Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-r6qrq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-28T14:06:35.196Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

STOPPERS, TRANSPORT STIRRUP JARS AND WINE TRANSPORT, 1450–1150 bc

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 September 2019

Trevor Van Damme*
Affiliation:
University of Victoria

Abstract

This paper examines Late Bronze Age chipped ceramic and stone discs known most commonly as stoppers. Stoppers are distinguished from other classes of archaeological finds, including pierced discs and lids. Although it has long been known that stoppers could play a role in sealing ceramic vessels, recent scholarship has preferred to see them as multifunctional. For this article, 158 stoppers and 100 spout apertures from transport stirrup jar spouts found in secure Late Bronze Age III contexts have been studied. The results demonstrate a strong correlation in the apertures of transport stirrup jar spouts and the maximum diameter of stoppers that points to a meaningful relationship between the two. As the primary transport container of the Late Bronze Age, transport stirrup jars required careful sealing in order to allow their contents to transit without spilling or spoiling. There were many possible sealing configurations, however, and indeed this paper demonstrates some support for independent Mycenaean and Minoan traditions. A comparison with sealing traditions throughout the eastern Mediterranean reveals that the stopper method of sealing endured or reoccurred for thousands of years for the storage and transport of a specific commodity – wine. I conclude with the case study of stopper distributions at ancient Eleon, Boeotia, in order to show that a contextualised study of stoppers and stoppering activities in domestic structures has much to contribute to the study of social processes and domestic consumption practices.

Πώματα, ψευδόστομοι αμφορείς και μεταφορά του οίνου, 1450–1150 π.Χ.

Η παρούσα εργασία εξετάζει τα αποκεκρουσμένα κεραμικά και λίθινα δισκάρια της Ύστερης Εποχής του Χαλκού, τα οποία είναι γνωστά ως πώματα. Τα πώματα διαφοροποιούνται από άλλες κατηγορίες αρχαιολογικών ευρημάτων, όπως τα όστρακα διαμορφωμένα σε σφονδύλια και τα καπάκια. Αν και είναι προ πολλού γνωστό ότι τα πώματα θα μπορούσαν να χρησιμεύουν στη σφράγιση κεραμικών σκευών, πρόσφατες έρευνες προτιμούν να τα θεωρούν πολύ-λειτουργικά. Για τους σκοπούς αυτού του άρθρου μελετήθηκαν 158 πώματα και 100 ανοίγματα στομίου ψευδόστομων αμφορέων, από ασφαλώς χρονολογημένα σύνολα της Ύστερης Εποχής του Χαλκού III. Τα αποτελέσματα της ανάλυσης δείχνουν σαφή και ισχυρή συσχέτιση ανάμεσα στο εύρος του στομίου των ψευδόστομων αμφορέων και στη μέγιστη διάμετρο των πωμάτων, γεγονός που υποδεικνύει σημαντική σχέση μεταξύ των δύο. Το κύριο δοχείο μεταφοράς στην Ύστερης Εποχής του Χαλκού, οι ψευδόστομοι αμφορείς χρειάζονταν προσεκτική σφράγιση ώστε το περιεχόμενό τους να διοχετεύεται χωρίς να χυθεί ή να χαλάσει. Ωστόσο, υπήρχαν πιθανώς πολλοί διαφορετικοί τρόποι σφράγισης και η παρούσα εργασία προσφέρει όντως στοιχεία που υποστηρίζουν την ύπαρξη ανεξάρτητων μυκηναϊκών και μινωικών παραδόσεων. Η σύγκριση με τις παραδεδομένες μεθόδους σφράγισης σε όλη την ανατολική Μεσόγειο αποκαλύπτει ότι η μέθοδος του πωματισμού για την αποθήκευση και τη μεταφορά ενός συγκεκριμένου αγαθού, του οίνου, άντεξε στο χρόνο ή επανεμφανίστηκε κατά διαστήματα για χιλιετίες. Καταλήγω με το παράδειγμα της κατανομής των πωμάτων στον αρχαίο Ελεώνα της Βοιωτίας, για να δείξω ότι η μελέτη των πωμάτων και πωματισμών στα συμφραζόμενά τους εντός των κτισμάτων του οικισμού μπορεί να συμβάλει σημαντικά στην έρευνα των κοινωνικών διαδικασιών και των εγχώριων πρακτικών κατανάλωσης.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Council, British School at Athens 2019 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Mycenae Excavation and Publication Archive, University of Cambridge, MCNE 1/1/044 (E.B. French's Mycenae 1952 Excavation Notebook).Google Scholar
