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Amazing Cycladic Antiquities Exhibition Hits Greek Isles This Summer

The Museum of Marble Crafts

An extensive and extremely fascinating series of exhibitions have been organized on the Cyclades islands this summer by the Cyclades Ephorate of Antiquities. The stunning exhibitions feature many unique and rare ancient artifacts, many of which have never been on public display before.

Among these are the exhibitions “From the world of Homer. Tinos and the Cyclades in the Mycenaean era” that runs between July 13 and October 14. A second exhibition, entitled “Look Opposite” is to be inaugurated on July 14 at Archaeological Collection of Koufonisia and will run until September 30, 2019. Dimitris Athanasoulis, Director of the Cyclades Ephorate of Antiquities told reporters:

“The exhibitions are extremely important. On the occasion of the founding of the tomb of Agia Thekla in Tinos, we have the first exhibition for an unknown period of the Cyclades, the Mycenaean period, presenting great and unknown material. Unique discoveries from Keros and Daskalio are revealed for the first time.” 

Four-years of excavations and research on the spectacular architectural findings of Kavos on the island of Keros in the Cycladic Islands group confirmed the existence in Early Cycladic times of a complex, stratified and technically expert society.

The sanctuary at Kavos on the islet of Keros was an important regional centre for all the Cycladic Islands, the Ministry of Culture said at the conclusion of the research programme under Cambridge University.

The programme has “revealed impressive architectural remains of a significant Early Cycladic settlement,” the ministry pointed out.

Under the project, excavations were carried out on the small islet of Daskalio, originally connected to the nearby site of Kavos on Keros through a narrow strip of land. The date of Early Cycladic was confirmed scientifically, and the remains of the culture at the time include “impressive staircases, drainage pipes and stone buildings that reveal an advanced urban architecture without precedence for the specific period.”

This year’s results, the ministry announced, feature paths leading to the top of the settlement, passing by terraces created to support buildings. “The complicated, interlinked and multi-level architecture shows the existence of a well-organised and well-built settlement on a steep promontory,” it added.

The Daskalio buildings were mostly made of good-quality marble from Naxos island, almost 10 km north of Keros. 

According to co-excavator professor Colin Renfrew, Daskalio indicates that the building techniques that were applied, the existence of huge entrance gates, stone ladders and the drainage pipes throughout the island show that there must have been a specialist architect and a central administration to carry out the building programme. He said the complexity of the construction is only comparable to Knossos on Crete for the same early period, he said.

The ministry added that materials discovered, including the marble and obsidian, show that the settlers were expert seamen and trade extended over a wide network reaching beyond the Cyclades.

Co-director of the site Michael Boyd added that a unique feature of the site includes the fact that metallurgy played a significant role throughout the life of the settlement. Its extent and scale prove a constant replenishing of raw materials from western Cyclades and Attica, and a social structure that trained and passed skills on to newer generations.

The fourth and last excavation period in the “Keros-Naxos Sea Roads” project took place in September and October 2018 by Cambridge University under the aegis of the British School at Athens and the supervision of the Antiquities Ephorate of the Cyclades, represented by Irene Legaki. The four-year project picked up from where the previous excavation cycle concluded in 2008 at Kavos Daskaliou.

Source: Tornos News

Categories: Greece
Aleksandr Shatskih:
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