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The East Aegean-West Anatolian Interface in the Late Bronze Age: Mycenaeans and the Kingdom of Ahhiyawa

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 December 2013

P. A. Mountjoy
Affiliation:
British School at Athens

Extract

The Mycenaean culture of the east Aegean islands should not be considered in relation to that of the Greek Mainland, as has generally been done up until now, but rather in terms of the East Aegean — West Anatolian Interface (fig 1), an area which forms an entity between the Mycenaean islands of the central Aegean and the Anatolian hinterland with Troy at its northern extremity and Rhodes at its southern one.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The British Institute at Ankara 1998

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References

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131 Already suggested by others, especially Page, D., History and the Homeric Iliad, Berkeley, 1959, 15Google Scholar and Ibid, 15–18 with references, Furumark, A., Opuscula Atheniensia 6 (1965), 109Google Scholar.

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147 Rhodes: Rhodes, Rodi, Dietz, S., Lindos IV. 1, Copenhagen, 1984Google Scholar; Kos: Morricone, L., Annuario 43–44 (19651966), 5311Google Scholar, Papazoglou, E., Athens Annals of Archaeology 14 (1981), 6275Google Scholar.

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166 Furumark, A., Mycenaean Pottery: Analysis and Classification, Stockholm, 1941, 643Google Scholar FS 336.1–3.

167 Ibid, 70–71. FS 336.4, the Apollakia vessel, is dated by Furumark to LH IIIC; see Mountjoy, P. A., PoDIA 1 (1995)Google Scholar, for the LH IIIA2 date. There is a good Minoan parallel from Mouliana Evans, A., The Prehistoric Tombs of Knossos, London, 1906, fig 105BGoogle Scholar, but there are also Anatolian parallels (see fn 82).

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169 For example Ibid, pl 144b Lartos 36.

170 There are examples of the based alabastron, for instance W. Rudolph, Tiryns VI, pl 17.4 left.

171 For example Rodi, pl 59f; Kardara, C., Aplomata Naxou, Kinita Evrimata Taphon A kai B, Athens, 1977, pl 44Google Scholar; Immerwahr, S., Agora XIII, T.7.24Google Scholar pl 40.

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