Anderson, E. 2016. Seals, Craft, and Community in Bronze Age Crete (Baltimore, MD).Google Scholar
Aravantinos, V., Burke, B., Burns, B., Fappas, Y., Lupack, S. and MacKay, C. 2016. ‘The Eastern Boeotia Archaeological Project 2007–2011’, Mouseion 13, 156.Google Scholar
Aruz, J. 1994. ‘Seal imagery and sealing practices in the early Aegean world’, in Ferioli, P. (ed.), Archives before Writing. Proceedings of the International Colloquium, Oriolo Romano, October 23–25, 1991 (Turin), 211–35.Google Scholar
Bennett, E.L. Jr and Chadwick, J. 1958. ‘The Mycenae tablets II’, Transactions of the American Philological Society 48.1, 1122.Google Scholar
Blegen, C.W. 1928. Zygouries: A Prehistoric Settlement in the Valley of Cleonae (Cambridge, MA).Google Scholar
Blegen, C.W. and Rawson, M. 1966. The Palace of Nestor at Pylos in Western Messenia, vol. 1: The Buildings and Their Contents (Princeton, NJ).Google Scholar
Boochs, W. 1982. Siegel und Siegeln im Alten Agypten (Sankt Augustin).Google Scholar
Bos, J.E.M.F. 2007. ‘Jar stoppers, seals, and lids, 1999 season’, in Sidebotham, S.E. and Wendrick, W.Z. (eds), Berenike 1999/2000. Report on the Excavations at Berenike, Including Excavations at Wadi Kalalat and Siket, and the Survey of the Mons Smaragdus Region (Los Angeles, CA), 258–69.Google Scholar
Bos, J.E.M.F. and Helms, C. 2000. ‘Jar stoppers and seals’, in Sidebotham, S.E. and Wendrich, W.Z. (eds), Berenike 1998. Report of the 1998 Excavations at Berenike and the Survey of the Egyptian Eastern Desert, including Excavations in Wadi Kalalat (Leiden), 275304.Google Scholar
Brann, E. 1961. ‘Protoattic well groups from the Athenian Agora’, Hesperia 30.4, 305–79.Google Scholar
Burke, B. and Burns, B. 2016. ‘Crafting before and after the collapse: Mycenaean Eleon in Boeotia’, in Driessen, J. (ed,), RA-PI-NE-U. Studies on the Mycenaean World Offered to Robert Laffineur for his 70th Birthday (Aegis Vol. 10; Louvain), 8594.Google Scholar
Burns, B., Burke, B. and Charami, A. 2017. ‘Mycenaean Eleon and eastern Boeotia during the Bronze Age’, in Rupp, D. and Tomlinson, J.E. (eds), From Maple to Olive (Athens), 177–91.Google Scholar
Burr, D. 1933. ‘A geometric house and a Proto-Attic votive deposit’, Hesperia 2.4, 542640.Google Scholar
Catling, H.W. 2009. Menelaion I. The Bronze Age (London).Google Scholar
Cherry, J.F. and Davis, J.L. 2007. ‘The other finds’, in Renfrew, C., Brodie, N., Morris, C. and Scarre, C. (eds), Excavations at Phylakopi in Melos 1974–1977 (Witney), 401–36.Google Scholar
Dakoronia, F. and Kounouklas, P. 2012. “Η ανακύκλωση στην αρχαιότητα: το παράδειγμα του Κύνου”, in Mazarakis Ainian, A. (ed.), Αρχαιολογικό Έργο Θεσσαλίας και Στερεάς Ελλάδας, vol. 3 (Volos), 1171–8.Google Scholar
Dakouri-Hild, A. in preparation. The House of Kadmos at Thebes, Greece: The Excavations of Antonios D. Keramopoullos (1906–1929), vol. 1: Architecture, Stratigraphy and Finds (Rome and Pisa).Google Scholar
Davis, J. and Stocker, S. 2016. ‘The lord of the gold rings: the griffin warrior of Pylos’, Hesperia 85.4, 627–55.Google Scholar
Dawkins, R.M. and Woodward, A.M. 1909/10. ‘Laconia: I. Excavations at Sparta, 1910’, BSA 16, 161.Google Scholar
Denecker, E. and Vandorpe, K. 2007. ‘Sealed amphora stoppers and tradesmen in Greco-Roman Egypt: archaeological, papyrological, and inscriptional evidence’, BABesch 82, 115–28.Google Scholar
Dickers, A. 2001. Die spätmykenischen Siegel aus Weichem Stein: Untersuchungen zur spätbronzezeitlichen Glyptik auf dem griechischen Festland und in der Ägäis (Rahden).Google Scholar
Dieleman, J. 1998. ‘Amphora stoppers’, in Sidebotham, S.E. and Wendrich, W.Z. (eds), Berenike 1996. Report of the 1996 Excavations at Berenike (Egyptian Red Sea Coast) and the Survey of the Eastern Desert (Leiden), 265–78.Google Scholar
