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The Hagia Photia Cemetery I

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This volume presents the tomb groups and the architecture of the Hagia Photia Cemetery, which takes its name from the nearby village on the northeast coast of Crete, 5 km east of modern Siteia. Thi...
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  • 31 December 2004
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The Hagia Photia Cemetery takes its name from the nearby village on the northeast coast of Crete, 5 km east of modern Siteia. This large Early Minoan burial ground with over fifteen hundred Cycladic imports was discovered in 1971. A total of 263 tombs were excavated as a rescue excavation in 1971 and 1984. Among the 1800 artefacts are some of the earliest known Cretan discoveries of several types: the grave goods come mostly from the Kampos Group, an assemblage of artefacts known mainly from the Cyclades. Similarly, the tombs represent an architectural style and a series of burial customs that are foreign to Crete but familiar from elsewhere within the Aegean. In fact, the cemetery has such close parallels from the Cyclades that it has often been regarded as a Cycladic colony. The burial contents are an extremely interesting body of evidence for the study of the formative phases of Minoan Crete.
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Price: £75.00
Pages: 296
Publisher: INSTAP Academic Press
Imprint: INSTAP Academic Press
Series: Prehistory Monographs
Publication Date: 31 December 2004
ISBN: 9781931534130
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

HISTORY / Ancient / General, Archaeology by period / region, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Archaeology

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