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OverviewThe South House, located immediately south of the Palace of Knossos was first excavated by Arthur Evans in 1908, with subsequent work carried out in 1924, but was never published. This volume pieces together evidence from the finds from the excavation housed in the Stratigraphical Museum, as well as the Daybooks of Duncan Mackenzie, to form an overview of the excavation and the history of the building. Contributions from a number of specialists assess the architecture of the South House and especially the entrance system (Jan Driessen) , the fresco fragments (P A Mountjoy) , the fragments of Early, Middle and Late Minoan pottery (C Knappett, P A Mountjoy) , pithoi and storage (K S Chrsitakis) , silver vessels (P A Mountjoy) , stone, bone, ivory, bronze and clay finds (R D G Evely) , loomweights (B Burke) and seals Full Product DetailsAuthor: P. A. Mountjoy , etc.Publisher: British School at Athens Imprint: British School at Athens Volume: 34 Dimensions: Width: 21.40cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 30.00cm Weight: 1.161kg ISBN: 9780904887426ISBN 10: 0904887421 Pages: 224 Publication Date: 01 December 2003 Audience: General/trade , College/higher education , General , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Out of Print Availability: Out of stock ![]() Table of ContentsReviews...handsomely produced volume is now the reference work for the South House, a book that will be of value to researchers interested in Late Bronze Age Knossos and Crete, and a barometer of the potential of but also limitations posed by material excavated nearly 100 years ago. Here is a legacy that, thanks to the origins and development of the discipline, Aegean prehistorians will never escape and cannot ignore.'--Eleni Hatzaki American Journal of Archaeology Online Book Review (01/01/0001) ...handsomely produced volume is now the reference work for the South House, a book that will be of value to researchers interested in Late Bronze Age Knossos and Crete, and a barometer of the potential of but also limitations posed by material excavated nearly 100 years ago. Here is a legacy that, thanks to the origins and development of the discipline, Aegean prehistorians will never escape and cannot ignore.'--Eleni Hatzaki American Journal of Archaeology Online Book Review (4/1/2007 12:00:00 AM) Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |