Everything about The Minoan Civilization totally explained
The
Minoan civilization was a
Bronze Age civilization which arose on the island of
Crete. The Minoan culture flourished from approximately
2700 to
1450 BC; afterwards,
Mycenaean Greek culture became dominant on Crete.
The term "Minoan" was coined by the British archeologist Sir
Arthur Evans after the mythic
"king" Minos. Minos was associated in
Greek myth with the
labyrinth, which Evans identified as the site at
Knossos. What the Minoans called themselves is unknown. It has sometimes been argued that the
Egyptian place name "Keftiu" (*
kaftāw) and the
Semitic "Kaftor" or "
Caphtor" and "Kaptara" in the
Mari archives apparently refer to the island of Crete. In the
Odyssey which was composed centuries after the destruction of the Minoan civilization,
Homer calls the natives of Crete
Eteocretans ("true Cretans"); these may have been descendants of the Minoans.
Minoan
palaces are the best known
building types to have been excavated on the island. They are monumental buildings serving
administrative purposes as evidenced by the large
archives unearthed by
archeologists. Each of the palaces excavated to date has its own unique features, but they also share features which set them apart from other structures. The palaces were often multi-storied, with interior and exterior
staircases, light wells, massive
columns, storage magazines and courtyards.
Chronology and history
relative chronology. The first, created by Evans and modified by later archaeologists, is based on
pottery styles. It divides the Minoan period into three main eras—Early Minoan (EM), Middle Minoan (MM), and Late Minoan (LM). These eras are further subdivided, for example Early Minoan I, II, III (EMI, EMII, EMIII). Another dating system, proposed by the Greek archaeologist
Nicolas Platon, is based on the development of the architectural complexes known as "palaces" at
Knossos,
Phaistos,
Malia, and
Kato Zakros, and divides the Minoan period into Prepalatial, Protopalatial, Neopalatial, and Post-palatial periods. The relationship among these systems is given in the accompanying table, with approximate calendar dates drawn from Warren and Hankey (1989).
All calendar dates given in this article are approximate, and the subject of ongoing debate.
The
Thera eruption occurred during a mature phase of the LM IA period. The calendar date of the volcanic eruption is extremely controversial; see the article on
dating the Thera eruption for discussion. It often is identified as a catastrophic natural event for the culture, leading to its rapid collapse, perhaps being related mythically as
Atlantis by Classical Greeks.
History
| Minoan chronology |
| 3650-3000 BC |
EMI |
Prepalatial |
| 2900-2300 BC |
EMII |
| 2300-2160 BC |
EMIII |
| 2160-1900 BC |
MMIA |
| 1900-1800 BC |
MMIB |
Protopalatial (Old Palace Period) |
| 1800-1700 BC |
MMII |
| 1700-1640 BC |
MMIIIA |
Neopalatial (New Palace Period) |
| 1640-1600 BC |
MMIIIB |
| 1600-1480 BC |
LMIA |
| 1480-1425 BC |
LMIB |
| 1425-1390 BC |
LMII |
Postpalatial (At Knossos, Final Palace Period) |
| 1390-1370 BC |
LMIIIA1 |
| 1370-1340 BC |
LMIIIA2 |
| 1340-1190 BC |
LMIIIB |
| 1190-1170 BC |
LMIIIC |
| 1100 BC |
Subminoan |
The oldest signs of inhabitants on Crete are ceramic
Neolithic remains that date to approximately 7000 BC. See
History of Crete for details.
The beginning of the Bronze Age in Crete, around 2600 BC, was a period of great unrest, and also marks the beginning of Crete as an important center of
civilization.
At the end of the MMII period (1700 BC) there was a large disturbance in Crete, probably an earthquake, or possibly an invasion from
Anatolia. The Palaces at Knossos, Phaistos, Malia, and Kato Zakros were destroyed. But with the start of the Neopalatial period, population increased again, the palaces were rebuilt on a larger scale and new settlements were built all over the island. This period (the seventeenth and sixteenth centuries BC, MM III / Neopalatial) represents the apex of the Minoan civilization. The
Thera eruption occurred during LMIA (and LHI).
