Ionian Islands in the Bronze Age and Early Iron Age

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A01=Christina Haywood
A01=Christina Souyoudzoglou-Haywood
Author_Christina Haywood
Author_Christina Souyoudzoglou-Haywood
Category=NHC
Category=NHD
Category=NKD
Corfu
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Ithaca
Kefalonia
Lefkada
Mycenaean
Zakynthos

Product details

  • ISBN 9781835537558
  • Dimensions: 210 x 297mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Aug 2025
  • Publisher: Liverpool University Press
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The central Ionian Islands occupy a special geographical position in the eastern Mediterranean. On the one hand they face and are in close proximity to the western Greek mainland and on the other they are connected with the western Balkans and the central Mediterranean through the Ionian and Adriatic seas. Although, with the exception of Corfu, they were integrated in the Aegean cultural sphere of influence throughout the Bronze Age and Early Iron Age, their marginal position and insularity also contributed to the formation of particular sociocultural identities, individually and as a group. On occasions these conditions also made them highly desirable as spaces for wide-ranging maritime-based interactions and inter-cultural exchanges. Culturally the islands remained above all a part of the western periphery of the Aegean world, pulsing to its major changes and upheavals.

In the twenty years since the first edition of The Ionian Islands in the Bronze Age and Early Iron Age came out there has been a significant surge of interest in peripheries and their role in the construction of cultural and historical narratives about Greece over the centuries. Yet the Ionian Islands have by and large been left behind in these discussions. This fully revised second edition of the book incorporates all the recent discoveries and studies, as well as updating a large part of the earlier evidence, and aims to bring the islands back to the centre of debates and showcase their relevance.

Christina Souyoudjoglou-Haywood is formerly Assistant Professor and Curator of the Classical Museum, University College Dublin, and for many years Director of the Irish Institute of Hellenic Studies at Athens (IIHSA). She has directed the IIHSA diachronic survey project on the island of Kefalonia, Greece (2003-2015). Her publications include The Archaeology of the Ionian Sea (co-editor with Christina Papoulia, 2022) and The Lure of Greece: Irish involvement in Greek culture, literature, history and politics (co-editor with John Luce and Christine Morris, 2007).

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