Nota Kourou
Pots and Graves
The Lost Cemeteries of early Iron Age Tenos
Satisfait ou remboursé pendant 30j
Livraison gratuite en France
Achetez-le maintenant, soyez livré dans 2 jours
Auteur | Nota Kourou |
---|---|
Editeur | ULB - Universite Libre de Bruxelles |
Distributeur | Association de Boccard |
Despite their apparently small populations, Early Iron Age Cycladic communities managed to gradually develop distinctive and wide-ranging cultures, as is reflected in the variety of Late Geometric and Archaic pottery styles. But consecutive and comprehensible contexts of the Protogeometric and earlier Geometric periods are limited and incompletely preserved. With only few exceptions the evidence is basically confined to sporadic and chance finds. Graves of this period are known only from a few islands and Tenos is one of them. A small number of tombs excavated at the beginning of the 20th century and a number of pots from destroyed and lost graves formed for a long time the nucleus of Early Iron Age evidence for the island. Later, further chance finds improved the evidence, but still the Early Iron Age funerary horizon remained poorly known.
This study investigates the Early Iron Age funerary record of the island, bringing together all the known material from Tenos and then setting it against its contemporary Aegean background. A detailed catalogue of excavated and lost graves and their finds is presented and discussed from a range of viewpoints. A brief chronological outline of mortuary assemblages and the chance vases is given, to better order the investigation in time. By analyzing the burial record and its contextual background conclusions are drawn on the burial topography and in turn the social and historical implications that emerge for the island. Emphasis is given to the ceramic record and the identification of local pottery workshops and imports. A short review of the history of each shape gives the contemporary ceramic background for each in the Aegean; this is followed by a discussion of pottery styles, networks and intercultural relationships. Pottery analysis demonstrates two successive ceramic phases with different cultural orientations. Thus, we may enhance our knowledge of Tenian culture in the Early Iron Age on the basis of the existing funerary evidence.
Table des matières
Preface 9
Introduction 11
I. Catalogue of Graves and Finds 15
1. Kambos 15
2. Ktikados 21
3. Kardiani and the Vatican group of vases 30
3. a. Kardiani 30
3. b. The Vatican group 58
4. Aghia Thekla 61
5. Xobourgo 62
6. Sporadic 69
Ii. Pottery Analysis 71
1. Shapes and decoration 71
1. Wheel-made closed shapes 71
Jugs 71
Trefoil‑lipped oenochoae 73
Tankards 77
Lekythoi 80
Amphorae and Amphoriskoi 82
Hydriae 88
Pyxiden 89
Lids 90
2. Wheel-made open shapes 91
One‑handled cups 91
Skyphoi 97
Craters 107
Kantharoi 109
3. Handmade and plain wares 112
Cooking pots 112
Aryballoi 113
Bird askoi 115
Lamps 118
Clay beads or spindle‑whorls 119
2. Fabrics, techniques and styles 120
1. Local wheel‑made and painted wares 120
2. Wheel-made slipped and polished wares 123
3. Handmade and plain wares 125
3. Imported wares 127
1. The Attic imports 127
2. The non‑Attic imports 130
Iii. Metal and Other Objects 135
1. Fibulae 135
2. Pins 136
3. Finger rings 138
4. Beads 139
5. Bracelets 141
6. Iron knives 141
Iv. The Mortuary Record: Direct and Indirect Evidence 143
1.The excavated graves: The burial record and its contextual background 143
2. A brief chronological outline of mortuary assemblages and sporadic vases 146
3. Burial topography and its social and historical implications 158
V. Epilogue: Pots, Graves and Networks 157
Abbreviations and Bibliography 161
Livre | Broché |
---|---|
Date de parution | 2021-11-22 |
Nbr Pages Arabes | 176 |
Couleurs | 1 |
Collection | Études d’archéologie (CReA-Patrimoine) |
ISBN 13 | 978-2-9602029-5-3 |
Type | Nom |
---|---|
Sommaire | E18-TDM.pdf |