On the Greek mainland, the
Helladic period of culture was contemporary; Late Helladic (LH) IIB began during LMIB, showing independence from Minoan influence. LMIB ware has been found in Egypt under the reigns of
Hatshepsut and
Tuthmosis III. At the end of the LMIB period, the Minoan palace culture failed catastrophically. All palaces were destroyed, and only Knossos was immediately restored - although other palaces, such as
Chania, sprang up later in LMIIIA. Either the LMIB/LMII catastrophe occurred after this time, or else it was so bad that the Egyptians then had to import LHIIB instead.
A short time after the LMIB/LMII catastrophe, around 1420 BC, the palace sites were occupied by the
Mycenaeans, who adapted the
Linear A Minoan script to the needs of their own
Mycenaean language, a form of
Greek, which was written in
Linear B. The first such archive anywhere is in the LMII-era "Room of the Chariot Tablets". Later Cretan archives date to LMIIIA (contemporary with LHIIIA) but no later than that.
During LMIIIA:1,
Amenhotep III at Kom el-Hatan took note of
k-f-t-w (Kaftor) as one of the "Secret Lands of the North of Asia". Also mentioned are Cretan cities such as
i-'m-n-y-s3/
i-m-ni-s3 (Amnisos),
b3-y-s3-?-y (Phaistos),
k3-t-w-n3-y (Kydonia) and
k3-in-yw-s (Knossos) and some
toponyms reconstructed as belonging to the Cyclades or the Greek mainland. If the values of these Egyptian names are accurate, then this
pharaoh didn't privilege LMIII Knossos above the other states in the region.
After about a century of partial recovery, most Cretan cities and palaces went into decline in the thirteenth century BC (LHIIIB/LMIIIB).
Knossos remained an administrative center until 1200 BC; the last of the Minoan sites was the defensive mountain site of
Karfi a refuge site which displays vestiges of Minoan civilization almost into the
Iron Age.
Geography
Crete is a
mountainous
island with natural
harbors. There are signs of earthquake damage at many Minoan sites and clear signs of both uplifting of land and submersion of coastal sites due to
tectonic processes all along the coasts.
Homer recorded a tradition that Crete had ninety cities. The island was probably divided into at least five political units during the height of the Minoan period and at different stages in the Bronze Age into more or less. The north is thought to have been governed from Knossos, the south from
Phaistos, the central eastern part from
Malia, and the eastern tip from
Kato Zakros and the west from
Chania. Smaller palaces have been found in other places.
Some of the major Minoan archaeological sites are:
- Palaces
- Knossos - the largest Bronze Age archaeological site on Crete; was purchased for excavations by Evans on March 16, 1900.
- Phaistos - the second largest palatial building on the island, excavated by the Italian school shortly after Knossos
- Malia - the subject of French excavations, a palatial centre which affords a very interesting look into the development of the palaces in the protopalatial period
- Kato Zakros - a palatial site excavated by Greek archaeologists in the far east of the island
- Galatas - the most recently confirmed palatial site
- Agia Triada - an administrative centre close to Phaistos
- Gournia - a town site excavated in the first quarter of the 20th Century by the American School
- Pyrgos - an early minoan site on the south of the island
- Vasiliki - an early minoan site towards the east of the island which gives its name to a distinctive ceramic ware
- Fournu Korfi - a site on the south of the island
- Pseira - island town with ritual sites
- Mount Juktas - the greatest of the Minoan peak sanctuaries by virtue of its association with the palace of Knossos
- Arkalochori - the findsite of the famous Arkalochori Axe
- Karfi - a refuge site from the late Minoan period, one of the last of the Minoan sites
- Akrotiri - settlement on the island of Santorini (Thera), near the site of the Thera Eruption
Minoans beyond Crete
Minoans were traders, and their cultural contacts reached far beyond the island of Crete — to
Old Kingdom Egypt, to copper-bearing
Cyprus and the Syrian coasts beyond, and to Anatolia. Minoan techniques and styles in ceramics provided models, of fluctuating influence, for
Helladic Greece. In addition to the familiar example of
Thera, Minoan "colonies" — if that isn't too misleading a term — can be found first of all at
Kastri on
Cythera, the birthplace for Greeks of
Aphrodite, an island close to the Greek mainland that came under Minoan influence in the mid-third millennium (EMII) and remained Minoan in culture for a thousand years, until Mycenaean occupation in the thirteenth century. The Minoan strata there replace a mainland-derived culture in the Early Bronze Age, the earliest Minoan settlement outside Crete. The
Cyclades were in the Minoan cultural orbit, and, closer to Crete, the islands of Karpathos, Saros and Kasos, also contained Minoan colonies, or settlements of Minoan traders, from the Middle Bronze Age (MMI-II); most of them were abandoned in LMI, but Minoan Karpathos recovered and continued with a Minoan culture until the end of the Bronze Age. Other supposed Minoan colonies, such as that hypothesised by
Adolf Furtwängler for
Aegina, have been dismissed by subsequent archaeological studies. There was a Minoan colony at
Triandra on
Rhodes.
