their World. Louvain-la-Neuve.Google Scholar
Kiriatzi, E. (2000) “Pottery technologies and people at LBA Toumba Thessalonikis,” BICS 44.Google Scholar
Kiriatzi, V., Andreou, S., Dimitriadis, S., and Kotsakis, K. (1997) “Co-existing traditions: handmade and wheelmade pottery in Late Bronze Age Central Macedonia,” in Laffineur, and Betancourt, , eds. (1997).
Kitchen, K. A. (2000) “Regnal and genealogical data of ancient Egypt,” in Bietak, M., ed., The Synchronisation of Civilisations in the Eastern Mediterranean in the Second Millennium BC.Vienna.Google Scholar
Knapp, A. B., and Cherry, J. F. (1994) Provenience Studies and Bronze Age Cyprus. Production, Exchange and Politico-Economic Change. Madison, WI.
Knappett, C. (1999) “Assessing a polity in Proto-Palatial Crete: the Malia–Lasithi state,” AJA 103.Google Scholar
Knappett, C. and Schoep, I. (2000) “Continuity and change in Minoan palatial power,” Antiquity 74.Google Scholar
Kotjabopoulou, E., Hamilakis, Y., Halstead, P., Gamble, C., and Elefanti, P., eds. (2003) Zooarchaeology in Greece: Recent Advances. London: British School at Athens Studies 9.
Kotsakis, K. (2001) “Mesolithic to Neolithic in Greece. Continuity, discontinuity or change of course?,” Documenta Praehistorica 28.Google Scholar
Kyriakidis, E. (1996–7) “Some aspects of the rôle of scribes in Pylian administration,” Minos 31–32.Google Scholar
Löwe, W. (1996) Spätbronzezeitliche Bestattungen auf Kreta. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports International Series 642.
Laffineur, R. and Greco, E., eds. (2005) EMPORIA. Aegeans in the Central and Eastern Mediterranean. Liège and Austin, TX: Aegaeum.
Lavery, J. (1990) “Some aspects of Mycenaean topography,” BICS 37.Google Scholar
Lavery, J. (1995) “Some ‘new’ Mycenaean roads at Mycenae,” BICS 40.Google Scholar
Lefkowitz, M. R. and Rogers, G., eds. (1996) Black Athena Revisited. Chapel Hill, NC.
Lejeune, M. (1974) “Analyse du dossier pylien Ea,” Minos 15.Google Scholar
Leonard, A. (1994) An Index to the Late Bronze Age Aegean Pottery from Syria-Palestine. Jonsered: Studies in Mediterranean Archaeology.
Lewthwaite, J. (1983) “Why did civilization not emerge more often? A comparative approach to the development of Minoan Crete,” in Nixon, L. and Krzyszkowska, O., eds., Minoan Society.Bristol.Google Scholar
Lindgren, M. (1973) The People of Pylos. Prosopographical and Methodological Studies in the Pylos Archive. 2 vols. Uppsala. Boreas 3.
Malamat, A. (1971) “Syro-Palestinian destinations in a Mari tin inventory,” Israel Exploration Journal 21.Google Scholar
Manning, S. W. (1999) A Test of Time: The Volcano of Thera and the Chronology and History of the Aegean and East Mediterranean in the Mid Second Millennium BC. Oxford.
Manning, S. W. (2001) The Absolute Chronology of the Aegean Early Bronze Age: Archaeology, Radiocarbon and History. Revised edn. Sheffield.
Manning, S. W., Kromer, B., Kuniholm, P. I., and Newton, W. M. (2001) “Anatolian tree rings and a new chronology for the east Mediterranan Bronze-Iron Ages,” Science 294.Google Scholar
Manning, S. W., Bronk, Ramsey C., Doumas, C., Marketou, T., Cadogan, G., and Pearson, C. L. (2002) “New evidence for an early date for the Aegean Late Bronze Age and Thera eruption,” Antiquity 76.Google Scholar
Maran, J. (2004) “Wessex und Mykene. Zur Deutung des Bernsteins in der Schachtgräberzeit Südgriechenlands,” in Hänsel, B. and Studeníkov´a, E., eds., Zwischen Karpaten und Ägäis: Neolithikum und ältere Bronzezeit.Gedenkschrift für Viera Nemějcov´a-Pav´ukov´a.Rahden.Google Scholar
Matsas, D. (1995) “Minoan long-distance trade: a view from the Northern Aegean,” in Niemeier, and Laffineur, , eds. (1995).
