An anchor cut from limestone and carved with a Cypro-Minoan sign—identified as “CM 102 Variant 7”—has been lifted from the floor of Tel Dor’s lagoon on Israel’s Carmel Coast. The object forms the ...
https://doi.org/10.5615/bullamerschoorie.378.0071 • https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5615/bullamerschoorie.378.0071 Copy URL This article follows the trail of ...
The Cycladic, the Minoan, and the Mycenaean cultures define the Bronze Age of Greece, 3,100-1,000 BCE. This was a period of flourishing architecture, craftmanship, agriculture, sanitation, including ...
The hundreds of clay tablets found in the ruins of King Minos’ palace at Knossos, Crete, and on the supposed site of King Nestor’s palace near Pylos on the Greek mainland long provided archaeology ...
The civilization made famous by the myth of the Minotaur was as warlike as their bull-headed mascot, new research suggests. The ancient people of Crete, also known as Minoan, were once thought to be a ...
The rare ancient tomb of a wealthy Minoan woman has been discovered at a monumental archaeological complex on the Greek island of Crete. The cist grave—a small, coffin-like grave built using ...