Society and culture
The Minoans were primarily a
mercantile people engaged in overseas trade. Their culture, from 1700 BC onward, shows a high degree of organization.
Many historians and archaeologists believe that the Minoans were involved in the Bronze Age's important
tin trade: tin, alloyed with
copper apparently from
Cyprus, was used to make
bronze. The decline of Minoan civilization and the decline in use of bronze tools in favor of iron ones seem to be correlated.
The Minoan trade in
saffron, the stigma of a mutated crocus which originated in the Aegean basin as a natural chromosome mutation, has left fewer material remains: a fresco of saffron-gatherers at
Santorini is well-known. This inherited trade pre-dated Minoan civilization: a sense of its rewards may be gained by comparing its value to
frankincense, or later, to
pepper. Archaeologists tend to emphasize the more durable items of trade: ceramics, copper, and tin, and dramatic luxury finds of
gold and
silver.
Objects of Minoan manufacture suggest there was a network of trade with mainland
Greece (notably
Mycenae),
Cyprus,
Syria,
Anatolia,
Egypt,
Mesopotamia, and westward as far as the coast of
Spain.
Minoan men wore
loincloths and
kilts. Women wore
robes that were open to the navel, leaving their breasts exposed, and had short sleeves and layered flounced skirts. Women also had the option of wearing a strapless fitted
bodice, the first fitted garments known in history. The patterns on clothes emphasized
symmetrical geometric designs.
The Minoan religion focused on female deities, with females officiating. The statues of
priestesses in Minoan culture and frescoes showing men and women participating in the same sports such as
bull-leaping, lead some archaeologists to believe that men and women held equal social status. Inheritance is thought to have been matrilineal. The frescos include many depictions of people, with the genders distinguished by colour: the men's skin is reddish-brown, the women's white.
Concentration of wealth played a large role in the structure of society. Multiroom constructions were discovered in even the ‘poor’ areas of town, revealing a social equality and even distribution of wealth. Minoan artwork reveals that equality existed among genders as well. Evidence includes frescos that depict women participating with men in recreational sporting events. The absence of a powerful warrior class meant that women and men were placed on an even playing field.
Language and writing
Knowledge of the spoken and written language of the Minoans is scant, due to the small number of records found. Sometimes the Minoan language is referred to as
Eteocretan, but this presents confusion between the language written in
Linear A scripts and the language written in a
Euboean- derived alphabet after the
Greek Dark Ages. While the Eteocretan language is suspected to be a descendant of Minoan, there isn't enough source material in either language to allow conclusions to be made. It also is unknown whether the language written in
Cretan hieroglyphs is Minoan. As with Linear A, it's undeciphered and its phonetic values are unknown.
Approximately 3,000 tablets bearing writing have been discovered so far in Minoan contexts. The overwhelming majority are in the
Linear B script, apparently being inventories of goods or resources. Others are inscriptions on religious objects associated with
cult. Because most of these inscriptions are concise economic records rather than dedicatory inscriptions, the translation of Minoan remains a challenge. The hieroglyphs came into use from MMI and were in parallel use with the emerging Linear A from the eighteenth century BC (MM II) and disappeared at some point during the seventeenth century BC (MM III).
In the Mycenean period, Linear A was replaced by Linear B, recording a very archaic version of the
Greek language. Linear B was successfully deciphered by
Michael Ventris in 1953, but the earlier scripts remain a mystery. Unless
Eteocretan truly is its descendant, it's perhaps during the
Greek Dark Ages, a time of economic and socio-political collapse, that the Minoan language became extinct.