McDonald, W. A. and Rapp, G. R. Jr., eds. (1972) The Minnesota Messenia Expedition: Reconstructing a Bronze Age Regional Environment. Minneapolis, MN.
McDonald, W. A. and Thomas, C. G. (1990) Progress Into the Past: The Rediscovery of Mycenaean Civilization. 2nd edn. Bloomington, IN.
McGeorge, P. (1987) “Biosocial evolution in Bronze Age Crete,” in Eilapini: Tomos Timitikos gia ton Kathigiti Nikolao Platona.Irakleion.Google Scholar
McGeorge, P. (1992) “The burials,” in Hallager, B. and McGeorge, P., eds., Late Minoan III Burials at Khania.Göteborg.Google Scholar
Mee, C. and Forbes, H., eds. (1997) A Rough and Rocky Place: The Landscape and Settlement History of the Methana Peninsula, Greece. Liverpool.
Melena, J. L. and Olivier, J.-P. (1991) TITHEMY: The Tablets and Nodules in Linear B from Tiryns, Thebes and Mycenae, a Revised Transliteration. Salamanca.
Michailidou, A. (1992–3) “‘Ostrakon’ with Linear A script from Akrotiri (Thera): a non-bureaucratic activity?,” Minos 27–28.Google Scholar
Moody, J. A. (1987) “The Minoan palace as a prestige artifact,” in Hägg, and Marinatos, , eds. (1987).
Moran, W. L., ed. and trans. (1992) The Amarna Letters. Baltimore.
Morpurgo, Davies A. (1979) “Terminology of power and terminology of work in Greek and Linear B,” in Risch, and Mühlestein, , eds. (1979).
Morris, I. (1994a) “Archaeologies of Greece,” in Morris, , ed. (1994d).
Mylonas, Shear I. (2004) Kingship in the Mycenaean World and its Reflections in the Oral Tradition. Philadelphia.
Niemeier, W. D. (1996) “A Linear A inscription from Miletus (MIL Zb 1),” Kadmos 35.Google Scholar
Niemeier, W. D. (1998) “The Mycenaeans in Western Anatolia and the problem of the origins of the Sea Peoples,” in Gitin, Mazar and Stern, , eds. (1998).
Nosch, M.-L. (2001) “The geography of the ta-ra-si-ja obligation,” Aegean Archaeology 4.Google Scholar
Olivier, J.-P. (1967a) Les scribes de Cnossos. Rome: Incunabula Graeca.
Olivier, J.-P. (1967b) “La série Dn de Cnossos,” SMEA 2.Google Scholar
Olivier, J.-P. (1972) “La série Dn de Cnossos reconsidérée,” Minos 13.Google Scholar
Olivier, J.-P. (1988) “KN: Da-Dg,” in Olivier, and Palaima, , eds. (1988).
Olivier, J.-P. (2001) “Les ‘collecteurs’: leur distribution spatiale et temporelle,” in Voutsaki, and Killen, , eds. (2001).
Olivier, J.-P. and Godart, L. (1996) Corpus hieroglyphicarum inscriptionum Cretae.Paris: Études Crétoises.
Palaima, T. G. (1982) “Linear A in the Cyclades: the trade and travel of a script,” Temple University Aegean Symposium 7.Google Scholar
Palaima, T. G. (1988a) The Scribes of Pylos. Rome. Incunabula Graeca.
Palaima, T. G. (1988b) “The development of the Mycenaean writing system,” in Olivier, and Palaima, , eds. (1988).
Palaima, T. G. (1995) “The nature of the Mycenaean wanax: non-Indo-European origins and priestly functions,” in Rehak, P., ed., The Role of the Ruler in the Prehistoric Aegean.Liège: Aegaeum II.Google Scholar
Palaima, T. G. (1997) “Potter and fuller: the royal craftsmen,” in Laffineur, and Betancourt, , eds. (1997).