Erickson, B. 2018. Lerna VIII: The Historical Greek Village (Princeton, NJ).Google Scholar
Evely, D. 2006. ‘The small finds’, in Evely, D. (ed.), Lefkandi IV. The Bronze Age. The Late Helladic IIIC Settlement at Xeropolis (Oxford and Northampton), 265302.Google Scholar
Fiandra, E. 1968. ‘A che cosa serviviano le cretule di Festos’, in Πεπραγμένα του Β' Διεθνούς Κρητολογικού Συνεδρίου, vol. A (Athens), 383–97.Google Scholar
French, E.B. 1961. ‘Mycenaean occupation near the Cyclopean Terrace Building’, BSA 56, 81–7.Google Scholar
French, E.B. and Taylour, W.D. 2007. Well Built Mycenae. The Helleno-British Excavations Within the Citadel at Mycenae, 1959–1969. Fascicule 13. The Service Areas of the Cult Centre (Oxford).Google Scholar
Furumark, A. 1941. Mycenaean Pottery, vol. 1: Analysis and Classification (Stockholm).Google Scholar
Gibbs, K.T. 2008. ‘Pierced clay disks and Late Neolithic textile production’, in Córdoba, J.M., Molist, M., Pérez, M.C., Rubio, I. and Martínez, S. (eds), Proceedings of the 5th International Congress on the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East (Madrid), 8993.Google Scholar
Haldane, C. 1993. ‘Direct evidence for organic cargoes in the Late Bronze Age’, WorldArch 24.3, 348–60.Google Scholar
Hallager, E. 2001. ‘Sealing without seals’, 1–16 (available online <http://www.hum.au.dk/ckulturf/pages/publications/eh/sealing_without_seals.pdf> accessed March 2018).+accessed+March+2018).>Google Scholar
Hallager, E. 2006. ‘The uniformity in seal use and sealing practice during the LH/LM III period’, in Agata, A.L. d’ and Moody, J. (eds), Ariadne's Threads. Connections Between Crete and the Greek Mainland in Late Minoan III (LM IIIA2 to LM IIIC) (Athens), 243–66.Google Scholar
Hallager, E. and Hallager, B. 2011. The Greek-Swedish excavations at the Agia Aikaterini Square, Kastelli, Khania 1970–1987 and 2001, vol. 4: The Late Minoan IIIB:1 and IIIA:2 Settlements (Stockholm).Google Scholar
Haskell, H.W., Jones, R.E., Day, P.M. and Killen, J.T. 2011. Transport Stirrup Jars of the Bronze Age Aegean and East Mediterranean (Philadelphia, PA).Google Scholar
Heath, M. 1958. ‘Early Helladic clay sealings from the House of the Tiles at Lerna’, Hesperia 27.2, 81121.Google Scholar
Hochstetter, A. 1987. Kastanas: Ausgrabungen in einem Siedlungshügel der Bronze- und Eisenzeit Makedoniens, 1975–1979: Die Kleinfunde (Berlin).Google Scholar
Hodder, I. and Orton, C. 1976. Spatial Analysis in Archaeology (Cambridge).Google Scholar
Hope, C. 1978. Malkata and the Birket Habu: Jar Sealings and Amphorae (Westminster).Google Scholar
Hope, C. 1993. ‘The jar sealings’, in Baines, J. (ed.), Stone Vases, Pottery and Sealings from the Tomb of Tut'ankhamun (Oxford), 87138.Google Scholar
Iakovides, S.E. 1998. Γλάς ΙΙ: Η ανασκαφή 1981–1991 (Athens).Google Scholar
Kardamaki, E., Day, P.M., Tenconi, M., Maran, J. and Papadimitriou, A. 2015. ‘Transport stirrup jars in Late Mycenaean Tiryns’, in Demesticha, S. and Knapp, A.B. (eds), Maritime Transport Containers in the Bronze–Iron Age Aegean and Eastern Mediterranean (Uppsala), 145–68.Google Scholar
Karnava, A. 2018. Seals, Sealings, and Seal Impressions from Akrotiri in Thera (Heidleberg).Google Scholar
Kilian, K. 1979. ‘Ausgrabungen in Tiryns 1977. Bericht zu den Grabungen’, AA 94.4, 379411.Google Scholar
Krzyszkowska, O. 2005. Aegean Seals: An Introduction (London).Google Scholar
Lalonde, G.V. 1968. ‘A fifth century hieron southwest of the Athenian Agora’, Hesperia 37.2, 123–33.Google Scholar
Laughy, M. 2018. ‘Figurines in the road: a Protoattic votive deposit from the Athenian Agora reexamined’, Hesperia 87.4, 633–79.Google Scholar
Lis, B. 2009. ‘A revolution in the study of Late Mycenaean pottery? A review article of Ch. Podzuweit “Studien Zur Spätmykenischen Keramik”’, ArcheologiaWar 58[2007], 171–84.Google Scholar
