Cypriot Marks on Mycenaean Pottery

Similar documents
Incised Marks (Post-Firing) on Aegean Wares

Cypriots to the West? The Evidence of Their Potmarks

How and Why Potmarks Matter

Rosetta 22:

INTRODUCTION. little evidence of the Minoans advancing much further than Euboea in the Aegean and involvement in

The Minoans, DNA and all.

THE PREHISTORIC AEGEAN AP ART HISTORY CHAPTER 4

LATE BRONZE AGE KOMMOS: IMPORTED POTTERY AS EVIDENCE FOR FOREIGN CONTACT. L. Vance Watrous

NEW CARD DESIGNS. Card designs and their descriptions EARLY AND MIDDLE BRONZE AGES. Master Card Classic Credit

Chronology of ancient Cyprus

Lesson 1

THE SANCTUARY OF THE HORNED GOD RECONSIDERED

III. THE EARLY HELLADIC POTTERY FROM THE MASTOS IN THE BERBATI VALLEY, ARGOLID

Similarities and Differences in the Bronze Age: Cycladic, Minoan, and Mycenaean

Using Cuisenaire Rods. Geometry & Measurement

Digital Resources for Aegean languages

Palmer, J. and Young, M. (2012) Eric Cline (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of the Bronze Age Aegean. Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2010.

LATE BRONZE AGE MARITIME TRADE IN THE EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN :

philippa m. steele INTRODUCTION: SYLLABIC WRITING ON CYPRUS AND ITS CONTEXT

Geography and Early Greek Civilization

IKLAINA ARCHAEOLOGICAL PROJECT 2016 FIELD REPORT Michael B. Cosmopoulos

Text 1: Minoans Prosper From Trade. Topic 5: Ancient Greece Lesson 1: Early Greece

ARCHAEOLOGICAL INVESTIGATIONS IN GUADALUPE, NORTHEAST HONDURAS

The Greek-Swedish-Danish Excavations at Kastelli, Khania 2010 a short report

Martha Hope Rhoads Bell 27 April November Unfortunately, I never had the opportunity to know Martha Bell while she was alive.

12. Communication and Interaction

THE THEBAN STIRRUP-JARS AND EAST CRETE. SOME REMARKS*

Sfakianou Bealby, M. (2009) Review of Phillips 2008, Aegyptiaca on the Island of Crete in Their Chronological Context: A Critical Review, Rosetta 6:

This is a repository copy of Understanding Relations Between Scripts: The Aegean writing systems, edited by P.M. Steele, 2017.

THE USE AND APPRECIATION OF MYCENAEAN POTTERY IN NEW KINGDOM EGYPT. Jorrit M. Kelder

The significance of Mycenaean animal figurines abroad

Aegean Bronze Age Chronology. Vera Klontza-Jaklova

ANNUAL REPORT: ANCIENT METHONE ARCHAEOLOGICAL PROJECT 2014 FIELD SCHOOL

IKLAINA ARCHAEOLOGICAL PROJECT 2012 FIELD REPORT

Gournia, Crete expedition records

Our Cups Are Full: Pottery and Society in the Aegean Bronze Age

Ancient Greece. Roots of Western Civilization

The Many Ways between Late Bronze Age Aegeans and Levants

Notes from the Field: An Island off an Island - Understanding Bronze Age Society in Mochlos, Crete

MS321 Excavating in the Aegean: the Case of Despotiko (Paros, Antiparos)

ARCHAEOLINGUA. Central European Series 1. Archaeometry 98. Proceedings of the 31st Symposium Budapest, April 26 - May Volume 11.

New Insights into Bronze Age Eleusis and the Formative Stages of the Eleusinian Cults

The Cypriot Bronze Age Pottery From Sir Leonard Woolley's Excavations At Alalakh (Tell Atchana) (Contributions To The Chronology Of The Eastern...

SHERD PROJECT (Secure Heritage, Exhibition, Research and Didactics).

Trench 91 revealed that the cobbled court extends further to the north.