Palaima, T. G. (1998–9) “Special vs. normal Mycenaean: hand 24 and writing in the service of the king?,” in Bennet, and Driessen, , eds. (1998–9).
Palaima, T. G. (2003a) “‘Archives’ and ‘scribes’ and information hierarchy in Mycenaean Greek Linear B records,” in Brosius, (2003b).
Palaima, T. G. and Shelmerdine, C. W. (1984) “Mycenaean archaeology and the Pylos texts,” Archaeological Review from Cambridge 3.Google Scholar
Palmer, L. R. (1963) The Interpretation of Mycenaean Greek Texts. Oxford.
Palmer, L. R. (1972) “Mycenaean inscribed vases, II: the mainland finds,” Kadmos 11.Google Scholar
Palmer, R. (1995) “Linear A commodities: a comparison of resources,” in Niemeier, and Laffineur, , eds. (1995).
Palmer, R. (1998–9) “Models in Linear B landholding: an analysis of methodology,” in Bennet, and Driessen, , eds. (1998–9).
Panagiotaki, M., Maniatis, Y., Kavoussanaki, D., Hatton, G., and Tite, M. (2004) “The production technology of Aegean Bronze Age vitreous materials,” in Bourriau, J. and Phillips, J., eds., The Social Context of Technological Change 2: Egypt, the Aegean and the Near East, 1650 – 1150 BC.Oxford.Google Scholar
Panagiotopoulos, D. (2001) “Keftiu in context: Theban tomb-paintings as a historical source,” Oxford Journal of Archaeology 20.Google Scholar
Peatfield, A. (1994) “After the ‘big bang’ – what? or Minoan symbols and shrines beyond palatial collapse,” in Alcock, and Osborne, , eds. (1994).
Perlès, C. (2001) The Early Neolithic in Greece. Cambridge.
Perna, M. (2004) Ètudes sur la fiscalité mycénienne. Nancy.
Phelps, W., Lolos, Y., and Vichos, Y., eds. (1999) The Point Iria Wreck: Interconnections in the Mediterranean ca. 1200 BC. Athens.
Pini, I. (1968) Beiträge zur minoische Gräberkunde. Wiesbaden.
Piteros, C., Olivier, J.-P., and Melena, J. L. (1990) “Les inscriptions en linéaire B des nodules de Thèbes (1982): la fouille, les documents, les possibilités d’interprétation,” BCH 114.Google Scholar
Polanyi, K. (1957) “The economy as instituted process,” in Polanyi, et al., eds. (1957).
Preston, L. (1999) “Mortuary practices and the negotiation of social identities at LM II Knossos,” BSA 94.Google Scholar
Pulak, C. (1998) “The Uluburun shipwreck: an overview,” International Journal of Nautical Archaeology 27.Google Scholar
Pullen, D. (1992) “Ox and plow in the Early Bronze Age Aegean,” AJA 96.Google Scholar
Pullen, D. (2003) “Site size, territory, and hierarchy: measuring levels of integration and social change in Neolithic and Bronze Age societies,” in Foster, K. Polinger and Laffineur, R., eds., METRON. Measuring the Aegean Brouze Age.Liège and Austin, TX.Google Scholar
Rackham, O. (1996) The Making of the Cretan Landscape. Manchester.
Rehak, P., and Younger, J. G. (2001) “Neopalatial, final palatial, and postpalatial Crete,” in Cullen, , ed. (2001).
Renfrew, C. (1972) The Emergence of Civilisation: the Cyclades and the Aegean in the Third Millennium BC. London.
Renfrew, C. (1980) “The great tradition versus the great divide: archaeology as anthropology?AJA 84.Google Scholar
Renfrew, C. and Wagstaff, M., eds. (1982) An Island Polity. The Archaeology of Exploitation in Melos Cambridge.
Robinson, A. (2002) The Man who Deciphered Linear B: the Story of Michael Ventris. London.
Runnels, C. N., and Hansen, J. M. (1986) “The olive in the prehistoric Aegean: the evidence for domestication in the Early Bronze Age,” Oxford Journal of Archaeology 5.Google Scholar
Rutter, J. (2001) “The prepalatial Bronze Age of the southern and central Greek mainland,” in Cullen, , ed. (2001).