Art
The great collection of Minoan art is in the museum at
Heraklion, near Knossos on the north shore of Crete. Minoan art, with other remains of
material culture, especially the sequence of ceramic styles, has allowed archaeologists to define the three phases of Minoan culture (EM, MM, LM) discussed above.
Since wood and textiles have vanished through decomposition, the most important surviving examples of Minoan art are
Minoan pottery, the palace architecture with its
frescos that include landscapes,
stone carvings, and intricately carved
seal stones.
Because prosperity didn't rely on agriculture and warfare, the Minoans had more time to dedicate art. This led to the development of a highly visual culture that created works for pleasure rather than utility, politics, or religion. Cretan society became the first ‘leisure’ society in existence.
In the Early Minoan period ceramics were characterised by linear patterns of
spirals,
triangles, curved lines,
crosses,
fishbone motifs, and such. In the Middle Minoan period naturalistic designs such as
fish,
squid,
birds, and
lilies were common. In the Late Minoan period, flowers and animals were still the most characteristic, but the variability had increased. The 'palace style' of the region around Knossos is characterised by a strong
geometric simplification of
naturalistic shapes and
monochromatic paintings. Very noteworthy are the similarities between Late Minoan and
Mycenaean art.
Religion
The Minoans worshiped goddesses. Although there's some evidence of male gods, depictions of Minoan goddesses vastly outnumber depictions of anything that could be considered a Minoan god. While some of these depictions of women are believed to be images of worshipers and priestesses officiating at religious ceremonies, as opposed to the deity herself, there still seem to be several goddesses including a
Mother Goddess of
fertility, a
Mistress of the Animals, a protectress of
cities, the
household, the
harvest, and the
underworld, and more. Some have argued that these are all aspects of a single
Great Goddess. They are often represented by
serpents, birds, poppies, and a somewhat vague shape of an animal upon the head. Some suggest the goddess was linked to the "Earthshaker", a male represented by the
bull and the
sun, who would die each
autumn and be reborn each
spring. Though the notorious bull-headed
Minotaur is a purely Greek depiction, seals and seal-impressions reveal bird-headed or masked deities.
A major festive celebration was exemplified in the famous athletic
Minoan bull dance, represented at large in the frescoes of Knossos and inscribed in miniature seals. In this feat that appears extremely dangerous, both male and female dancers would confront the bull and, grasping it by its sacred horns, permit themselves to be tossed, somersaulting over its back to alight behind it. Each of these sequential movements appears in Minoan representations, but the actual significance of the bull dance in Minoan cult and cultural life is lost beyond retrieval. What is clear, however, is that there's no inkling of an antagonistic confrontation and triumph of the human through the ritual death of the bull, which is the essence of the surviving
bullfight of Hispanic culture; rather, there's a sense of harmonious cooperation.
Interpretation of Minoan icons can easily range too far:
Walter Burkert warns:
» "To what extent one can and must differentiate between Minoan and Mycenaean religion is a question which hasn't yet found a conclusive answer"
and suggests that useful parallels will be found in the relations between Etruscan and Archaic Greek culture and religion, or between Roman and Hellenistic culture. Minoan religion hasn't been transmitted in its own language, and the uses literate Greeks later made of surviving Cretan
mythemes, after centuries of purely oral transmission, have transformed the meager sources: consider the Athenian point-of-view of the
Theseus legend. A few Cretan names are preserved in
Greek mythology, but there's no way to connect a name with an existing Minoan icon, such as the familiar
serpent-goddess. Retrieval of metal and clay votive figures—
double axes, miniature vessels, models of artifacts, animals, human figures—has identified sites of cult: here were numerous small shrines in Minoan Crete, and mountain peaks and very numerous sacred caves—over 300 have been explored—were the centers for some
cult, but
temples as the Greeks developed them were unknown. Within the palace complex, no central rooms devoted to cult have been recognized, other than the center court where youths of both sexes would practice the
bull-leaping ritual. It is notable that there are no Minoan frescoes that depict any deities.
Minoan sacred symbols include the
bull and its horns of consecration, the
labrys (double-headed axe), the
pillar, the serpent, the sun-disk, and the
tree.