Effect of Geography on Ancient Greece. Chapter 4-1

Greece and Region 27/01/ Black figure/red figure -Contrapposto -Ex-voto -Foreshortening -Fresco -Megaron -Tholos

CHAPTER 8 STUDY GUIDE ANSWERS

THE HELLENISTIC TRANSPORT AMPHORAS FROM THE EXCAVATION AT THE HARBOUR OF PHALASARNA:

Architecture and General Functioning of the Cult Units at Late Bronze Age Enkomi on Cyprus

January 6, Chapter 7 & 8 Vocab. due Wednesday, 1/11

Non-scribal Communication

Target. List and describe the government, religion, economy, and contributions of the Minoan civilization

Greek civilizations and archeology. Staples Field Trip to Santorini and Crete, 2018

Two new Proto-White Painted ware vases of the pictorial style from Palaepaphos, Cyprus

ANNA MORPURGO-DAVIES GERALD CADOGAN A SECOND LINEAR A TABLET FROM PYRGOS

Cadwrfa Ymchwil Research Repository

Prof. William R. Caraher, Prof. R. Scott Moore, and Prof. David K. Pettegrew

The Kouris river valley project: an introduction

REGULATIONS. XXVeme Biennale Internationale Création Contemporaine et Céramique Vallauris 2019

The Archaic, Classical and Hellenistic periods

D2. Islands and tourism

A Short History of Cyprus. Name

Ancient Greece Chapter 7 Review

A study of the scribal hands of Knossos based on phylogenetic methods and find-place analysis

How have archaeologists used the concept of social ranking in the study of Minoan civilisation?

UvA-DARE (Digital Academic Repository) The Mycenaeans in the south-eastern Aegean revisited Eerbeek, J. Link to publication

Minding the Gap A Problem in Eastern Mediterranean Chronology, Then and Now

DO NOW: Pick up the map of Eastern Europe pg 978

One of the earliest civilizations began on the island of CRETE This was the Minoan civilization, named for King MINOS Crete is long and narrow, about

Greek Art. Key Notions 17/09/2015. Wednesday, September 05, 2012 Course Outline

384 * Index. Cape Gelidonya ship, 43, 44, 101, 104 Carthage, 28, 99 Chabas, F., 2, 180 Chadwick, J., 47 Chania continuity in the 12th century, 82

21/01/2010. Source: 3. Greek Art (P & S), St. Lawrence, Winter 2010, Beaudoin

Aspects of Civilizations Economy, Government

A MYCENAEAN RITUAL VASE FROM THE TEMPLE AT AYIA IRINI, KEOS

FIND-PLACES OF THE Wm NODULES FROM KNOSSOS

Steps to Civilization

An Assessment of Protogeometric Apsidal Buildings. Senior Honors Thesis: Sarah Moore Departments of Anthropology and Classics

Greek Art. Greek Art 12/09/2017. Greek Sculpture and Painting. Sculpture and Painting: or, the Art of Man St. Lawrence, 9/12/2017

The volume from mine to microscope represents

The Destination Management Company of Greece

ΒΙΟΙ ΠΑΡΑΛΛΗΛΟΙ: ΑΡΧΑΙΕΣ ΝΗΣΙΩΤΙΚΕΣ ΚΟΙΝΩΝΙΕΣ ΣΤΗΝ ΚΡΗΤΗ ΚΑΙ ΤΗΝ ΚΥΠΡΟ PARALLEL LIVES: ANCIENT ISLAND SOCIETIES IN CRETE AND CYPRUS

oi.uchicago.edu Over a span of more than two decades, Oriental Institute expeditions have worked within the ruins of the ancient city of Nippur.

Excavations at the Agia Aikaterini Square, Kastelli, Khania 2005 and 2008: a preliminary report*

Greek Art. Sculpture and Painting 09/09/2016. Friday, September 9, 2016 Course Outline. Sculpture and Painting St. Lawrence, 9/9/2016

Chapter 4. Daily Focus Skills

The Visual Cultures of Classical Greece. Prof. Dimitris Plantzos

1. Sea: heavy influence on physical environment of Greece (Aegean Sea, Ionian Sea)

CHRISTOPHER A. PFAFF Curriculum Vitae

one of the crucial questions regarding the historical development of thera is

CONTENTS. Preface... 5

The Mycenaean Cemetery at Achaia Clauss near Patras

Greek Art. Greek Art. Key Notions 04/02/ Black figure/red figure -Contrapposto -Ex-voto -Foreshortening -Megaron -Tholos

The Minoans (c B.C.)

