
Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- ABBREVIATIONS
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION
- CHAP. I THE GEOGRAPHY OF NORTH-EASTERN GREECE, AND THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE PREHISTORIC SITES
- CHAP. II THE PRINCIPAL CLASSES OF POTTERY AND CELTS
- CHAP. III NORTH THESSALY, RAKHMANI, MARMARIANI, MESIANI MAGHULA, ETC.
- CHAP. IV SOUTH EASTERN THESSALY, SESKLO, DHIMINI, PIRGHOS
- CHAP. V CENTRAL THESSALY, TSANGLI, RINI
- CHAP. VI WESTERN THESSALY, TSANI MAGHULA
- CHAP. VII SOUTHERN THESSALY, ZERELIA, PHTHIOTIC THEBES, ETC.
- CHAP. VIII THE SPERCHEUS VALLEY, LIANOKLADHI
- CHAP. IX BOEOTIA AND PHOCIS
- CHAP. X THE MYCENEAN PERIOD AND THE EARLY IRON AGE
- CHAP. XI ARCHITECTURE
- CHAP. XII CONNECTIONS WITH THE SOUTH
- CHAP. XIII CONNECTIONS WITH THE WEST
- CHAP. XIV CONNECTIONS WITH THE NORTH
- CHAP. XV CHRONOLOGY
- CHAP. XVI THE PREHISTORIC HISTORY OF NORTH-EASTERN GREECE
- CHAP. XVII ETHNOLOGICAL CONCLUSIONS
- APPENDIX I NOTES ON THE PREHISTORIC FINDS IN BULGARIA, ROUMANIA, ETC.
- APPENDIX II CHEMICAL ANALYSES, ETC.
- TABLE OF ILLUSTRATIONS REPRESENTING POTTERY
- MUSEOGRAPHICAL INDEX
- INDEX
- Plate section
CHAP. X - THE MYCENEAN PERIOD AND THE EARLY IRON AGE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2011
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- ABBREVIATIONS
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION
- CHAP. I THE GEOGRAPHY OF NORTH-EASTERN GREECE, AND THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE PREHISTORIC SITES
- CHAP. II THE PRINCIPAL CLASSES OF POTTERY AND CELTS
- CHAP. III NORTH THESSALY, RAKHMANI, MARMARIANI, MESIANI MAGHULA, ETC.
- CHAP. IV SOUTH EASTERN THESSALY, SESKLO, DHIMINI, PIRGHOS
- CHAP. V CENTRAL THESSALY, TSANGLI, RINI
- CHAP. VI WESTERN THESSALY, TSANI MAGHULA
- CHAP. VII SOUTHERN THESSALY, ZERELIA, PHTHIOTIC THEBES, ETC.
- CHAP. VIII THE SPERCHEUS VALLEY, LIANOKLADHI
- CHAP. IX BOEOTIA AND PHOCIS
- CHAP. X THE MYCENEAN PERIOD AND THE EARLY IRON AGE
- CHAP. XI ARCHITECTURE
- CHAP. XII CONNECTIONS WITH THE SOUTH
- CHAP. XIII CONNECTIONS WITH THE WEST
- CHAP. XIV CONNECTIONS WITH THE NORTH
- CHAP. XV CHRONOLOGY
- CHAP. XVI THE PREHISTORIC HISTORY OF NORTH-EASTERN GREECE
- CHAP. XVII ETHNOLOGICAL CONCLUSIONS
- APPENDIX I NOTES ON THE PREHISTORIC FINDS IN BULGARIA, ROUMANIA, ETC.
- APPENDIX II CHEMICAL ANALYSES, ETC.
- TABLE OF ILLUSTRATIONS REPRESENTING POTTERY
- MUSEOGRAPHICAL INDEX
- INDEX
- Plate section
Summary
A. THE MYCENEAN PERIOD
It is now well recognised that the civilisation, which is usually called Mycenean, developed in Crete, and thence spread to other parts of the Greek world. This has been established by Dr Mackenzie's examination of the pottery sequences from Cnossus, and his results are confirmed by the evidence from other sites in Crete. Thus Crete for all practical purposes may be regarded as the source of this civilisation. Up to the end of the Third Middle Minoan Period its connections with the mainland of Greece were, as far as we know at present, slight. But from the beginning of the Late Minoan period it seems to have established itself on the mainland, and to have begun to create there subsidiary centres, which probably in the Third Late Minoan Period, after the fall of Cnossus, replaced Crete as the principal focus of civilisation. Of these centres the most important seem to have been in Argolis and Boeotia, though the latter district is not fully explored. But it is in the highest degree incorrect to assume that because there was in these districts a “Mycenean Period,” there was therefore a uniform Mycenean Period all over Greece. Neither in prehistoric, nor in historic Greece, was there ever a uniform culture. There are many local varieties of Dipylon pottery, and of the Orientalising fabrics.
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- Prehistoric ThessalyBeing some Account of Recent Excavations and Explorations in North-Eastern Greece from Lake Kopais to the Borders of Macedonia, pp. 206 - 216Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1912