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The Early Iron Age pottery and devel...
~
Symeonoglou, Nancy Evelyn Wamser.
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The Early Iron Age pottery and development of the sanctuary at Aetos, Ithaka (Greece).
Record Type:
Language materials, printed : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
The Early Iron Age pottery and development of the sanctuary at Aetos, Ithaka (Greece)./
Author:
Symeonoglou, Nancy Evelyn Wamser.
Description:
603 p.
Notes:
Chair: Susan I. Rotroff.
Contained By:
Dissertation Abstracts International63-09A.
Subject:
Anthropology, Archaeology. -
Online resource:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=3065098
ISBN:
0493843183
The Early Iron Age pottery and development of the sanctuary at Aetos, Ithaka (Greece).
Symeonoglou, Nancy Evelyn Wamser.
The Early Iron Age pottery and development of the sanctuary at Aetos, Ithaka (Greece).
- 603 p.
Chair: Susan I. Rotroff.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Washington University, 2002.
This dissertation investigates the development of the Early Iron Age sanctuary at Aetos, Ithaka, first excavated in the 1930s by archaeologists of the British School at Athens. The material, which covers the Protogeometric and Geometric periods, c. 1025–700 BCE, represents one of the largest bodies of evidence for this period from western Greece and, as such, its study bears directly on problems encountered in the study of the region as a whole. The study focuses on two broad categories of archaeological evidence: architecture and pottery. Examination of the architectural remains concentrates on the enigmatic ‘cairns’, variously interpreted as cremation burials or the remains of houses, and three superimposed walls located to the west. The greater part of this study is devoted to pottery. It focuses on a stylistic analysis, with the goal of establishing a relative dating sequence. Special emphasis is given to the Protogeometric pottery and the poorly understood phases of Early and Middle Geometric. Discussion centers on the problematic issues of dating Ithakan and West Greek Protogeometric pottery within the larger context of traditional approaches to Early Iron Age studies and a revised chronology is proposed. This study also includes an analysis of the ritual vessels. Consideration of the form and function of the vessels provides clues for understanding the rituals performed at the sanctuary and for identifying the deities worshipped there. Two ritual forms, the ring-kernos and the tripod, indicate that cult activity began at Aetos in the Protogeometric period. Artifacts other than pottery are referred to, but not examined in detail.
ISBN: 0493843183Subjects--Topical Terms:
622985
Anthropology, Archaeology.
The Early Iron Age pottery and development of the sanctuary at Aetos, Ithaka (Greece).
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Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 63-09, Section: A, page: 3241.
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Thesis (Ph.D.)--Washington University, 2002.
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This dissertation investigates the development of the Early Iron Age sanctuary at Aetos, Ithaka, first excavated in the 1930s by archaeologists of the British School at Athens. The material, which covers the Protogeometric and Geometric periods, c. 1025–700 BCE, represents one of the largest bodies of evidence for this period from western Greece and, as such, its study bears directly on problems encountered in the study of the region as a whole. The study focuses on two broad categories of archaeological evidence: architecture and pottery. Examination of the architectural remains concentrates on the enigmatic ‘cairns’, variously interpreted as cremation burials or the remains of houses, and three superimposed walls located to the west. The greater part of this study is devoted to pottery. It focuses on a stylistic analysis, with the goal of establishing a relative dating sequence. Special emphasis is given to the Protogeometric pottery and the poorly understood phases of Early and Middle Geometric. Discussion centers on the problematic issues of dating Ithakan and West Greek Protogeometric pottery within the larger context of traditional approaches to Early Iron Age studies and a revised chronology is proposed. This study also includes an analysis of the ritual vessels. Consideration of the form and function of the vessels provides clues for understanding the rituals performed at the sanctuary and for identifying the deities worshipped there. Two ritual forms, the ring-kernos and the tripod, indicate that cult activity began at Aetos in the Protogeometric period. Artifacts other than pottery are referred to, but not examined in detail.
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http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=3065098
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