ATOP THE KADMEIA: MYCENAEAN ROOF TILES FROM THEBES IN CONTEXT
Autor: | Vassilis L. Aravantinos, Yannis Galanakis, Ioannis Fappas |
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Přispěvatelé: | Galanakis, Yannis [0000-0002-6934-6929], Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository |
Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Archeology
History 060102 archaeology Visual Arts and Performing Arts Context (language use) Excavation 06 humanities and the arts 02 engineering and technology 021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology Archaeology Geography 4301 Archaeology Bronze Age Assemblage (archaeology) 0601 history and archaeology Pottery Classics Architecture 0210 nano-technology Roof 43 History Heritage and Archaeology |
Zdroj: | The Annual of the British School at Athens. 115:175-245 |
ISSN: | 2045-2403 0068-2454 |
DOI: | 10.1017/s006824542000009x |
Popis: | Questions were raised in the past regarding the use of Mycenaean tiles as ‘roof tiles’ on the basis of the small numbers of them recovered in excavations and their overall scarcity in Mycenaean domestic contexts. The investigation of the Theodorou plot in 2008 in the southern part of the Kadmeia hill at Thebes yielded the single and, so far, largest known assemblage per square metre of Mycenaean tiles from a well-documented excavation. This material allows, for the first time convincingly, to identify the existence of a Mycenaean tiled roof. This paper presents the results of our work on the Theodorou tiles, placing emphasis on their construction, form and modes of production, offering the most systematic study of Mycenaean tiles to date. It also revisits contexts of discovery of similar material from excavations across Thebes. Popular as tiles might have been in Boeotia, and despite their spatially widespread attestation, their use in Aegean Late Bronze Age architecture appears, on the whole, irregular with central Greece and the north-east Peloponnese being the regions with the most sites known to have yielded such objects. Mycenaean roof tiles date mostly from the mid- and late fourteenth centurybcto the twelfth centurybc. A study of their construction, form, production and contexts suggests that their role, apart from adding extra insulation, might have been one of signposting certain buildings in the landscape. We also present the idea that Mycenaean tile-making was guided by a particular conventional knowledge which was largely influenced by ceramic-related technologies (pottery- and drain-making). While production of roof tiles might have been palace-instigated to begin with, it does not appear to have been strictly controlled. This approach to Mycenaean tile-making may also help explain their uneven (in terms of intensity of use) yet widespread distribution. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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