ARTICLES | 2015
Exploring mobility patterns and biological affinities in the southern Aegean: first insights from Early Bronze Age eastern Crete
The Annual of the British School at Athens 110 (2015): 3-25
This paper presents the results of a pilot project which combines, for the first time, biodistance and strontium isotope analyses in the study of human skeletal remains from Early Bronze Age Crete (third millennium BC).The Minoan amphoroid krater: from production to consumption
The Annual of the British School at Athens 110 (2015): 147-201
This article focuses on a distinct type of clay vessel which formed part of both the Late Minoan and the Mycenaean repertoire: the amphoroid krater.The beginnings of writing on Crete: theory and context
The Annual of the British School at Athens 110 (2015): 27-49
This article examines the inception of writing on Crete in the second millennium BC from a fresh methodological perspective.Becoming Mycenaean?: The living, the dead, and the ancestors in the transformation of society in second millennium BC southern Greece
C. Renfrew, M.J. Boyd & I. Morley (eds), Death Rituals, Social Order and the Archaeology of Immortality in the Ancient World (Oxford 2015), 200-220
Without abstractHaghia Triada III. The Late Minoan III Buildings in the Villaggio
Athens
The present book is the result of two different excavations. The fist excavation was carried out by the Italian archaeologist Federico Halbherr in the region of Hagia Triada, which has been called “Villaggio”. The second one has been undertaken by the author one century later (2010-2015).Arthur Evans in Dubrovnik and Split (1875-1882)
Oxford
Thanks to the biography by Joan Evans, sister of Arthur Evans, the research of John J. Wilkes and the new biography by Silvia L. Horwitz, we know much about Arthur Evans’s work in the Balkans prior to his discoveries on Crete.How did the Mycenaeans Remember? Death, matter, and memory in the Early Mycenaean world
C. Renfrew, M.J. Boyd & I. Morley (eds), Death Rituals, Social Order and the Archaeology of Immortality in the Ancient World (Oxford 2015), 303-314
Without abstractPutting death in its place: the idea of the cemetery
C. Renfrew, M.J. Boyd & I. Morley (eds), Death Rituals, Social Order and the Archaeology of Immortality in the Ancient World (Oxford 2015), 187-199
Without abstract‘The unanswered question’: investigating early conceptualisations of death
C. Renfrew, M.J. Boyd & I. Morley (eds), Death Rituals, Social Order and the Archaeology of Immortality in the Ancient World (Oxford 2015), 1-11
Without abstractAn Overview of the Western Anatolian Early Bronze Age
European Journal of Archaeology 18. 1 (February 2015): 60-89
For a long time, assessments and evaluations of the western Anatolian Early Bronze Age (EBA) have only been based on the excavation results of Tarsus, Karataş-Semayük, Beycesultan, Demircihüyük, and Troy.Review of Religion and Society in Middle Bronze Age Greece
European Journal of Archaeology
Lupack, S., 2015. Review of H. Whittaker, Religion and Society in Middle Bronze Age Greece (Cambridge 2014), European Journal of Archaeology 18.4 (2015): 734-738.
Review of Western Anatolia before Troy: Proto-Urbanisation in the 4th Millennium BC? Proceedings of the International Symposium held at the Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien, Vienna, Austria, 21−24 November, 2012
European Journal of Archaeology
Düring, B.S., 2015. Review of M. Mehofer & B. Horejs (eds), Western Anatolia before Troy: Proto-Urbanisation in the 4th Millennium BC? Proceedings of the International Symposium held at the Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien, Vienna, Austria, 21−24 November, 2012 (Vienna 2014), European Journal of Archaeology 18.4 (2015): 727-730.
Review of The Archaeology of Cyprus from the Earliest Prehistory Through the Bronze Age
European Journal of Archaeology
Jung, R., 2015. Review of A.B. Knapp, The Archaeology of Cyprus from the Earliest Prehistory Through the Bronze Age (Cambridge 2013), European Journal of Archaeology 18.2 (2015): 361-365.
Review of La Transition Néolithique en Méditerranée. Actes du colloque. Transitions en Méditerranée, ou comment des chasseurs devinrent agriculteurs, Muséum de Toulouse, 14–15 avril 2011
European Journal of Archaeology
Pluciennik, M., 2015. Review of C. Manen, T. Perrin & J. Guilaine (eds), La Transition Néolithique en Méditerranée. Actes du colloque. Transitions en Méditerranée, ou comment des chasseurs devinrent agriculteurs, Muséum de Toulouse, 14–15 avril 2011 (Arles 2014), European Journal of Archaeology 18.3 (2015): 551-553.