Ancient Greece GREECE UNIT 5 GEOGRAPHY CHALLENGE. 1 Unit 5 Geography Challenge miles. Lambert Azimuthal Equal-Area Projection

aimed at gaining an understanding of ceramic sequencing in the Valley of Oaxaca, Mexico, as

Jane C. Waldbaum Archaeological Field School Scholarship - Report.

Tegea II. of Athena Alea and 2004

LATE HELLADIC I POTTERY FROM KORAKOU

Unitised Goods Transport via Danish Ports 2004

Transcription:

Trinity University Digital Commons @ Trinity Classical Studies Faculty Research Classical Studies Department 1992 Cypriot Marks on Mycenaean Pottery Nicolle E. Hirschfeld Trinity University, nhirschf@trinity.edu Follo this and additional orks at: http://digitalcommons.trinity.edu/class_faculty Part of the Classics Commons Repository Citation Hirschfeld, N. (1992). Cypriot marks on Mycenaean pottery. In J.- P. Olivier (Ed.), Bulletin de Correspondence Helleńique: Suppl. 25. Mykenai ka. Actes du IXe colloque international sur les textes myceńiens et eǵeéns organise par le Centre de l'antiquite Grecque et Romaine de la Fondation Helleńique des Recherches Scientifiques et l'ecole franc aise d'atheńes (Atheńes, 2-6 octobre 1990) (pp. 315-319). Athens, Greece: Ecole Française Athene. This Contribution to Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Classical Studies Department at Digital Commons @ Trinity. It has been accepted for inclusion in Classical Studies Faculty Research by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Trinity. For more information, please contact jcostanz@trinity.edu.

CYPRIOT MARKS ON MYCENAEAN POTTERY Most signs incised into Late HelladicJLate Minoan III pottery are related in form and method of application, as ell as the types of vessels to hich they are applied and the chronological range and distribution of those vessels. The signs are almost alays incised after firing, generally into the handles of large transport/storage vessels : stirrup jars (both coarse and fine-are varieties) or a particular piriform jar shape (FS 36). With fe exceptions, the Aegean vessels ith incised marks hich can be closely dated by either ceramic typology or stratigraphical context fall ithin LH IIIA-B; of those hich can be dated specifically ithin this range, most are LHJLM IIIB. The great majority of incised Aegean vessels are found on Cyprus and the closely-affiliated sites of Ras ShamraJMinet el Beidha. Other substantial deposits of marked vessels occur in the Argolid. Elsehere, finds are scarce or completely absent. The consistently restricted appearance of incised marks points to some specific and directed use, and thus one can speak of a marking system. It is clear that this system is directly related to potmarking practices of contemporar:y Cyprus. First, the distribution of the marked vessels indicates some sort connection ith Cyprus as the reason for the incised marks : by far the greatest quantity and variety of marked vases are found on Cyprus (see table of geographic distribution). Elsehere, incised marks are found only at sites here other finds attest significant contact ith Cyprus : coastal Syro-Palestine (especially Ras ShamraJMinet el Beidha), the Argolid, and (perhaps on a smaller scale) Crete. Second, the one type of vase most commonly marked by means of incised signs, the FS 36 piriform jar, is a shape specifically associated ith Cyprus and the Near East. Third, the method of marking seems a Cypriot feature; hile signs incised after firing are unusual ithin the Mycenaean Aegean, they are abundantly preserved on both local and imported ceramics on Cyprus. Finally, those signs hich can be certainly identified ith any attested notational system are Cypro-Minoan characters (see plate); many others may be Cypro-Minoan. The use of the Cypro-Minoan signary as a basis for the forms of the marks strengthens the hypothesis that the practice of marking Aegean pottery ith incised signs as specifically Cypriot. The identification of incised signs as a particularly Cypriot feature implies that vessels ith these signs on them either have been routed via Cyprus at some stage, or

