Aegean from Bronze Age to Iron Age

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A01=Oliver Dickinson
Aegean archaeology
ancient Greek society
Animal Figurines
archaeological evidence analysis
Attic Protogeometric
Author_Oliver Dickinson
Ayia Irini
Ayia Triada
burial customs study
Category=NK
cemetery
chamber
Dark Age Greece
EIA Site
Epidauros Limera
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
Euboean Pottery
Greek Dark Ages continuity
iiic
jar
Late Geometric
Late Helladic
Late Helladic IIIB
Late Helladic IIIC
Late Protogeometric
material culture transition
Mazarakis Ainian
Mycenaean Civilisation
palace
Palace Period
Palace Societies
Pendent Semicircle Skyphos
period
postpalatial
Postpalatial Period
Ramesses III
Rod Tripods
SPG.
stirrup
Stirrup Jars
tomb
toumba
Toumba Cemetery
Weapon Burials
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415135900
  • Weight: 580g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Sep 2006
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Following Oliver Dickinson’s successful The Aegean Bronze Age, this textbook is a synthesis of the period between the collapse of the Bronze Age civilization in the thirteenth and twelfth centuries BC, and the rise of the Greek civilization in the eighth century BC.

With chapter bibliographies, distribution maps and illustrations, Dickinson’s detailed examination of material and archaeological evidence argues that many characteristics of Ancient Greece developed in the Dark Ages. He also includes up-to-date coverage of the 'Homeric question'.

This highly informative text focuses on:

  • the reasons for the Bronze Age collapse which brought about the Dark Ages
  • the processes that enabled Greece to emerge from the Dark Ages
  • the degree of continuity from the Dark Ages to later times.

Dickinson has provided an invaluable survey of this period that will not only be useful to specialists and undergraduates in the field, but that will also prove highly popular with the interested general reader.

Dr Oliver Dickinson recently retired as Reader Emeritus from the Department of Classics and Ancient History, University of Durham, where he taught from 1976–2005. He is a specialist in Greek prehistory.

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