ELEUTHERNA - Orthi Petra - 2011
General Information
Record ID
2857
Activity Date
2011
Chronology
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Type of Operation
Institution
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Report
Eleutherna. Orthi Petra. N. Stampolidis (Crete/Museum of Cycladic Art) reports on continuing excavation in the Geometric-Archaic cemetery in 2011.
Work resumed on the outsize pithos burial east of the covered area, under late Hellenistic-early Roman settlement remains. Four inhumations were found in the two-metre high pithos. An eminent male, some 60-70 years old, was buried with an iron dirk and an iron brooch with traces of textile. At intervals thereafter, three women, aged 35-42, around 30 (with cranial damage) and 19, were buried with him, wearing gold-trimmed clothing. On top of the pithos was stacked a pair of bronze basins, with another large basin (0.65m in diameter) close by.
Outside the pithos were dozens of vases packed tightly together: these include kraters, amphorae, hydriae, lekythoi, and skyphoi in Cretan, Creto-Cypriot and Cypro-Phoenician style. With them were iron weapons such as spear-heads (up to 0.45m long) and a dagger, as well as a pick-axe. These probably belonged with the eighth-century inurned cremation of a man aged 28-35. Finds include a large Argive krater depicting on each side a male figure between two horses (with fish below the bellies and trees before). Close by is a chamber tomb in which a series of warriors were laid between 900 BC and the start of the seventh century. It remains to be determined why the cremated warrior was buried alone.
Author
Don EVELY
Bibliographic reference(s)
To Vima 12/09/2011; Kathimerini, Eleftherotypia, Eleftheros Typos and Ethnos 13/09/2011; Adesmevtos Typos 14/09/2011.
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Date of creation
2012-09-26 00:00:00
Last modification
2023-10-11 10:24:14