Sakellarakis, Y. (1996) “Minoan religious influence in the Aegean: the case of Kythera,” BSA 91.Google Scholar
Santillo, Frizell B. (1998) “Giants or geniuses? Monumental building at Mycenae,” Current Swedish Archaeology 6.Google Scholar
Sarpaki, A. (2001) “Condiments, perfume and dye plants in Linear B: A look at the textual and archaeobotanical evidence,” in Michailidou, , ed. (2001).
Schallin, A.-L. (1997) “The Late Bronze Age potter’s workshop at Mastos in the Berbati valley,” in Gillis, C., Risberg, C., and Sjöberg, B., eds., Trade and Production in Premonetary Greece: Production and Craftsmen.Jonsered.Google Scholar
Schoep, I. (1999) “Tablets and territories? Reconstructing Late Minoan IB political geography through undeciphered documents,” AJA 103.Google Scholar
Schoep, I. (2002) The Administration of Neopalatial Crete: A Critical Assessment of the Linear A Tablets and their Role in the Administrative Process. Salamanca.
Shaw, J. W. (1987) “The Early Helladic ii corridor house: development and form,” AJA 91.Google Scholar
Shelmerdine, C. W. (1973) “The Pylos Ma tablets reconsidered,” AJA 77.Google Scholar
Shelmerdine, C. W. (1985) The Perfume Industry of Mycenaean Pylos. Göteborg: Studies in Mediterranean Archaeology-Pocket Book 34.
Shelmerdine, C. W. (1987) “Architectural change and economic decline at Pylos,” in Killen, J. T., Melena, J. L., and Olivier, J.-P., eds., Studies in Mycenaean and Classical Greek presented to John Chadwick.Salamanca: Minos.Google Scholar
Shelmerdine, C. W. (1999) “A comparative look at Mycenaean administration,” in Deger-Jalkotzy, et al., eds. (1999).
Shelmerdine, C. W. (2001a) “The palatial Bronze Age of the southern and central Greek mainland,” in Cullen, , ed. (2001).
Shelmerdine, C. W. (2001b) “The evolution of administration at Pylos,” in Voutsaki, and Killen, , eds. (2001).
Shelmerdine, C. W., and Palaima, T. G., eds. (1984) Pylos Comes Alive. Industry and Administration in a Mycenaean Palace. New York.
Shelton, K. S. (2002–3) “A new Linear B tablet from Petsas House, Mycenae,” Minos 37–8.Google Scholar
Sherratt, A. G. (1981) “Plough and pastoralism: aspects of the secondary products revolution,” in Hammond, N., Hodder, I., and Isaac, G., eds., Pattern of the Past: Studies in Honour of David Clarke.Cambridge [repr. in Sherratt, 1997].Google Scholar
Sherratt, A. G. (1987) “Warriors and traders: Bronze Age chiefdoms in central Europe,” in Cunliffe, B., ed., Origins: The Roots of European Civilisation.London.Google Scholar
Sherratt, A. G. (1993) “What would a Bronze-Age world system look like? Relations between temperate Europe and the Mediterranean in later prehistory,” Journal of European Archaeology 1.Google Scholar
Sherratt, A. G. (1997) Economy and Society in Prehistoric Europe: Changing Perspectives. Edinburgh.
Sherratt, A. and Sherratt, E. S. (1991) “From luxuries to commodities: the nature of Mediterranean Bronze Age trading systems,” in Gale, , ed. (1991a).
Sherratt, E. S. (1994) “Commerce, iron and ideology: metallurgical innovation in 12th – 11th century Cyprus,” in Karageorghis, V., ed., Proceedings of the International Symposium “Cyprus in the 11th century BC”.Nicosia.Google Scholar
Sherratt, E. S. (1999) “E pur si muove: pots, markets and values in the second millennium Mediterranean,” in Crielaard, et al., eds. (1999).
Sherratt, E. S. (2000a) Catalogue of Cycladic Antiquities in the Ashmolean Museum. Oxford.
