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Knossos 1902, 1905: The Prepalatial and Protopalatial deposits from the Room of the Jars in the Royal Pottery Stores1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 September 2013

Nicoletta Momigliano
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology, University of Bristol

Abstract

This article examines the Prepalatial and Protopalatial pottery deposits excavated by Evans and Mackenzie in the Room of the Jars of the Royal Pottery Stores at Knossos in 1902 and 1905. These deposits yielded abundant and unusual ceramic finds, illustrating aspects of storage and ceremonial activities in those periods. They also provide good stratigraphic evidence for the EM III, MM I A, and MM I B pottery sequence at Knossos.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Council, British School at Athens 2000

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References

2 The EM III phase at Knossos has been previously referred to as ‘Prepolychrome MM I A’ by Sinclair Hood and as ‘EM III/MM I A’ by Momigliano (1991): see N. Momigliano, ‘On the Early Minoan III-Middle Minoan IA sequence at Knossos’, in Proceedings of the VIII Cretological Congress, Heraklion 9–14 September 1996 (in press); see also Hood, Sinclair, ‘Stratigraphical excavations at Knossos 1957–61’, Proceedings of the I Cretological Congress, published in Kr. Chron. 15–16 (19611962), 92–8Google Scholar, and id., ‘The Early and Middle Minoan periods at Knossos’, BICS 13 (1966), 110–11. On the EM III and MM IA sequence at Knossos see also Conclusions, below.

3 Evans, A. J., ‘The Palace of Knossos. Provisional report of the excavations for the year 1902’, BSA 8 (19011902), 117–20, figs. 70–1Google Scholar (see also Appendix 1). For a recent re-examination of these ceramics and their context see MacGillivray 1998, 35–9.

4 See Evans, PM i, 231 ffGoogle Scholar, esp. pp. 240–7. See also Hood, M. S. F. and Taylor, W., The Bronze Age Palace at Knossos (London, 1981), no. 178Google Scholar.

5 See Evans, (n. 3) and PM i, 241Google Scholar colour plate II; see also Mackenzie, D., ‘The pottery of Knossos’, JHS 23 (1903), 157205CrossRefGoogle Scholar, pls, v–vi and MacGillivray 1998, 35–9.

6 See Evans, , PM i, 572Google Scholar fig. 416: a. Also, in the Index of PM, compiled by Joan Evans, the jars are listed under MM III B. Evans and Mackenzie did not give very precise information as to the location of the Room of the Jars, butj. Pendlebury, D. S. et al. , The Guide to the Stratigraphical Museum at Knossos (London, 19331935)Google Scholar lists 34 boxes (1019–52) labelled ‘L.III.8 Room of Jars’, and locates L.III.8 in a narrow room, longer walls running N–S, at the eastern border of the Royal Pottery Stores (cf. FIG. 2: b). This seems in agreement with the fact that Mackenzie in his 1902 Daybook refers to the other rooms with polychrome pottery as being ‘adjacent W’ and provided with doors opening onto the Room of the Jars (see also MacGillivray 1998, 38).

7 This change of mind is more fully illustrated by the extracts from Mackenzie's original excavation records and later published sources in the Appendix. On the ‘Small East Rooms’ see MacGillivray 1998, 35–8.

8 Appendix, 19 May.

9 MacGillivray 1998, 38–9.

10 Pendlebury et al. (n. 6 ), 18–19: L.III. Royal Pottery Stores.

11 Mackenzie, D., ‘The Middle Minoan pottery of Knossos’, JHS 26 (1906), 243–67CrossRefGoogle Scholar at 253 (deposit no. 6). The deposit was grouped by Mackenzie with the Upper East Well, the North Quarter of the City and other deposits which, together with later deposits such as the Vat Room, formed his and Evans's definition of MM I A: see Momigliano 1991, 149–271, csp. 150.

12 For the sake of brevity, I report only the titling of the boxes, as they generally repeat faithfully the information written by Mackenzie on the original wooden labels used during the excavations and still kept inside many of the boxes.

13 British Museum, Dept. of Greek and Roman Antiquities, Report of Donations, 8 November 1906.

14 On this MM I A fill see Cadogan, G., Day, P. M., Macdonald, C. F., MacGillivray, J. A., Momigliano, N., Whitelaw, T. M., and Wilson, D. E., ‘Early Minoan and Middle Minoan pottery groups at Knossos’, BSA 88 (1993), 21–8Google Scholar, at 25, with bibliography.