316 ICOLLE HIRSCHFELD [BCH Suppl XXV Piriform Jars Large fine SJs Large coarse SJs Other SJs Jars Closed Open/ Frgs. Totals CYPRUS Enkomi 12 5 8 2 1 11 Athienou I 1 2 Pyla I I 2 Kition 8 2 1 1 3 3 18 Hala Sultan Tekke 18 1 2? 21 Kalavassos Ay. Dh. 1 4 1 6 Kourion 4 6 8 11 Kouklia 2 1 2 5 Maa PK I 1 Apliki 1 1 Akhera 1 1 Dhenia 2 2 Lapithos 1 1 Akanthou 3 3 Unprovenienced 1 2 3 1 3 10 39 49 15 25 3 7 2 22 123 :'IIEAR EAST Ugarit{RS{MeB 19 4 2 2 27 Alalakh 1 1 By bios 1 1 Tell Abu Haan 5 1 1 1 8 Beth Shan 1 1 Deir el Balah I 1 26 3 5 3 - - 2 39 ANATOLIA Gelidonya 1 1 Ulu Burun 1 1-1 1 - - - - 2 AEGEA:'Il Crete 4 4 Tiryns 3 15 6 24 Mycenae 1 1 Asine 1 l Midea 1 1 2 Argo lid 1 1 3 18 4 - - 7 1 33 78 37 35 6 7 9 25 197 Vessels ith Incised Marks : Geographical Distribution

1992] CYPRIOT MARKS ON MYCENAEAN POTTERY 317 that they have been handled by people familiar ith the Cypriot marking system. Cypriot signs on Myenaean vessels found on Cyprus or in the Near East can be explained as having been marked in Cyprus, but the incised Mycenaean vases found in the Aegean are more difficult to understand. The increasing number of incised vessels found in the Argolid and the fact that they are fine-are vases makes it difficult to think of them as <<returnables)). In vie of other evidence of highly-organized trade beteen the Argo lid and Cyprus, it is proposed that the vessels bearing incised marks ere designated for export to Cyprus hile still on the mainland and there marked according to the practices appropriate to their destination. Who in the Argolid as inscribing such marks? To possibilities can be suggested. Either local Mycenaean pottery-dealers, much experienced in handling Cypriot trade, CM 4 #4 T CM 13 " #17 A u CM 26 #19A CM 31 #18A CM 38 # 37 I Cypro-Minoan Characters Incised as Marks on Aegean Vessels 22

318 NICOLLE HIRSCHFELD [BCH Suppl XXV CM 41 CM 65 CM 66 d # 29 #36A #36B I v 11' CM 87 CM 99 CM 102 CM 104 (a) tb '4' hi # 45 #26B #33E #33B \.k' r lit, - -Pf ' 7 \,f 4 CM 104 (b) CM 106 )( )y{ # 48 #33A tl\i lrl Cypro-Minoan Characters Incised as Marks on Aegean Vessels

1992] CYPRIOT MARKS ON MYCENAEAN POTTERY 319 CM 107 )'l #35A-C ~ CM 108 (a) #47 CM 108 (b) #46 'f Cypro-Minoan Characters Incised as Marks on Aegean Vessels may have adopted the foreign notational system from, and for the benefit of, their customers. Or Cypriot traders may have come to the Argolid and marked their purchases by means familiar to them. Neither suggestion can be <<proven > by the existing evidence, though the latter seems more probable. Many different signs are found on the pottery in the Argolid, and thus the inscribers seem to have had a fairly intimate knoledge of the Cypriot marks. Although it is quite possible that a Mycenaean may have acquired such knoledge, there is no evidence of such familiarity ith foreign scripts in the Mycenaean administrative records. Also, it seems that the practice of marking pottery as in general alien to Mycenaean administrative methods, but common on Cyprus. No pattern can be discerned hich might indicate the function of the marks. No particular sign or combination of signs is peculiar to a certain shape, size, decorative motif, specific context, site or geographical region. In fact, this lack of patterning in the appearance of the marks must provide some clue to the meaning of the signs. In default of other possible explanations, it is proposed that the diversity of signs is best explained as reflecting personal marks of those (Cypriots) handling the merchandise : traders, shippers or arehousers. Thus, incised marks on Aegean ares not only are evidence of trade in ceramics targeted for a specific market, but also suggest active participation of Cypriots m organizing shipments from the mainland to Cyprus. Nicolle HIRSCHFELD.