Sherratt, E. S. (2000b) “Circulation of metals and the end of the Bronze Age in the eastern Mediterranean,” in Pare, C. F. E., ed., Metals Make the World Go Round: The Supply and Circulation of Metals in Bronze Age Europe.Oxford.Google Scholar
Sherratt, E. S. (2001) “Potemkin palaces and route-based economies,” in Voutsaki, and Killen, , eds. (2001).
Smith, J. S. (1992–3) “The Pylos Jn series,” Minos 27–28.Google Scholar
Snodgrass, A. M. (1987) An Archaeology of Greece. Berkeley.
Snodgrass, A. M. and Bintliff, J. L. (1991) “Surveying ancient cities,” Scientific American 204.Google Scholar
Steel, L. (2002) “Consuming passions: a contextual study of the local consumption of Mycenaean pottery at Tell el-’Ajjul,” Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 15.Google Scholar
Steel, L. (2004) Cyprus Before History: From the Earliest Settlers to the End of the Bronze Age. London.
Stos-Gale, Z. A. (2000) “Trade in metals in the Bronze Age Mediterranean: an overview of lead isotope data for provenance studies,” in Pare, C. F. E., ed., Metals Make the World Go Round: The Supply and Circulation of Metals in Bronze Age Europe.Oxford.Google Scholar
Stos-Gale, Z. A. (2001) “Minoan foreign relations and copper metallurgy in Protopalatial and Neopalatial Crete,” in Shortland, A. J., ed., The Social Context of Technological Change: Egypt and the Near East, 1650 – 1550 BC.Oxford.Google Scholar
Stos-Gale, Z. A. and Macdonald, C. (1991) “Sources of metals and trade in the Bronze Age Aegean,” in Gale, , ed. (1991a).
Symeonoglou, S. (1985) The Topography of Thebes from the Bronze Age to Modern Times. Princeton.
Triantaphyllou, S. (2001) A Bioarchaeological Approach to Prehistoric Cemetery Populations from Central and Western Greek Macedonia. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports International Series 976.
Tzedakis, Y. and Martlew, H., eds. (1999) Minoans and Mycenaeans: Flavours of Their Time. Athens.
Vagnetti, L. (1993) “Mycenaean pottery in Italy: fifty years of study,” in Zerner, , ed. (1993).
Vagnetti, L. (1998) “Variety and function of the Aegean derivative pottery in the central Mediterranean in the Late Bronze Age,” in Gitin, , et al., eds. (1998).
Vagnetti, L. (1999a) “Mycenaean pottery in the central Mediterranean: imports and local production in their context,” in Crielaard, et al., eds. (1999).
Vagnetti, L. (1999b) “Mycenaeans and Cypriots in the central Mediterranean before and after 1200 BC,” in Phelps, et al., eds. (1999).
Valamoti, S. (2003) “Neolithic and Early Bronze Age food from northern Greece: the archaeobotanical evidence,” in Pearson, M. Parker, ed., Food, Culture and Identity in the Neolithic and Early Bronze Age.Oxford: British Archaeological Reports International Series 1117.Google Scholar
Van Alfen, P. (1996–7) “The LM IIIB inscribed stirrup-jars as links in an administrative chain,” Minos 31–32.Google Scholar
Vaughan, S. J., and Coulson, W. D. E., eds. (2000) Palaeodiet in the Aegean. Oxford.
Ventris, M. and Chadwick, J. (1973) Documents in Mycenaean Greek. 2nd edn. Cambridge.
Vercoutter, J. (1956) L’Ègypte et le monde égéen préhellénique. Cairo.
Vermeule, E., and Karageorghis, V. (1982) Mycenaean Pictorial Vase Painting. Cambridge, MA.
Voutsaki, S. (1995) “Social and political processes in the Mycenaean Argolid: the evidence from the mortuary practices,” in Niemeier, and Laffineur, , eds. (1995).
Wachsmann, S. (1987) Aegeans in the Theban Tombs. Leuven: Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta.
Walter, H. (2001) The People of Ancient Aegina: 3000–1000 BC. Athens.
Wardle, K. A. (1993) “Mycenaean Trade and Influence in Northern Greece,” in Zerner, , ed. (1993).
Warren, P. M. and Hankey, V. (1989) Aegean Bronze Age Chronology. Bristol.