Lis, B. 2016. ‘A foreign potter in the Pylian kingdom? A reanalysis of the ceramic assemblage of Room 60 in the Palace of Nestor at Pylos’, Hesperia 85.4, 491536.Google Scholar
Lis, B. 2017. ‘Foodways in Early Mycenaean Greece: innovative cooking sets and social hierarchy at Mitrou and other settlements on the Greek mainland’, AJA 121.2, 183217.Google Scholar
Lock, P. 1986. ‘The Frankish towers of central Greece’, BSA 81, 101–23.Google Scholar
MacDonald, M. 2017. ‘Textile tools and production at a Mycenaean secondary centre’ (unpublished MA thesis, University of Victoria).Google Scholar
Manning, S. 2010. ‘Chronology and terminology’, in Cline, E. (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of the Bronze Age Aegean (Oxford and New York), 1130.Google Scholar
Maran, J. and Papadimitriou, A. 2016. ‘Gegen den Strom der Geschichte. Die nördliche Unterstadt von Tiryns: ein gescheitertes Urbanisierungsprojekt der mykenischen Nachpalastzeit’, AA 2016.2, 19118.Google Scholar
Marazzi, M. and Tusa, S. 2005. ‘Egei in Occidente. Le più antiche vie maritime alla luce dei nuovi scavi sull'isola di Pantelleria’, in Laffineur, R. (ed.), Emporia. Aegeans in the Central and Eastern Mediterranean (Aegaeum Vol. 25; Liège), 599610.Google Scholar
Marinatos, S. 1969. Excavations at Thera II (Athens).Google Scholar
Marinatos, S. 1970. Excavations at Thera III (Athens).Google Scholar
Marinatos, S. 1971. Excavations at Thera IV (Athens).Google Scholar
Marinatos, S. 1972. Excavations at Thera V (Athens).Google Scholar
Marinatos, S. 1974. Excavations at Thera VI (Athens).Google Scholar
Marinatos, S. 1976. Excavations at Thera VII (Athens).Google Scholar
Mayerson, P. 2001. ‘Jar stoppers and the sealing of winejars’, ZPE 136, 217–20.Google Scholar
Mcdonald, W.A. and Wilke, N.C. 1992. Excavations at Nichoria in Southwest Greece, vol. 2: The Bronze Age Occupation (Minneapolis, MN).Google Scholar
McGovern, P.E. and Hall, G.R. 2016. ‘Charting a future course for organic residue analysis in archaeology’, Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 23, 592622.Google Scholar
Mercklin, E. von 1935. ‘Neuerwerbungen der Antikenabteilung im hamburgischen Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe’, AA 50.1/2, 70159.Google Scholar
Moore, A.D. and Taylour, W.D. 1999. The Temple Complex. Well Built Mycenae: The Helleno-British Excavations Within the Citadel at Mycenae, 1959–1969, fasc.10 (Oxford).Google Scholar
Mountjoy, P. 1999. Regional Mycenaean Decorated Pottery (Rahden).Google Scholar
Mulder, S.F. 2007. ‘Jar stoppers, seals, and lids, 2000 season’, in Sidebotham, S.E. and Wendrick, W.Z. (eds), Berenike 1999/2000. Report on the Excavations at Berenike, Including Excavations at Wadi Kalalat and Siket, and the Survey of the Mons Smaragdus Region (Los Angeles, CA), 270–84.Google Scholar
Murray, M.A., Boulton, N. and Heron, C. 2000. ‘Viticulture and wine production’, in Nicholson, P.T. and Shaw, I. (eds), Ancient Egyptian Materials and Technology (Cambridge), 577608.Google Scholar
Nikolakopoulou, I. 2002. ‘Storage, storage facilities, and island economy: the evidence from LC I Akrotiri, Thera. Volume 1’ (unpublished PhD thesis, University of Bristol).Google Scholar
Onofrio, M. d’ 2007. ‘A preliminary survey of evidence for counters and tokens in the Aegean and Hellenic world’, in Onofrio, M. d’ (ed.), Tallies, Tokens & Counters. From the Mediterranean to India: A Cross-Cultural Approach (Naples), 85103.Google Scholar
Palaima, T. 1987. ‘Mycenaean seals and sealings in their economic and administrative contexts’, in Ilievski, P.H. and Crepajac, L. (eds), Tractata Mycenaea. Proceedings of the Eighth International Colloquium on Mycenaean Studies, Ohrid (Skopje), 249–66.Google Scholar
Palaima, T. (ed.) 1990. Aegean Seals, Sealings, and Administration (Aegaeum Vol. 5; Liège).Google Scholar
