Gournia
Gournia
Minoan archaeological site in Crete, Greece
Gournia (Greek: Γουρνιά) is the site of a Minoan palace complex in the Lasithi regional unit on the island of Crete, Greece, excavated in the early 20th century by the American archaeologist, Harriet Boyd-Hawes. The sites of Gournia, Pachyammos, Vasiliki, Monasteraki, Vraika and Kavusi all lie within a three mile radius and the site of Pseira is not far away.[1] The original name for the site is unknown. The modern local name comes from the many stone troughs, Greek γουρνιά,
visible on site.[2]
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Location | Lasithi, Crete, Greece |
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Coordinates | 35°06′20″N 25°47′20″E |
Type | Minoan town and "palace" |
History | |
Cultures | Minoan |
Site notes | |
Excavation dates | 1901, 1903, 1904, 1971-1972, 1976, 1992-1994, 2010–2014 |
Archaeologists | Harriet Boyd Hawes, Jeffrey Soles, Costis Davaras, Vance Watrous |
Public access | Yes |
Timespan | Period | |
---|---|---|
3100–2650 BC | EM I | Prepalatial |
2650–2200 BC | EM II | |
2200–2100 BC | EM III | |
2100–1925 BC | MM IA | |
1925–1875 BC | MM IB | Protopalatial |
1875–1750 BC | MM II | |
1750–1700 BC | MM III | Neopalatial |
1700–1625 BC | LM IA | |
1625–1470 BC | LM IB | |
1470–1420 BC | LM II | Postpalatial |
1420–1330 BC | LM IIIA | |
1330–1200 BC | LM IIIB | |
1200–1075 BC | LM IIIC |
The overarching term "Bronze Age" means something different depending on the culture and region of the world being studied. The Aegean Bronze Age is defined according to the place, which are mainland, Aegean islands, and Crete. These are referred to as Helladic, Cycladic, and Minoan respectively. Although Crete is an island in the Aegean, their culture is so distinctive from the ones considered to be Cycladic that it stands on its own.
Archaeologists abbreviate the chronological periods using two prefixes. The first one always refers to the major Bronze Age period which are Early, Middle and Late. The second letter stands for the place: H for Helladic, M for Minoan and C for Cycladic. Lastly, some of these periods are further divided and distinguished from each other by adding Roman numerals and sometimes letters for subperiods.[3] Thus, EM IIB refers to the last half of the second period of the Early Minoan Bronze Age. Besides using this notation, since the Bronze Age in Crete is based on the building, use, and destruction of important architectural structures known as "palaces" found throughout the island, Minoan archaeologists tend to employ and use these as criteria to name the periods as Pre-palatial, Protopalatial, Neopalatial and Post-palatial.[4]
At its maximum extent, in the Neopalatial period, the site covered an area of about 1.68 hectares, including about 64 houses, a small palace. and a 500 square meter town square. It had a cobblestone street system of over one half kilometer in length.[5]
Harriet Boyd Hawes excavated the Minoan village for three field seasons in 1901, 1903 and 1904. Boyd and her team were able to expose almost the entire town, uncovering sixty houses, a central building which she called "the palace", the cemetery and a road system connecting all these features. They also excavated at the site of Vasiliki which lies one mile further in on the isthmus.[6][7][8] In 1973 a lost notebook of Hawes was recovered which contained detailed descriptions and findspots of the recoveries.[9] In 1910 Richard Seager worked at the cemetery area of Sphoungaras ridge. In 1971, 1972, and 1976 Jeffrey Soles and Costis Davaras conducted cleaning excavations at the site including at Tombs I and III where finds included "seals, ivory plaques, and bits of gold and silver jewelry".[10][11] From 1992 until 1994 Vance Watrous conducted a survey of the site and its surrounding area.[12] After cleaning seasons in 2008 and 2009, from 2010 until 2014 the University at Buffalo in New York based Gournia Excavation Project led by Lance Watrous excavated at the site. This work focused on the early period (Early Minoan II–Middle Minoan II) of the site.[2][13]
Many of the archaeological finds from Gournia are held at the Heraklion Archaeological Museum and a few at the Penn Museum.