Watrous, L. V. (2001) “Crete from earliest prehistory through the Protopalatial period,” in Cullen, , ed. (2001).
Watrous, L. V., Hadzi-Vallianou, D., and Blitzer, H. (2004) The Plain of Phaistos: Cycles of Social Complexity in the Mesara Region of Crete. Los Angeles: Monumenta Archaeologica 23.
Weingarten, J. (1997) “Another look at Lerna: an EHIIB trading post?,” Oxford Journal of Archaeology 16.Google Scholar
Whitelaw, T. M. (1983) “The settlement at Fournou Korifi, Myrtos and aspects of Early Minoan social organization,” in Nixon, L. and Krzyszkowska, O., eds., Minoan Society: Proceedings of the Cambridge Colloquium 1981. Bristol.Google Scholar
Whitelaw, T. M. (2000) “Beyond the palace: a century of investigation in Europe’s oldest city,” BICS 44.Google Scholar
Whitelaw, T. M. (2001a) “From sites to communities: defining the human dimensions of Minoan urbanism,” in Branigan, , ed. (2001b).
Whitelaw, T. M. (2001c) “Reading between the tablets: assessing Mycenaean palatial involvement in ceramic production and consumption,” in Voutsaki, and Killen, , eds. (2001).
Whitelaw, T. M. (2004b) “Alternative pathways to complexity in the southern Aegean,” in Barrett, and Halstead, , eds. (2004).
Whitelaw, T., Day, P. M., Kiriatzi, E., Kilikoglou, V., and Wilson, D. E. (1997) “Ceramic traditions at EM IIB Myrtos, Fournou Korifi,” in Laffineur, and Betancourt, , eds. (1997).
Wiener, M. H. (1990) “The isles of Crete? The Minoan thalassocracy revisited,” in Hardy, D. A., Doumas, C. G., Sakellarakis, J., and Warren, P. M., eds., Thera and the Aegean World III.I: Archaeology.London.Google Scholar
Wiener, M. H. (2003) “Time out: the current impasse in Late Bronze Age archaeological dating,” in Foster, K. Polinger and Laffineur, R., eds., METRON. Measuring the Aegean Bronze Age.Liège and Austin.Google Scholar
Wijngaarden, G. J. (1999a) “An archaeological approach to the concept of value: Mycenaean pottery at Ugarit (Syria),” Archaeological Dialogues 6.Google Scholar
Wijngaarden, G. J. (1999b) “Production, circulation and consumption of Mycenaean pottery (sixteenth to twelfth centuries BC),” in Crielaard, et al., eds. (1999).
Wijngaarden, G. J. (2002) Use and Appreciation of Mycenaean Pottery in the Levant, Cyprus and Italy (ca. 1600–1200 BC). Amsterdam: Amsterdam Archaeological Studies 8.
Wilson, D. E., Day, P. M., and Dimopoulou-Rethemiotaki, N. (2004) “The pottery from Early Minoan i-iiB Knossos and its relations with the harbour site of Poros-Katsambas,” in Cadogan, et al., eds. (2004).
Wright, J. C. (1984) “Changes in form and function of the palace at Pylos,” in Shelmerdine, and Palaima, , eds. (1984).
Wright, J. C. (1995) “From chief to king in Mycenaean Greece,” in Rehak, P., ed., The Role of the Ruler in the Prehistoric Aegean.Liège: Aegaeum ii.Google Scholar
Wright, J. C., ed. (2004) The Mycenaean Feast. Princeton: Hesperia 73.
Yon, M., Karageorghis, V., and Hirschfeld, N. (2000) Céramiques mycéniennes. Paris.
Younger, J. (1996–7) “The Cretan Hieroglyphic script: a review article,” Minos 31–32.Google Scholar
Zangger, E. (1993) The Geoarchaeology of the Argolid. Berlin.
Zangger, E. (1994) “Landscape changes around Tiryns during the Bronze Age,” AJA 98.Google Scholar
Zangger, E., Timpson, M., Yazvenko, E., Kuhnke, E., and Knauss, J. (1997) “The Pylos regional archaeological project, part ii: landscape evolution and site preservation,” Hesperia 66.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×