Panagiotopoulos, D. 2014. Mykenische Siegelpraxis: Funktion, Kontext und administrative Verwendung mykenischer Tonplombe (Munich).Google Scholar
Papadopoulos, J.K. 2002. “Παίζω ἢ χέζω? A contextual approach to pessoi (gaming pieces, counters, or convenient wipes?)”, Hesperia 71.4, 423–47.Google Scholar
Pini, I. 1964. Die Siegelabdrucke von Phästos (Berlin).Google Scholar
Pini, I. 1997. Die Tomblomben aus dem Nestorpalast von Pylos (Mainz).Google Scholar
Popham, M., Evely, D. and Sackett, H. 2006. ‘The site and its excavation’, in Evely, D. (ed.), Lefkandi IV. The Bronze Age. The Late Helladic IIIC Settlement at Xeropolis (Oxford and Northampton), 1136.Google Scholar
Pratt, C. 2016. ‘The rise and fall of the transport stirrup jar in the Late Bronze Age Aegean’, AJA 120.1, 2766.Google Scholar
Pulak, C. 1988. ‘The Bronze Age shipwreck at Ulu Burun, Turkey: 1985 campaign’, AJA 92.1, 137.Google Scholar
Rahmstorf, L. 2008. Tiryns XVI. Kleinfunde aus Tiryns. Terrakotta, Stein, Bein und Glas/Fayence vornehmlich aus der Spatbronzezeit (Wiesbaden).Google Scholar
Renfrew, C. 1985. The Archaeology of Cult: The Sanctuary at Phylakopi (London).Google Scholar
Rutter, J. 2006. ‘Neopalatial and later Minoan pottery’, in Shaw, J.C. and Shaw, M.C. (eds), Kommos V. The Monumental Minoan Buildings at Kommos (Toronto), 377630.Google Scholar
Rutter, J. 2017. House X at Kommos. A Minoan Mansion near the Sea, part 2: The Pottery (Toronto).Google Scholar
Shelmerdine, C. 1985. The Perfume Industry of Mycenaean Pylos (Gothenburg).Google Scholar
Shelton, K. 2015. ‘Pottery and Petsas House: recent research on LH IIIA2 Mycenae’, in Schallin, A.-L. and Tournavitou, I. (eds), Mycenaeans Up to Date. The Archaeology of the North-Eastern Peloponnese – Current Concepts and New Directions (Stockholm), 2736.Google Scholar
Spyropoulos, T.G. and Chadwick, J. 1975. The Thebes Tablets II (Salamanca).Google Scholar
Stocker, S. and Davis, J. 2017. ‘The combat agate from the Grave of the Griffin Warrior at Pylos’, Hesperia 86.4, 583605.Google Scholar
Stockhammer, P. 2008. ‘Kontinuität und Wandel. Die Keramik der Nachpalastzeit aus der Unterstadt von Tiryns’ (unpublished PhD thesis, University of Heidleberg).Google Scholar
Stockhammer, P. 2009. ‘The change of pottery's social meaning at the end of the Bronze Age: new evidence from Tiryns’, in Bachhuber, C. and Roberts, R.G. (eds), Forces of Transformation. The End of the Bronze Age in the Mediterranean (Oxford), 164–9.Google Scholar
Stockhammer, P. 2011. ‘Household archaeology in LH IIIC Tiryns’, in Yasur-Landau, A., Ebeling, J.R. and Mazow, L. (eds), Household Archaeology in Ancient Israel and Beyond (Leiden and Boston, MA), 207236.Google Scholar
Sundelin, L.K.R. 1996. ‘Plaster jar stoppers’, in Sidebotham, S.E. and Wendrich, W.Z. (eds), Berenike 1995. Preliminary Report of the 1995 Excavations at Berenike (Egyptian Red Sea Coast) and the Survey of the Eastern Desert (Leiden), 297308.Google Scholar
Thomas, R. 2018. ‘Ptolemaic, Roman and Byzantine amphorae and stoppers’, 1–19 (available online <https://www.britishmuseum.org/pdf/Thomas_Ptolemaic_Byzantine_amphorae.pdf> accessed April 2019).+accessed+April+2019).>Google Scholar
Thomas, R. and Tomber, R. 2006. ‘Vessel stoppers’, in Maxfield, V. and Peacock, D. (eds), Survey and Excavation, Mons Claudianus, 1987–1993, vol. 3: Ceramic Vessels & Related Objects (Cairo), 239–58.Google Scholar
Tomlinson, J.E. and Day, P.M. 1995. ‘Comparison of AAS and NAA results’, in Tournavitou, I., The ‘Ivory Houses’ at Mycenae (London), 318–20.Google Scholar
Tournavitou, I. 1995. The ‘Ivory Houses’ at Mycenae (London).Google Scholar
Tzedakis, Y. and Martlew, H. 1999. Minoans and Mycenaeans. Flavours of their Time. National Archaeological Museum 12 July–27 November 1999 (Athens).Google Scholar
