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THE FINDS FROM THE PREHISTORIC SITE OF AYIOS NIKOLAOS MYLON, SOUTHERN EUBOEA, GREECE1
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 November 2011
Abstract
In this paper we present the unpublished finds from the survey of Ayios Nikolaos Mylon. The site is located on one of the foothills of Mount Ochi, on a strategic defensive position overlooking the Bay of Karystos. The site, although unexcavated, is important for establishing the chronological sequence of events in southern Euboean prehistory, as it is the only locality in the area that has produced evidence for habitation which can be dated to the Middle Bronze Age. In the paper we analyse the material and offer some tentative interpretations not only of the archaeological evidence but also of the place of Ayios Nikolaos Mylon in the wider prehistoric world of the Aegean.
Τα ευρήματα από την προϊστορική θέση Άγιος Νικόλαος Μύλων, Νότια Εύβοια, Ελλάδα
Στο παρόν άρθρο παρουσιάζουμε τα αδημοσίευτα ευρήματα από την επιφανειακή έρευνα στον Άγιο Νικόλαο Μύλων. Η θέση βρίσκεται στους πρόποδες του όρους Όχη, σε στρατηγικά αμυντική τοποθεσία πάνω από τον κόλπο της Καρύστου. Η θέση αυτή, αν και δεν έχει ανασκαφεί, είναι πολύ σημαντική καθώς παρέχει στοιχεία για την χρονολογική σειρά των γεγονότων στη νοτιοευβοϊκή προϊστορία, αφού είναι η μοναδική θέση με κατοίκηση κατά την Μέση Εποχή του Χαλκού. Στο άρθρο αναλύουμε τα αρχαιολογικά ευρήματα και εξάγουμε κάποια προκαταρκτικά συμπεράσματα τόσο για το υλικό, όσο και για την σημασία του Αγίου Νικολάου Μύλων στον ευρύτερο προϊστορικό κόσμο του Αιγαίου.
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- Copyright © The Council, British School at Athens 2011
Footnotes
A great number of people have in some way participated in the shaping of this article and, although we cannot mention them all, we owe them a debt of gratitude. We would like to particularly thank Dr Donald Keller and the Southern Euboea Exploration Project for generously allowing us to study and publish the material from Ay. Nikolaos and for his comments on earlier drafts of this paper. Without the generous financial support from the E. A. Schrader Endowment for Classical Archaeology at Indiana University our work would not have been possible. We would also like to thank Dr Catherine Perlès for deciding to participate in this paper with her brief but disproportionately significant contribution. We owe many thanks to a number of people who found time out of their busy schedules to read and comment on various drafts of this paper, namely Karen D. Vitelli, Tracey Cullen, Jere Wickens, Walter Gauss, and Fanis Mavridis; without them this paper would have been much poorer. We particularly thank Professor Oliver Dickinson and an anonymous BSA reviewer for their invaluable comments, suggestions, and edits. Nonetheless, all errors and transgressions in this paper remain absolutely our own and we alone take full responsibility for each and every one of them.
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