Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of Illustrations and Maps
- Lists of Books Consulted
- Chapter I The Land
- Chapter II The Stone Age
- Chapter III The Bronze Age
- Chapter IV The Religion of Early Cyprus
- Chapter V The Greek Colonization
- Chapter VI Phoenicians, Assyrians and Egyptians
- Chapter VII From Cyrus to Alexander
- Chapter VIII The Successors
- Chapter IX The Ptolemies
- Chapter X The Arts in Pre-Roman Cyprus
- Chapter XI The Roman Province
- Chapter XII Byzantium and Islam
- Addenda
- Index
- Plate section
Chapter VI - Phoenicians, Assyrians and Egyptians
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of Illustrations and Maps
- Lists of Books Consulted
- Chapter I The Land
- Chapter II The Stone Age
- Chapter III The Bronze Age
- Chapter IV The Religion of Early Cyprus
- Chapter V The Greek Colonization
- Chapter VI Phoenicians, Assyrians and Egyptians
- Chapter VII From Cyrus to Alexander
- Chapter VIII The Successors
- Chapter IX The Ptolemies
- Chapter X The Arts in Pre-Roman Cyprus
- Chapter XI The Roman Province
- Chapter XII Byzantium and Islam
- Addenda
- Index
- Plate section
Summary
The first two or three centuries of the Iron Age are the darkest period in Cypriote history. The origin of the typical Iron Age style of Cypriote pottery is obscure, whether it was a local invention (if so, from what did it arise?), or due to a movement of population from Asia Minor, which also affected Syria and Palestine. The evidence for close contact with Syria, as shown by the “Cypriote” black-on-red pottery from al Mina, Sueidia, at the mouth of the Orontes, is said to culminate about 700. On the other hand, evidence from Palestine points to about a century earlier for the peak; in fact “Cypriote” Iron Age pottery seems to occur in Palestine earlier than it does in Cyprus. The historian must be content to leave untouched the question as to which was the originating region, until the archaeologist has provided him with more dated evidence.
The trade relations with the West, which must have been lively from the seventh century at least, are illustrated by the spread of Cypriote terracotta figurines and stone statuettes, which were imported largely by such places as Rhodes and Cnidus. The “pudica” type of female figurine was evidently especially popular; and it may have been to such a little idol that Herostratus of Naucratis successfully prayed, when his ship was in danger (p. 110). The Aphrodite cult generally in the Aegean was profoundly influenced by Cyprus in the early archaic period.
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- A History of Cyprus , pp. 95 - 110Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1940