Synopses & Reviews
This study of prehistoric artefacts and ruins discovered in north-east Greece by the team of archaeologists led by A. J. B. Wace and M. S. Thompson was first published in 1912, thirty years after that area first revealed prehistoric remains. The one hundred and twenty sites in the Thessaly area have yielded domestic artefacts and ruins ranging from spit supports to tombs. These are depicted through detailed sketches, photographs and descriptions. The evolving architecture uncovered at different strata at the excavation sites, and the changing forms of the artefacts discovered alongside them, are explored in relation to other Greek excavation sites to determine any possible historic significance. Modern technological advances have taken some aspects of archaeology in a very different direction, but the practices of meticulous data collection and comparative analysis between sites and strata demonstrated here provide a valuable lesson in establishing a chronology of cultural and domestic development.
Synopsis
A detailed documentation of the prehistoric finds in the Thessaly area in 1912, and the archaeological theories deduced.
Synopsis
The detailed documentation of the prehistoric artefacts and ruins discovered during the 1912 excavations lead by A. J. B. Wace and M. S. Thompson in Thessaly, Greece. The practices of data cataloguing and comparison used in the study to formulate theories on the chronology of cultural development are still relevant today.
Table of Contents
Introduction; 1. The geography of north-eastern Greece, and the distribution of the prehistoric sites; 2. The principal classes of pottery and celts; 3. North Thessaly, Rakhmani, Marmariani, Mesiani Maghula, etc.; 4. South-eastern Thessaly, Sesklo, Dhimini, Pirghos; 5. Central Thessaly, Tsangli, Rini; 6. Western Thessaly, Tsani Maghula; 7. Southern Thessaly, Zerelia, Phthiotic Thebes, etc.; 8. The Spercheus valley, Lianokladhi; 9. Boeotia and Phocis; 10. The Mycenaean period and the early Iron Age; 11. Architecture; 12. Connections with the south; 13. Connections with the west; 14. Connections with the north; 15. Chronology; 16. The prehistoric history of north-eastern Greece; 17. Ethnological conclusions; Appendixes; Plates; Indexes.