Unruh, J. 2007. ‘Ancient textile evidence in soil structures at the Agora excavations in Athens, Greece’, in Gillis, C. and Nosch, M.-L.B. (eds), Ancient Textiles. Production, Craft, and Society (Oxford), 167–72.Google Scholar
Van Damme, T. 2017a. ‘Euboean connections with eastern Boeotia: ceramics and synchronisms between Lefkandi and ancient Eleon’, in Tankosić, Z., Mavridis, F. and Kosma, M. (eds), An Island Between Two Worlds. The Archaeology of Euboea from Prehistoric to Byzantine Times (Athens), 171–82.Google Scholar
Van Damme, T. 2017b. ‘Life after the palaces: a household archaeology approach to mainland Greece during Late Helladic IIIC’ (unpublished PhD thesis, University of California, Los Angeles).Google Scholar
Van der Moortel, A. 2006. ‘Middle Minoan IA and protopalatial pottery’, in Shaw, J.C. and Shaw, M.C. (eds), Kommos V. The Monumental Minoan Buildings at Kommos (Toronto), 264377.Google Scholar
Verdan, S. 2013. Eretria XXII. Le sanctuaire d'Apollon Daphnéphoros à l’époque géométrique (Gollion).Google Scholar
Wace, A.J.B. 1922/3. ‘The Cyclopean Terrace Building’, BSA 25, 403–7.Google Scholar
Wace, A.J.B. 1949. Mycenae. An Archaeological History and Guide (Princeton, NJ).Google Scholar
Wace, A.J.B. 1953. ‘Mycenae, 1939–1952: Part I. Preliminary report on the excavations of 1952’, BSA 48, 118.Google Scholar
Wace, E.B. 1954. ‘Mycenae 1939–1953: Part VI. The Cyclopean Terrace Building and the deposit of pottery beneath it’, BSA 49, 267–91.Google Scholar
Weingarten, J. 1983. The Zakro Master and His Place in Prehistory (Gothenburg).Google Scholar
Weingarten, J. 1986. ‘The sealing structures of Minoan Crete: MM II Phaistos to the destruction of the palace of Knossos. Part I: the evidence until the LM IB destructions’, OJA 5.3, 279–83.Google Scholar
Weingarten, J. 1988. ‘The sealing structures of Minoan Crete: MM II Phaistos to the destruction of the palace of Knossos. Part II: the evidence from Knossos until the destruction of the palace’, OJA 7.1, 117.Google Scholar
Weingarten, J. 2012. ‘Minoan seals and sealings’, in Cline, E. (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of the Bronze Age Aegean (Oxford and New York), 317–28.Google Scholar
Wiencke, M. 1969. ‘Further seals and sealings from Lerna’, Hesperia 38.4, 500–21.Google Scholar
Young, R.S. 1939. Late Geometric Graves and a Seventh Century Well in the Agora (Hesperia Supp. Vol. 2; Princeton, NJ).Google Scholar
Younger, J. 1988. The Iconography of Late Minoan and Mycenaean Sealstones and Finger Rings (Bristol).Google Scholar
Younger, J. 2012. ‘Mycenaean seals and sealings’, in Cline, E. (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of the Bronze Age Aegean (Oxford and New York), 329–39.Google Scholar
Mycenae Excavation and Publication Archive, University of Cambridge, MCNE 1/1/044 (E.B. French's Mycenae 1952 Excavation Notebook).Google Scholar
Anderson, E. 2016. Seals, Craft, and Community in Bronze Age Crete (Baltimore, MD).Google Scholar
Aravantinos, V., Burke, B., Burns, B., Fappas, Y., Lupack, S. and MacKay, C. 2016. ‘The Eastern Boeotia Archaeological Project 2007–2011’, Mouseion 13, 156.Google Scholar
Aruz, J. 1994. ‘Seal imagery and sealing practices in the early Aegean world’, in Ferioli, P. (ed.), Archives before Writing. Proceedings of the International Colloquium, Oriolo Romano, October 23–25, 1991 (Turin), 211–35.Google Scholar
Bennett, E.L. Jr and Chadwick, J. 1958. ‘The Mycenae tablets II’, Transactions of the American Philological Society 48.1, 1122.Google Scholar
Blegen, C.W. 1928. Zygouries: A Prehistoric Settlement in the Valley of Cleonae (Cambridge, MA).Google Scholar
Blegen, C.W. and Rawson, M. 1966. The Palace of Nestor at Pylos in Western Messenia, vol. 1: The Buildings and Their Contents (Princeton, NJ).Google Scholar
Boochs, W. 1982. Siegel und Siegeln im Alten Agypten (Sankt Augustin).Google Scholar