Warfare and "The Minoan Peace"
Though the vision created by
Sir Arthur Evans of a
pax Minoica, a "Minoan peace", has been criticised in recent years, it's generally assumed there was little internal armed conflict in Minoan Crete itself, until the following Mycenaean period. As with much of Minoan Crete, however, it's hard to draw any obvious conclusions from the evidence. However, new excavations keep sustaining interests and documenting the impact around the Aegean.
Many argue that there's little evidence for ancient Minoan fortifications. But as S. Alexiou has pointed out (in
Kretologia 8), a number of sites, especially Early and Middle Minoan sites such as Aghia Photia, are built on hilltops or are otherwise fortified. As Lucia Nixon said, "...we may have been over-influenced by the lack of what we might think of as solid fortifications to assess the archaeological evidence properly. As in so many other instances, we may not have been looking for evidence in the right places, and therefore we may not end with a correct assessment of the Minoans and their ability to avoid war.".
Chester Starr points out in "Minoan Flower Lovers" (Hagg-Marinatos eds. Minoan Thalassocracy) that
Shang China and the
Maya both had unfortified centers and yet still engaged in frontier struggles, so that itself can't be enough to definitively show the Minoans were a peaceful civilization unparalleled in history.
In 1998, however, when Minoan archaeologists met in a conference in Belgium to discuss the possibility that the idea of Pax Minoica was outdated, the evidence for Minoan war proved to be scanty.
Archaeologist Jan Driessen, for example, said the Minoans frequently show 'weapons' in their art, but only in ritual contexts, and that "The construction of fortified sites is often assumed to reflect a threat of warfare, but such fortified centers were multifunctional; they were also often the embodiment or material expression of the central places of the territories at the same time as being monuments glorifying and merging leading power" (Driessen 1999, p. 16).
On the other hand, Stella Chryssoulaki's work on the small outposts or 'guard-houses' in the east of the island represent possible elements of a defensive system. Claims that they produced no weapons are erroneous; type A Minoan swords (as found in palaces of Mallia and Zarkos) were the finest in all of the Aegean (See Sanders, AJA 65, 67, Hoeckmann, JRGZM 27, or Rehak and Younger, AJA 102).
Regarding Minoan weapons, however, archaeologist Keith Branigan notes that 95% of so-called Minoan weapons possessed hafting (hilts, handles) that would have prevented their use as weapons (Branigan, 1999). However more recent experimental testing of accurate replicas has shown this to be incorrect as these weapons were capable of cutting flesh down to the bone (and scoring the bone's surface) without any damage to the weapons themselves. Archaeologist Paul Rehak maintains that Minoan figure-eight shields couldn't have been used for fighting or even hunting, since they were too cumbersome (Rehak, 1999). And archaeologist Jan Driessen says the Minoans frequently show 'weapons' in their art, but only in ritual contexts (Driessen 1999). Finally, archaeologist Cheryl Floyd concludes that Minoan "weapons" were merely tools used for mundane tasks such as meat-processing (Floyd, 1999). Although this interpretation must remain highly questionable as there are no parallels of one-meter-long swords and large spearheads being used as culinary devices in the historic or ethnographic record.
About Minoan warfare in general, Branigan concludes that "The quantity of weaponry, the impressive fortifications, and the aggressive looking long-boats all suggested an era of intensified hostilities. But on closer inspection there are grounds for thinking that all three key elements are bound up as much with status statements, display, and fashion as with aggression…. Warfare such as there was in the southern Aegean EBA
early Bronze Age was either personalized and perhaps ritualized (in Crete) or small-scale, intermittent and essentially an economic activity (in the Cyclades and the Argolid/Attica) " (1999, p. 92). Archaeologist Krzyszkowska concurs: "The stark fact is that for the prehistoric Aegean we've no direct evidence for war and warfare per se" (Krzyszkowska, 1999).
Furthermore, no evidence exists for a Minoan army, or for Minoan domination of peoples outside Crete. Few signs of warfare appear in Minoan art. "Although a few archaeologists see war scenes in a few pieces of Minoan art, others interpret even these scenes as festivals, sacred dance, or sports events" (Studebaker, 2004, p. 27). Although armed warriors are depicted being stabbed in the throat with swords, violence may occur in the context of ritual or blood sport.
