Cave and Worship in Ancient Greece

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Acheloos River
Ancient Greece
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Category=NK
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Cave Archaeology
Cave Cult
Cave Rituals
Cave Sanctuaries
Cave Shrines
Cave Space
Cave worship
Classical archaeology
Corycian Cave
Cycladic Islands
Cyclops Cave
Early Iron Age
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Franchthi Cave
Idaean Cave
Late Bronze Age
Locri Epizephyrii
Middle Bronze Age
Millennium Bce
Mountain's Lower Altitudes
Mountain’s Lower Altitudes
Mycenaean Period
Polis Bay
Salentine Peninsula
Terracotta figurines
Votive Terracottas
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367677503
  • Weight: 500g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Aug 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Cave and Worship in Ancient Greece brings together a series of stimulating chapters contributing to the archaeology and our modern understanding of the character and importance of cave sanctuaries in the fi rst millennium BCE Mediterranean.

Written by emerging and established archaeologists and researchers, the book employs a fascinating and wide range of approaches and methodologies to investigate, and interpret material assemblages from cave shrines, many of which are introduced here for the fi rst time. An introductory section explores the emergence and growth of caves as centres of cult and religion. The chapters then probe some of the meanings attached to cave spaces and votive materials such as terracotta fi gurines, and ceramics, and those who created and used them. The authors use sensory and gender approaches, discuss the identity of the worshippers, and the contribution of statistical analysis to the role of votive materials. At the heart of the volume is the examination of cave materials excavated on the Cycladic islands and Crete, in Attika and Aitoloakarnania, on the Ionian islands and in southern Italy.

This is a welcome volume for students of prehistoric and classical archaeology,enthusiasts of the history of caves, religion, ancient history, and anthropology.

Stella Katsarou is an archaeologist at the Ephorate of Palaeoanthropology–Speleology of the Greek Ministry of Culture. She has carried out fi eldworkin caves and prehistoric sites in Thessaly, the Peloponnese, the Aegean islands and, recently, Aitoloakarnania. She studies and writes about the functional, social, and ritual aspects of cave use and their material expression in prehistoric Greece.

Alexander Nagel is Chair of the Art History and Museum Professions Program and Assistant Professor at the State University of New York, Fashion Institute of Technology, and a Research Associate in Residence at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C.