from Part IV - Aegean Art in the Second Palace Period
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 May 2022
Along with frescoes, it is seals that best represent the Minoan art of this period: the richness of their iconographic repertoire is unmatched in the other arts. The growth in administrative activity entails an increase in their production; at Knossos, Zakros, and some villas like that of Haghia Triada this is reflected in the presence of archive deposits containing significant numbers of sealings. In total, nearly 2,000 seals and several hundred imprints allow for the study of Neopalatial glyptic – and this number is probably tiny compared to the total output. It has been estimated that at Knossos several thousand seals must have been in use at any one time (Krzyszkowska 2005, 119–53).
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