Although on the Mainland of Greece at the time of the Shaft Graves at Mycenae, there's little evidence for major fortifications among the Mycenaeans there (the famous citadels post-date the destruction of almost all Neopalatial Cretan sites), the constant warmongering of other contemporaries of the ancient Minoans – the Egyptians and Hittites, for example – is well documented.
Possibility of human sacrifice
Evidence that suggest the Minoans may have performed human sacrifice has been found at three sites: (1)
Anemospilia, in a MMII building near Mt. Juktas, interpreted as a temple, (2) an EMII sanctuary complex at
Fournou Korifi in south central Crete, and (3)
Knossos, in an LMIB building known as the "North House."
The temple at Anemospilia was destroyed by earthquake in the MMII period. The building seems to be a tripartite shrine, and terracotta feet and some carbonized wood were interpreted by the excavators as the remains of a cult statue. Four human skeletons were found in its ruins; one, belonging to a young man, was found in an unusually contracted position on a raised platform, suggesting that he'd been trussed up for sacrifice, much like the bull in the sacrifice scene on the Mycenaean-era
Agia Triadha sarcophagus. A bronze dagger was among his bones, and the discoloration of the bones on one side of his body suggests he died of blood loss. The bronze blade was fifteen inches long and had images of a boar on each side. The bones were on a raised platform at the center of the middle room, next to a pillar with a trough at its base.
The positions of the other three skeletons suggest that an earthquake caught them by surprise—the skeleton of a twenty-eight year old woman was spread-eagled on the ground in the same room as the sacrificed male. Next to the sacrificial platform was the skeleton of a man in his late thirties, with broken legs. His arms were raised, as if to protect himself from falling debris, which suggests that his legs were broken by the collapse of the building in the earthquake. In the front hall of the building was the fourth skeleton, too poorly preserved to allow determination of age or gender. Nearby 105 fragments of a clay vase were discovered, scattered in a pattern that suggests it had been dropped by the person in the front hall when he was struck by debris from the collapsing building. The jar had apparently contained bull's blood.
Unfortunately, the excavators of this site have not published an official excavation report; the site is mainly known through a 1981 article in
National Geographic (Sakellarakis and Sapouna-Sakellerakis 1981, see also Rutter).
Not all agree that this was human sacrifice. Nanno Marinatos says the man supposedly sacrificed actually died in the earthquake that hit at the time he died. She notes that this earthquake destroyed the building, and also killed the two Minoans who supposedly sacrificed him. She also argues that the building wasn't a temple and that the evidence for sacrifice "is far from … conclusive." Dennis Hughes concurs and also argues that the platform where the man lay wasn't necessarily an altar, and the blade was probably a spearhead that may not have been placed on the young man, but could have fallen during the earthquake from shelves or an upper floor.
At the sanctuary-complex of Fournou Korifi, fragments of a human skull were found in the same room as a small hearth, cooking-hole, and cooking-equipment. This skull has been interpreted as the remains of a sacrificed victim.
In the "North House" at Knossos, the bones of at least four children (who had been in good health) were found which bore signs that "they were butchered in the same way the Minoans slaughtered their sheep and goats, suggesting that they'd been sacrificed and eaten. The senior Cretan archaeologist Nicolas Platon was so horrified at this suggestion that he insisted the bones must be those of apes, not humans."
The bones, found by Peter Warren, date to Late Minoan IB (1580-1490), before the Myceneans arrived (in LM IIIA, circa 1320-1200) according to
Paul Rehak and John G. Younger. Dennis Hughes and Rodney Castleden argue that these bones were deposited as a 'secondary burial'. Secondary burial is the not-uncommon practice of burying the dead twice: immediately following death, and then again after the flesh is gone from the skeleton. The main weakness of this argument is that it doesn't explain the type of cuts and knife marks upon the bones.
Architecture
The Minoan cities were connected with stone-paved
roads, formed from blocks cut with bronze
saws. Streets were drained and water and
sewer facilities were available to the upper class, through
clay pipes.
Minoan buildings often had flat tiled roofs;
plaster, wood, or
flagstone floors, and stood two to three stories high. Typically the lower
walls were constructed of stone and
rubble, and the upper walls of
mudbrick. Ceiling timbers held up the roofs.