Occupation at the site began early in the Early Minoan period and by Early Minoan II it had become a sizable town. In Early Minoan II–III burials began in rock shelters on the Sphoungaras ridge (with direct inhumations at Deposits A and B nearby) and on the north ridge (rock shelters V and VI and one built tomb, House Tomb III, which continued in use until the Middle Minoan IA period). In the Middle Minoan IA period five additional House Tombs were built (I, II, IV, VII, and VIII).[5]
In the MM IB period substantial construction began which was then destroyed in MM IIB. Beginning in MM IIIA rebuilding occurred including the NeoPalatial "palace". This occupation was destroyed in LM IB, As at other Minoan sites all the Linear A tablets were found in that final layer.[2] A Linear A roundel (sealing) from the LM IA period was also found.[14] Other Minoan sites including Zakros to the east and Hagia Triada to the west followed the same sequence of building and destruction. While the causes of this destruction at Gournia are not known, at Hagia Tradia they are known to be the result of major seismic events.[15]
After a period of abandonment occupation resumed in the Mycenae period (Late Minoan IIIA) including the construction of a megaron.[16]
Sphoungaras is located 150 to 200 meters from the Gournia ridge, looking over the coast. Its natural rock shelters, openings in the rock, provided the Minoans for a suitable space to bury their dead without the need for physical labor to create or build tombs. The cemetery was in continuous use from EM II to the end of LM I. Inhumation was the preferred mode of body disposal from early Bronze Age until the pithos burial, where the bodies were placed inside a large storage container. This method was introduced and became the norm around 1900-1800 BC. These burials were first excavated by Harriet Boyd and later revisited by Richard Seager in 1910 [11] and Soles and Davaras in 1970.[2] Some of the artifacts found were various types of complete vases, jewelry, and seals made out of ivory.[11]
The North cemetery is located along a steep and rocky ridge about 80 meters from Gournia.[11][2] First discovered by Boyd and her team in 1901, she discovered what she described as “intramural burials,” later coining the term “house tombs” to refer to them. Unlike the cemetery in Sphoungaras, people were buried in built structures here. The remains were deposited in no particular order in a charnel house manner.
Tomb I
The house tomb is a square building measuring approximately 4 meters on all its sides. It is located on the east slope of the North cemetery. First excavated by Boyd, in 1971 it was revisited by a different team of archaeologists, yielding numerous artifacts presumed to be funerary offerings. Among the findings were two small vases, a miniature jug, a mug with no handles from MM Ia found in situ; as well as a silver kantharos, two bird's nest bowls, a pair of bronze tweezers, stone vases, seals, jewelry and fragmentary sarcophagi with remains of 8 skulls and other unidentified bones.[17]
Tomb II
Together with Tomb I, the second house tomb are the best preserved funerary structures in Gournia. Unlike Tomb I, this house tomb is rectangular and consists of two rooms; it is the only tomb that has an altar. Altars are commonly found outside of tholoi, round structures where the dead were commonly deposited, in other sites from the South of Crete. Nonetheless, both Tomb I and II would have appeared like normal houses to outsiders without the presence of the shrine due to the use of the same construction techniques and architectural style applied to build the town's structures.
Some of the artifacts found in this house tomb were stone seals, fruitstands, three bronze tweezers, terracotta vases, cups, jugs, pithoi, and larnakes. Among these were fragmentary bones with only one salvageable skull. The accumulation and pattern of deposition of the human remains suggest that these were moved to the side once fully skeletonized to make space for more bodies.[17] This was a common practice among the ancient Greeks and is still practiced today in many other cultures.
- "Aegean Chronology". people.ku.edu. Retrieved 2015-11-14.
- "Chronology Overview | Aegean Prehistoric Archaeology". www.dartmouth.edu. Retrieved 2015-11-14.
