Format:
X, 54 S.
,
Ill.
ISBN:
9789170812477
Series Statement:
Studies in Mediterranean archaeology and literature 177
Content:
"The 'Ochsenkrater-Grab' from Nicosia Ayia Paraskevi in Cyprus has long been known but never fully documented. Named after the Mycenaean IIIB crater decorated with bulls included amongst its contents, the presumed tomb group was acquired by Max Ohnefalsch-Richter in the 1880s and subsequently sold to the Königliche, now Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Germany, where part of what is left of it remains. For the first time all the objects, which originally numbered more than 150, have been catalogued, drawing on personal examination as well as published and archival information. As the cemetery from which the antiquities came has now been completely built over, this study adds significantly to our knowledge of Middle and Late Bronze Age habitation in the modern capital of Cyprus. e ways in which a selection of glyptic images from Ayia Triada respond to different conceptual and associative contexts and suggests that the idea of indeterminate ambiguity--as a by-product of western taxonomic systems--may mask this multivalent aspect. By positioning glyptic imagery as multivalent this volume makes a significant contribution to debates within Aegean Bronze Age archaeology and current interpretative practice."--Publisher's website
Note:
The 'Ochsenkrater-Grab'Catalogue -- Chronology -- bibliography.
Language:
English
Keywords:
Ajia Paraskevi
;
Minoische Kultur
;
Keramik
;
Geschichte 1750 v. Chr.-1300 v. Chr.
;
Ajia Paraskevi
;
Mykenische Kultur
;
Grab
;
Funde
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