Palaces
The first palaces were constructed at the end of the Early Minoan period in the third millennium BC (
Malia). While it was formerly believed that the foundation of the first palaces was synchronous and dated to the Middle Minoan at around 2000 BC (the date of the first palace at Knossos), scholars now think that palaces were built over a longer period of time in different locations, in response to local developments. The main older palaces are Knossos, Malia, and Phaistos.
The palaces fulfilled a plethora of functions: they served as centres of
government, administrative offices,
shrines, workshops, and storage spaces (for example, for grain). These distinctions might have seemed artificial to Minoans.
The use of the term 'palace' for the older palaces, meaning a dynastic residence and seat of power, has recently come under criticism (see
Palace), and the term 'court building' has been proposed instead. However, the original term is probably too well entrenched to be replaced. Architectural features such as ashlar masonry,
orthostats, columns, open courts, staircases (implying upper stories), and the presence of diverse basins have been used to define palatial architecture.
Often the conventions of better-known, younger palaces have been used to reconstruct older ones, but this practice may be obscuring fundamental functional differences. Most older palaces had only one story and no representative facades. They were U-shaped, with a big central court, and generally were smaller than later palaces. Late palaces are characterised by multi-story buildings. The west facades had sandstone ashlar masonry. Knossos is the best-known example. See
Knossos.
Columns
One of the most notable contributions of Minoans to architecture is their unique column, which was wider at the top than the bottom. It is called an 'inverted' column because most Greek columns are wider at the bottom, creating an illusion of greater height. The columns were also made of wood as opposed to stone, and were generally painted red. They were mounted on a simple stone base and were topped with a pillow-like, round piece as a capital.
Agriculture
The Minoans raised
cattle,
sheep,
pigs, and
goats, and grew
wheat,
barley,
vetch, and
chickpeas, they also cultivated
grapes,
figs, and
olives, and grew
poppies, for poppyseed and perhaps, opium. The Minoans domesticated
bees, and adopted
pomegranates and
quinces from the Near East, although not
lemons and
oranges as is often imagined. They developed Mediterranean polyculture, the practice of growing more than one crop at a time, and as a result of their more varied and healthy diet, the population increased.
Farmers used wooden
plows, bound by leather to wooden handles, and pulled by pairs of
donkeys or
oxen.
Minoan Demise Theories
The
Minoan eruption on the island of
Thera (present day
Santorini about 100 km distant from Crete) is estimated to have occurred sometime between 1550 and 1630 BCE. This eruption was among the largest volcanic explosions in the history of civilization, ejecting approximately 60 km
3 of material and rating a 6 on the
Volcanic Explosivity Index. The eruption devastated the nearby Minoan settlement at
Akrotiri on Santorini, which was entombed in a layer of
pumice.
It is further believed that the eruption severely affected the Minoan culture on Crete, although the extent of the impact has been debated. Early theories proposed that ashfall from Thera on the eastern half of Crete choked off plant life, causing starvation of the local population. However, after more thorough field examinations, this theory has lost credibility, as it has been determined that no more than of ash fell anywhere on Crete. Recent studies indicate, based on archeological evidence found on Crete, that a massive
tsunami, generated by the Theran eruption, devastated the coastal areas of Crete and destroyed many Minoan coastal settlements.
Significant Minoan remains have been found above the
Late Minoan I era Thera ash layer, implying that the Thera eruption didn't cause the immediate downfall of the Minoans. As the Minoans were a sea power and depended on their naval and merchant ships for their livelihood, the Thera eruption caused significant economic hardship to the Minoans. Whether these effects were enough to trigger the downfall of the Minoan civilization is under intense debate. The
Mycenaean conquest of the Minoans occurred in Late Minoan II period, not many years after the eruption, and many archaeologists speculate that the eruption induced a crisis in Minoan civilization, which allowed the Mycenaeans to conquer them easily.
The Minoan eruption provides for an important marking in chronically prehistoric archaeological sites. However, precise dating of the eruption is still disputed.
Radiocarbon dating has suggested a date of about 1630 BC. These radiocarbon dates, however, conflict with the estimates of other archaeologists who synchronize the eruption with unearthed Egyptian artifacts and the
Conventional Egyptian chronology arrive at a later date of around 1550 BC.
Several authors have noted evidence for exceedence of
carrying capacity by the Minoan civilization. For example archaeological recovery at
Knossos provides clear proof of
deforestation of this part of Crete near late stages of Minoan development.
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