15 Cf. n. 2, above. See also conclusions, below.

16 MacGillivray 1998, 35–6.

17 Most if not all the EM III deposits from Evans's excavations published so far were heavily selected: Momigliano 1991, 244–5 (referred to as EM III/MM I A). For the Upper East Well, Mackenzie recorded that 24 ‘baskets’ and 427 fragments were thrown away (ibid. 156)

18 F. Carinci, during a visit to the KSM in Sept. 1996, recognized this jar as Phaistian.

19 Nos. 1, 3, 4, 13–26, 33, 40, 43, 44–9, 54. Some of these vessels have now been moved to shelves in the KSM ‘Treasury’, together with others mended in 1991.

20 Momigliano 1991; ead. and Wilson, D. E., ‘Knossos 1993: excavations outside the South Front of the Palace’, BSA 91 (1996), 159Google Scholar.

21 Momigliano 1991, 245, 260: Fabrics I and II. See also MacGillivray 1998, 55 (‘Fine Buff’).

22 In my previous study of EM III and MM I A deposits from Evans's excavations, I suggested that such vessels were made with the help of some rotating device but not wheel-thrown, in the sense of being made with the use of centrifugal force (Momigliano 1991, 264–5 and plate 44:7). However, further study of Knossian pottery and discussions with other colleagues have persuaded me that such footed goblets may have been wheel-thrown, representing the first tentative, and not very skilful, use of the potter's wheel in Crete (cf. also Momigliano, N. ‘Osservazioni sulla nascita dei palazzi minoici e sul periodo prepalaziale a Cnosso’, inRosa, V. La, Palermo, D. and Vagnetti, L., Epi ponton plazomenoi. Simposio italiano di Studi Egei dedicato a Luigi Bernabó Brea e Giovanni Pugtiese Carraletli (Rome, 1999), 6974, at 72Google Scholar.

23 Cf. Momigliano 1991, 245–8: Footed Goblet types 1–4; Footless Goblet types 1–2.

24 Ibid., 250–1: One-Handled Cup type 2.

25 Similar to ibid.: One-Handled Cup type 3, but with a smaller rim diameter.

26 Ibid., 256–9. This was further confirmed by sherd counts and weights.

27 Cf. ibid., 253 Type 1.

28 Ibid., 251–3.

29 The necked jar and the bridge spouted jars are similar in shape to vessels from House B, the only other deposit 20), 52 (P 190). which has yielded a similar assemblage: ibid., 220 ff, esp. pl. 53: nos. 79, 80. 82, 83.

30 Ibid., 261–4. where this is referred to as ‘Fabric III’; Cadogan, G., ‘Lasithi in the Old Palace Period’, BICS 37 (1990), 172–4Google Scholar. On this fabric, its origins and continued use in the Protopalatial period see also MacGilhvray 1998, 88–9. where it is referred to as ‘Fine Red’.

31 Momigliano 1991. 261–4: Momigliano and Wilson (n. 20), 52 (P 190).

32 On this deposit see Cadogan et al. (n. 14) above.

33 This wheel-made monochrome cup finds a close parallel in MacGillivray's tall-rimmed angular cup type 5 (1998, 72–3) which should belong to MM II A.

34 On the excavation of these levels see above, section 1.2. The pottery from this intermediate fill level was recovered in 6 baskets, the total weight of this material amounts to just over 60 kg.

