ΑΡΘΡΑ | 2014
Minoan Stone Vessels with Linear A Inscriptions
Leuven/Liège
Communal storage in Bronze Age Crete: Re-assessing testimonies
Κρητικά Χρονικά 34 (2014), 201-218
The extensive and well-built storerooms of Cretan Bronze Age palaces, the stores in the central complexes of peripheral settlements, and storerooms in many of the excavated elite mansions and ordinary houses highlight the importance that social groups placed on the production, collection, processing and storage of agricultural and pastoral goods.Mortuary Behavior and Social Trajectories in Pre-and Protopalatial Crete
Philadelphia/Pennsylvania
Mobility and migration in the Early Neolithic of the Mediterranean: questions of motivation and mechanism
World Archaeology 46:4 (2014), 484-501
The spread of the Neolithic throughout Mediterranean Europe involved, at least to some degree, the physical movement of farmers westwards. This mobility has often been attributed to demographic or climatic factors, and long-term environmental changes of this type surely provided the backdrop against which subsistence practices and behavioral strategies developed.Migration, mobility and craftspeople in the Aegean Bronze Age: a case study from Ayia Irini on the island of Kea
World Archaeology 46:4 (2014), 551-568
This paper investigates the question of human mobility from a practice-centered perspective, and argues for the value of such approaches in elucidating how new ideas and objects enter a community and become ‘local’ over time.Yo-ho, yo-ho, a seren’s life for me!
World Archaeology 46:4 (2014), 624-640
Historical accounts indicate pirates were able to create culturally mixed tribal entities and identities by incorporating new followers from different cultures into their social structure.Donum Mycenologicum. Mycenean Studies in Honour of Francisco Aura Jorro
Louvain-la-Neuve, Walpole
Sects and the city: factional ideologies in representations of performance from Bronze Age Crete
World Archaeology 46:2 (2014), 224-241
Analyses of performance (and performance events) depicted in the iconography from Minoan Crete most often focus upon religious aspects of these activities. In this article, a performance approach is adopted; this alternative viewpoint emphasizes the significance of performances for materializing ideologies, reinforcing elements of the socio-political order and the negotiation of power relations.Κύθηρα. Το Μινωικό Ιερό Κορυφής στον Άγιο Γεώργιο στο Βουνό. 4: Κεραμεική της Εποχής του Χαλκού
Αθήνα
Bronze Age acrobats: Denmark, Egypt, Crete
World Archaeology 46:2 (2014), 242-255
A Danish eighteenth-century find of some bronze figurines tells the story of the practising of similar ritual performances across Bronze Age Europe from Egypt to Scandinavia. The Danish figurines, as well as Swedish rock carvings, show backwards-bending female acrobats doing backward handsprings.Η ιστορική και αρχαιολογική έρευνα στην Πελοπόννησο όπως προκύπτει από τα αρχεία των Γ.Α.Κ. νομών Πελοποννήσου και αρχεία άλλων φορέων
Τρίπολη
Vravron. The Mycenaean Cemetery
Uppsala