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2009
LH III C chronology and synchronisms III: LH …
THE SEQUENCE OF LATE BRONZE/EARLY IRON AGE POTTERY FROM CENTRAL GREEK SETTLEMENTSA FRESH LOOK AT OLD AND NEW …2009 •
The article provides a critical discussion of publication of pottery deriving from one of the best stratigraphical sequences for the late Mycenaean period in the Argolid and beyond. Chronological conclusions of Ch. Podzuweit’s work on Tiryns material are reviewed in the light of the most recent studies of Mycenaean decorated pottery. The analysis of vessel function and composition of the assemblage is presented as a main achievement of Podzuweit’s study and receives a thorough discussion.
I will briefly summarise part of the wider research conducted on colonial pottery coming from the urban settlements of Sybaris, Kroton and Kaulonia and dated between the second half of the 8th and the end of the 6th centuries BC. The need to conduct a comparative analysis of the archeological documentation of these three centres is consistent with the current research directions in this field; this was the way in which research was conducted by D. Mertens on architectural systems, J. N. Coldstream on some pottery productions and F. Croissant on terracotta figurines, just to name a few examples. This kind of approach is clearly imposed by the very nature of the Achaean colonial phenomenon that overall is very uniform in terms of times, places and structuring modalities. As is well-known, Kroton, Sybaris and Kaulonía were founded in rapid chronological sequence and in narrow geographical contiguity by Greek people who themselves had come from adjacent sites of Eastern Achaea. These fundamental observations, however, have constituted an essential methodological starting point, a sort of ‘state of the art,’ for the present study — as I hope to demonstrate, the results achieved clearly show that the production of ceramics in Achaean colonies is linked to a wide range of Greek manufactures, from those of the motherland to the ones recognised directly in South Italy and, on the contrary, has very little to do with the common origin of the apoikoi. In this way, the proposed research could, therefore, represent a basis from which to develop an exhaustive and homogeneous classification of pottery production in Magna Graecia, still lacking at present. The following chapter will start with an extremely concise overview of the contexts of provenance of the finds, continue with a discussion of the different pottery classes, and conclude with some brief, general observations.
TMA Supplement 2 - Breaking Boundaries. Connecting the Aegean Bronze Age
Breaking ceramic boundaries: formation and change in pottery assemblages during the Middle Helladic period with a special look at the Trapeza settlement (Eastern Achaea, Greece)This paper discusses the theme of tradition and change in pottery assemblages across the Greek mainland during the Middle Bronze Age, namely the Middle Helladic period. It aims to examine recurring shapes within the morphological repertoire of the Middle Helladic painted and unpainted ceramic wares in order to outline their functional purposes throughout the period under discussion. The ceramic data are set in the cultural context of several representative sites, including a newly discovered Middle Helladic settlement near the Trapeza Hill (Eastern Achaea, Greece).
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The Annual of the British School at Athens
Mycenae and Tiryns: the Pottery of the Second Half of the Thirteenth Century BC - Contexts and Definitions2009 •
AEGAEUM 43 - MNHMH / MNEME PAST AND MEMORY IN THE AEGEAN BRONZE AGE. Proceedings of the 17th International Aegean Conference, University of Udine, Ca’ Foscari University of Venice, 17-21 April 2018. Edited by Elisabetta BORGNA, Ilaria CALOI, Filippo Maria CARINCI and Robert LAFFINEUR
K. Aktypi, O.A. Jones and M. Gazis, Use and Reuse of the Past: Case Studies from Mycenaean Achaea.American Journal of Archaeology
Mycenaean Pottery From Pylos: An Indigenous Typology2010 •
Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental …
A preliminary study of the Mycenaean IIIC: 1 pottery assemblages from Tel Miqne-Ekron and Ashdod2004 •
2019 •
American Journal of Archaeology
Cretan Pottery in the Levant in the Fifth and Fourth Centuries B.C.E. and Its Historical ImplicationsATHENS JOURNAL OF MEDITERRANEAN STUDIES
Pottery Styles in Transition in Iron Age Crete2021 •
R, D, Whitehouse, J. B. Wilkins (edd.), Accordia Research Papers 12, 2009-2012, London 2013, pp. 97-118.
The Mediterranean distribution of Pithekoussan-Cumaean pottery in the Archaic periodAmerican Journal of Archaeology
" Non-Mycenaean" Pottery: A Reply to Gisela Walberg1976 •
Praehistorische Zeitschrift
Pottery Production in Mycenaean Laconia: NAA Results from the Palace of Ayios Vasileios2021 •
Labyrinth Revisited: Rethinking 'Minoan'Archaeology
Pottery as a barometer of economic change: from the Protopalatial to the Neopalatial society in Central Crete2002 •