- Buell, D. Matthew, and John C. McEnroe, "Community building/building community at Gournia", Minoan Architecture and Urbanism: New Perspectives on an Ancient Built Environment, pp. 204-227, 2017
- Boyd Hawes, H., B.E. Wiliams, R.B. Seager, and E.H. Hall, "Gournia, Vasiliki, and Other Prehistoric Sites on the Isthmus of Hierapetra, Crete", Philadelphi, 1908
- Davaras, C., "Γουρνιά", ArchDelt, B, 28, pp. 588–589, 1973
- Soles, J.S., "The Prepalatial Cemeteries at Mochlos and Gournia and the House Tombs of Bronze Age Crete", (Hesperia Suppl. 24), Princeton, 1992
- Watrous, L.V. D. Haggis, K. Nowicki, N. Vogeikoff-Brogan, and M. Schultz, "An Archaeological Survey of the Gournia Landscape: A Regional History of the Mirabello Bay, Crete, in Antiquity", Prehistory Monographs 37, Philadelphia, PA: INSTAP Academic Press, 2012 ISBN 9781931534673
- Gallimore, S., and K.T. Glowacki, "Stratigraphic Excavations within the Gournia Palace 2011-2014", Abstract, Archaeological Institute of America 119th Annual Meeting of the Archaeological Institute of America, vol. 41, Boston: Archaeological Institute of America, pp. 345, 2017
- Monaco, Carmelo, and Luigi Tortorici, "Effects of Earthquakes on the Minoan 'Royal Villa' at Haghia Triada (Crete)", Creta antica 4, pp. 403-417, 2003
- Soles, Jeffrey S., "The Early Gournia Town", American Journal of Archaeology, vol. 83, no. 2, pp. 149–67, 1979
- Betancourt, P., T.S. Wheeler, R. Maddin, & J.D. Muhly, "Metallurgy at Gournia", MASCAJ 1, pp. 7-8, 1978
- Cadogan, G., "Gournia", in The Aerial Atlas of Ancient Crete, J.W. Myers, E.E. Myers, and G. Cadogan, eds., Berkley, Los Angeles, pp. 104–111, 1992
- V. Fotou, "New light on Gournia. Unknown Documents of the Excavation at Gournia and Other Sites on the Isthmus of Hierapetra by Harriet Ann Boyd", Aegaeum 9, Liege & Austin, 1993
- Hall, E.H., "Early Painted Pottery from Gournia, Crete", in Transactions of the Department of Archaeology, Free Museum of Science and Art, University of Pennsylvania I.3, Philadelphia, pp. 191–206, 1905
- Jansen, M., Hauptmann, A. and Klein, S., "Copper and lead isotope characterization of Late Bronze Age copper ingots in the Eastern Mediterranean: results from Gelidonya, Gournia, Enkomi and Mathiati", Bronze Age Metallurgy on Mediterranean Islands. In Honor of Robert Maddin and Vassos Karageorgis, hrsg. v. A. Giumlia-Mair, F. Lo Schiavo (Monographies Instrumentum 56), pp. 552-577, 2018
- Smith, R. Angus K., "Foundation Feasts in the Minoan Palace at Gournia, Crete", Kleronomia: Legacy and Inheritance. Studies on the Aegean Bronze Age in Honor of Jeffrey S. Soles, hrsg. v. Joanne M. A. Murphy, Jerolyn E. Morrison (Prehistory Monographs 61), pp. 137-148, 2022
- Soles, Jeffrey S., "The Gournia Palace", American Journal of Archaeology 95.1, pp. 17-78, 1991
- Vavouranakis, Georgios, "Burials and the landscapes of Gournia, Crete, in the Bronze Age", Robertson, EC, Siebert, JD, Fernandez, DC & Zender, MU (edd.), Space and Spatial Analysis, pp. 233-242, 2006
- Watrous, L. Vance, "A Peak Sanctuary for Gournia", Kleronomia: Legacy and Inheritance.Studies on the Aegean Bronze Age in Honor of Jeffrey S. Soles, hrsg. v. Joanne M. A. Murphy, Jerolyn E. Morrison (Prehistory Monographs 61), pp. 211-216, 2022
- Watrous, L.V., "The Harbor Complex at Gournia of the Minoan Town at Gournia. Includes Online Image Gallery", American Journal of Archaeology, vol. 116, pp. 521–542, 2012
- Watrous, L.V., and A. Heimroth, "Household Industries of Late Minoan IB Gournia and the Socioeconomic Status of the Town", in ΣΤΕΓΑ: The Archaeology of Houses and Households in Ancient Crete (Hesperia Suppl. 44), edited by K. Glowacki and N. Vogeikoff-Brogan, Princeton: American School of Classical Studies at Athens, pp. 199–212, 2011 ISBN 9780876615447
- J.G. Younger, "Seals and Sealings from the Boyd-Hall Excavations at Gournia, Crete", Archaeological Institute of America, 115th Annual Meeting, 5-9 January 2014, Chicago IL, Abstracts, pp. 141-142, 2014