Bos, J.E.M.F. 2007. ‘Jar stoppers, seals, and lids, 1999 season’, in Sidebotham, S.E. and Wendrick, W.Z. (eds), Berenike 1999/2000. Report on the Excavations at Berenike, Including Excavations at Wadi Kalalat and Siket, and the Survey of the Mons Smaragdus Region (Los Angeles, CA), 258–69.Google Scholar
Bos, J.E.M.F. and Helms, C. 2000. ‘Jar stoppers and seals’, in Sidebotham, S.E. and Wendrich, W.Z. (eds), Berenike 1998. Report of the 1998 Excavations at Berenike and the Survey of the Egyptian Eastern Desert, including Excavations in Wadi Kalalat (Leiden), 275304.Google Scholar
Brann, E. 1961. ‘Protoattic well groups from the Athenian Agora’, Hesperia 30.4, 305–79.Google Scholar
Burke, B. and Burns, B. 2016. ‘Crafting before and after the collapse: Mycenaean Eleon in Boeotia’, in Driessen, J. (ed,), RA-PI-NE-U. Studies on the Mycenaean World Offered to Robert Laffineur for his 70th Birthday (Aegis Vol. 10; Louvain), 8594.Google Scholar
Burns, B., Burke, B. and Charami, A. 2017. ‘Mycenaean Eleon and eastern Boeotia during the Bronze Age’, in Rupp, D. and Tomlinson, J.E. (eds), From Maple to Olive (Athens), 177–91.Google Scholar
Burr, D. 1933. ‘A geometric house and a Proto-Attic votive deposit’, Hesperia 2.4, 542640.Google Scholar
Catling, H.W. 2009. Menelaion I. The Bronze Age (London).Google Scholar
Cherry, J.F. and Davis, J.L. 2007. ‘The other finds’, in Renfrew, C., Brodie, N., Morris, C. and Scarre, C. (eds), Excavations at Phylakopi in Melos 1974–1977 (Witney), 401–36.Google Scholar
Dakoronia, F. and Kounouklas, P. 2012. “Η ανακύκλωση στην αρχαιότητα: το παράδειγμα του Κύνου”, in Mazarakis Ainian, A. (ed.), Αρχαιολογικό Έργο Θεσσαλίας και Στερεάς Ελλάδας, vol. 3 (Volos), 1171–8.Google Scholar
Dakouri-Hild, A. in preparation. The House of Kadmos at Thebes, Greece: The Excavations of Antonios D. Keramopoullos (1906–1929), vol. 1: Architecture, Stratigraphy and Finds (Rome and Pisa).Google Scholar
Davis, J. and Stocker, S. 2016. ‘The lord of the gold rings: the griffin warrior of Pylos’, Hesperia 85.4, 627–55.Google Scholar
Dawkins, R.M. and Woodward, A.M. 1909/10. ‘Laconia: I. Excavations at Sparta, 1910’, BSA 16, 161.Google Scholar
Denecker, E. and Vandorpe, K. 2007. ‘Sealed amphora stoppers and tradesmen in Greco-Roman Egypt: archaeological, papyrological, and inscriptional evidence’, BABesch 82, 115–28.Google Scholar
Dickers, A. 2001. Die spätmykenischen Siegel aus Weichem Stein: Untersuchungen zur spätbronzezeitlichen Glyptik auf dem griechischen Festland und in der Ägäis (Rahden).Google Scholar
Dieleman, J. 1998. ‘Amphora stoppers’, in Sidebotham, S.E. and Wendrich, W.Z. (eds), Berenike 1996. Report of the 1996 Excavations at Berenike (Egyptian Red Sea Coast) and the Survey of the Eastern Desert (Leiden), 265–78.Google Scholar
Erickson, B. 2018. Lerna VIII: The Historical Greek Village (Princeton, NJ).Google Scholar
Evely, D. 2006. ‘The small finds’, in Evely, D. (ed.), Lefkandi IV. The Bronze Age. The Late Helladic IIIC Settlement at Xeropolis (Oxford and Northampton), 265302.Google Scholar
Fiandra, E. 1968. ‘A che cosa serviviano le cretule di Festos’, in Πεπραγμένα του Β' Διεθνούς Κρητολογικού Συνεδρίου, vol. A (Athens), 383–97.Google Scholar
French, E.B. 1961. ‘Mycenaean occupation near the Cyclopean Terrace Building’, BSA 56, 81–7.Google Scholar
French, E.B. and Taylour, W.D. 2007. Well Built Mycenae. The Helleno-British Excavations Within the Citadel at Mycenae, 1959–1969. Fascicule 13. The Service Areas of the Cult Centre (Oxford).Google Scholar
Furumark, A. 1941. Mycenaean Pottery, vol. 1: Analysis and Classification (Stockholm).Google Scholar
Gibbs, K.T. 2008. ‘Pierced clay disks and Late Neolithic textile production’, in Córdoba, J.M., Molist, M., Pérez, M.C., Rubio, I. and Martínez, S. (eds), Proceedings of the 5th International Congress on the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East (Madrid), 8993.Google Scholar