35 For the term ‘Polychrome Geometric’ cf. MacGillivray 1998, passim and Momigliano 1991, 150. It is largely for this material that the label MM I A was devised by Kvans and Mackenzie in the first place in PM i, and it is for this kind of material that the MM I A label continues to be employed by most scholars: e.g. Pendlebury, J. D. S., The Archaeology of Crete: an Introduction (London, 1939), 105Google Scholar fig. 16; Levi, D., Festòs e la civiltà minoica, ii, (Rome, 1981), 19Google Scholar; Bctancourt, P., The History of Minoan Pottery (Princeton, 1985), 71–7Google Scholar; Warren, P. M. and Hankey, V., Aegean Bronze Age Chronology (Bristol, 1989), 19Google Scholar; Manning, S. W., The Absolute Chronology of the Aegean Early Bronze Age: Archaeology, Radiocarbon and History (Sheffield. 1995), 63Google Scholar; , Y. and Sakellarakis, E.. Minoan Crete in a New Light (Athens, 1997), especially 394405Google Scholar, illustrating probably the best MM IA assemblage discovered so far in north central Crete. A comparison between the ‘pit-repository’ material published here and the MM IA deposits from Archanes illustrates at once the strong continuity as well as the changes occurring between EM III and MM IA in north-central Crete. Note that this MM IA ‘Polychrome Geometric’ is rather different from the polychrome decoration of two unique vessels found on the lower floor of House B (Momigliano 1991, 221, 231, pl. 47: 38 and 42). The red pigment on these vessels is of a dark wine-red colour, reminiscent of Protopalatial examples from the Mesara. The reddish pigment used on Knossian ‘Geometric Polychrome’ is more orange.

36 Given the rather mixed appearance of the pottery kept in boxes 1020–6 is was not possible to produce reliable statistics, but something in the region of 2% of the fine decorated wares (and even less of the total assemblage) may not be too wide of the mark.

37 A similar example (in terms of shape) comes from the sherd material from the upper (fill) levels of House B: see Pendlebury, J. D. S. and Pendlebury, H. W., ‘Two Protopalatial houses at Knossos’, BSA 30 (19291930), pl. XIVGoogle Scholar: 4. Many better-preserved examples can be found in Hood's MM I A fill deposit and in the MM IA deposits from Archanes. For the latter see Y. and E. Sakellarakis (n. 35), esp. 396 fig. 347 and 399–400 fig. 353. For later (MM I B) examples of similar straight-sided cups sec below, 66 67, and especially MacGillivray 1998, 68 ff.

38 See MacGillivray 1998, 56 (‘Pared Ware’) and pl. 33: 1–6, 15–16. See also, below, 60 and the MM I B egg-cups in ‘Drab Ware’ in Momigliano and Wilson 1996 (n. 20). 17 and pl. 5: 36, 38.

39 Boxes 1047–52 have no wooden labels. Their present titling, suggesting that this material comes from the 1905 excavation, must be incorrect, for they clearly contain the material recovered during the 1902 excavations.

40 Unfortunately the jars were transferred from the KSM to the HM in 1981, before any thorough study and restoration work was carried out. Indeed, among the material transferred to the HM there is also a bag of loose jar sherds (SMP 1376 B) waiting to be restored. Thus, although it has not been possible to join physically any of the KSM sherds to the jars and sherds in the HM, it is clear that this could be done.

41 Appendix, 2 May.

42 Carinci, pers. comm, (visit of Sept. 1996 to KSM).

43 Unfortunately no fragments of suitable lids were found in the KSM boxes.

44 MacGillivray 1998, 35–9.

45 The jar from Macdonald's excavations is P 93 II/P379 from Context S.VII. 8 level 33 no. 1873.3. The jar from Warren's excavations is SEX 81/P 850. I am very grateful to Dr Macdonald and Professor Warren for allowing me to mention these finds from their excavations.

46 Cf. MacGillivray 1998, 82–5, and pls. 113, 114, 115, 119.

47 See Appendix, 19 May.

48 MacGillivray 1998, 38 (Group J).

49 Day, P. M. and Wilson, D. E.. ‘Consuming power: Kamares ware in protopalatial Knossos’, Antiquity, 72 (1998), 350–8CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

50 MacGillivray, A. J., ‘Pottery workshops and the old palaces in Crete’, in Hägg, R. and Marinatos, N. (eds), The Function of the Minoan Palaces (Stockholm, 1987), 273–9, at 274Google Scholar.

51 Day and Wilson 1998 (n. 49).

52 Ibid.; see also Wilson, D. E. and Day, P. M., ‘Cerami regionalism in prepalatial central Crete: the Mesara imports at EM I to EM II A Knossos’, BSA 89 (1994), 187Google Scholar.

53 For EM II B (and EM III) sec Wilson, D. E., ‘Knossos before the Palaces: an overview of the Early Bronze Age (EM I–EM III)’, in Evely, D., Hughes-Brock, H., and Momigliano, N. (eds), Knossos: A Labyrinth of History (London, 1994), 2344Google Scholar, especially at pp. 32–5 and 39–42.

54 For example, a beaked jug from the Upper East Well (Momigliano 1991, 159, pl. 21: 41) is almost certainly a Mesara import.

55 For east Cretan imports see below, esp. n. 59.

56 Mackenzie (n. 11), 253. The EM III deposits from the 1993 excavations of the ‘South Front House’ come from fills beneath floors or from foundation trenches and appear to represent a slightly earlier phase on stratigraphic (though not stylistic) grounds: sec also Momigliano (n. 2, Cretological).

57 The meagre descriptions in Mackenzie's Daybooks and in Pendlebury's publication of Houses A and B below the Kouloures make no mention of burnt levels. In the case of the Upper East Well Mackenzie is less laconic, but still makes no mention of burnt or ashy layers (Daybook for 1902 vol. ii, 37, 39, 43–4, 46, 48, 49, 51).

58 Cf. MacGillivray 1998, 90–4: while his stylistic analysis is correct, his ‘stratigraphic evidence’ is a chypothetical reconstruction which cannot be verified, for in the deposits he mentions (the Monolithic Pillar Basement, House B, and House C) the finds from different levels have not been kept separate. For good stratigraphic evidence for the EM III and MM IA sequence in north-central Crete see also see Y. and E. Sakcllarakis' recent publication on Archanes (n. 35).

59 Andreou, S., ‘Pottery Groups of the Old Palace Period in Crete’ (PhD diss., Univ. of Cincinnati 1978), 25, 68–9Google Scholar. Momigliano, , ‘MM I A Pottery from Evans' Excavations at Knossos’, (unpublished PhD thesis, University College London 1989), 221–31Google Scholar. Sec also Momigliano 1991, 226 (cup no. 26 from House B), Warren and Hankey (n. 35), 17–18.

60 Momigliano (n. 2); see also Momigliano 1991, 227 (nos. 60 and 61 from lower floor of House B); ead. and Wilson (n. 20), 45 fig. 27: P158 (Cycladic handle). For a recent discussion of the Early Cycladic III ‘gap’, and for a good Early Cycladic parallel for the Cycladic handle found in an EM III context during the 1993 excavations at Knossos, sec Sotirakopoulou, P., ‘The dating of Late Phylakopi I as evidenced at Akrotiri on Thera’, BSA 91 (1996), 113–36Google Scholar. See also Warren and Hankey (n. 35), 25–9.

61 On House C see Evans, A. J., ‘The palace of Knossos and its dependencies’, BSA II (19041905), 1618Google Scholar, fig. 9; Momigliano 1991, 185–94 and MacGillivray 1998, 23.

62 Bonacasa, N., ‘Paterikies, una stazione Medio Minoica fra Hagia Triada c Festos’, ASAA, n.s. 29–30 (1968), 754Google Scholar; Andreou (n. 59); Momigliano (n. 59), 232–3; see also, most recently, MacGillivray 1998, 100–1.

63 Bonarasa (n. 62), 15; Warren, P. M., ‘Problems of chronology in Crete and the Aegean in the third and earlier second millennium’, AJA 84 (1980), 487–99CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at 491.

64 See Zerner, C., ‘The Beginning of the Middle Helladic Period at Lerna’ (PhD diss, Univ. of Cincinnati, 1978), p. 60Google Scholar: D 596/10 (polychrome jar); p. 68: D 597/7 (carinated cup with barbotine decoration); p. 88: D 598/4 (cup, polychrome); p. 91: D 589/17 (jar with polychrome barbotine decoration); p. 97: D 590/3 (barbotine cup); p. 101: BD 410/7 (polychrome bowl); p. 124: BE 426/10 and 140: BE 429/8 (oval-mouthed amphorae). Cf. Momigliano (n. 2).

65 Rutter, J. B. and Zerner, C., ‘Early Hellado-Minoan contacts’, in Hägg, R. and Marinatos, N. (eds), The Minoan Thalassocracy: Myth and Reality (Stockholm, 1984), 7583Google Scholar, at 81.

66 The jar from Colin Macdonald's excavations (see n. 45) has been sampled by P. M. Day.