Haldane, C. 1993. ‘Direct evidence for organic cargoes in the Late Bronze Age’, WorldArch 24.3, 348–60.Google Scholar
Hallager, E. 2001. ‘Sealing without seals’, 1–16 (available online <http://www.hum.au.dk/ckulturf/pages/publications/eh/sealing_without_seals.pdf> accessed March 2018).+accessed+March+2018).>Google Scholar
Hallager, E. 2006. ‘The uniformity in seal use and sealing practice during the LH/LM III period’, in Agata, A.L. d’ and Moody, J. (eds), Ariadne's Threads. Connections Between Crete and the Greek Mainland in Late Minoan III (LM IIIA2 to LM IIIC) (Athens), 243–66.Google Scholar
Hallager, E. and Hallager, B. 2011. The Greek-Swedish excavations at the Agia Aikaterini Square, Kastelli, Khania 1970–1987 and 2001, vol. 4: The Late Minoan IIIB:1 and IIIA:2 Settlements (Stockholm).Google Scholar
Haskell, H.W., Jones, R.E., Day, P.M. and Killen, J.T. 2011. Transport Stirrup Jars of the Bronze Age Aegean and East Mediterranean (Philadelphia, PA).Google Scholar
Heath, M. 1958. ‘Early Helladic clay sealings from the House of the Tiles at Lerna’, Hesperia 27.2, 81121.Google Scholar
Hochstetter, A. 1987. Kastanas: Ausgrabungen in einem Siedlungshügel der Bronze- und Eisenzeit Makedoniens, 1975–1979: Die Kleinfunde (Berlin).Google Scholar
Hodder, I. and Orton, C. 1976. Spatial Analysis in Archaeology (Cambridge).Google Scholar
Hope, C. 1978. Malkata and the Birket Habu: Jar Sealings and Amphorae (Westminster).Google Scholar
Hope, C. 1993. ‘The jar sealings’, in Baines, J. (ed.), Stone Vases, Pottery and Sealings from the Tomb of Tut'ankhamun (Oxford), 87138.Google Scholar
Iakovides, S.E. 1998. Γλάς ΙΙ: Η ανασκαφή 1981–1991 (Athens).Google Scholar
Kardamaki, E., Day, P.M., Tenconi, M., Maran, J. and Papadimitriou, A. 2015. ‘Transport stirrup jars in Late Mycenaean Tiryns’, in Demesticha, S. and Knapp, A.B. (eds), Maritime Transport Containers in the Bronze–Iron Age Aegean and Eastern Mediterranean (Uppsala), 145–68.Google Scholar
Karnava, A. 2018. Seals, Sealings, and Seal Impressions from Akrotiri in Thera (Heidleberg).Google Scholar
Kilian, K. 1979. ‘Ausgrabungen in Tiryns 1977. Bericht zu den Grabungen’, AA 94.4, 379411.Google Scholar
Krzyszkowska, O. 2005. Aegean Seals: An Introduction (London).Google Scholar
Lalonde, G.V. 1968. ‘A fifth century hieron southwest of the Athenian Agora’, Hesperia 37.2, 123–33.Google Scholar
Laughy, M. 2018. ‘Figurines in the road: a Protoattic votive deposit from the Athenian Agora reexamined’, Hesperia 87.4, 633–79.Google Scholar
Lis, B. 2009. ‘A revolution in the study of Late Mycenaean pottery? A review article of Ch. Podzuweit “Studien Zur Spätmykenischen Keramik”’, ArcheologiaWar 58[2007], 171–84.Google Scholar
Lis, B. 2016. ‘A foreign potter in the Pylian kingdom? A reanalysis of the ceramic assemblage of Room 60 in the Palace of Nestor at Pylos’, Hesperia 85.4, 491536.Google Scholar
Lis, B. 2017. ‘Foodways in Early Mycenaean Greece: innovative cooking sets and social hierarchy at Mitrou and other settlements on the Greek mainland’, AJA 121.2, 183217.Google Scholar
Lock, P. 1986. ‘The Frankish towers of central Greece’, BSA 81, 101–23.Google Scholar
MacDonald, M. 2017. ‘Textile tools and production at a Mycenaean secondary centre’ (unpublished MA thesis, University of Victoria).Google Scholar
Manning, S. 2010. ‘Chronology and terminology’, in Cline, E. (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of the Bronze Age Aegean (Oxford and New York), 1130.Google Scholar
Maran, J. and Papadimitriou, A. 2016. ‘Gegen den Strom der Geschichte. Die nördliche Unterstadt von Tiryns: ein gescheitertes Urbanisierungsprojekt der mykenischen Nachpalastzeit’, AA 2016.2, 19118.Google Scholar
Marazzi, M. and Tusa, S. 2005. ‘Egei in Occidente. Le più antiche vie maritime alla luce dei nuovi scavi sull'isola di Pantelleria’, in Laffineur, R. (ed.), Emporia. Aegeans in the Central and Eastern Mediterranean (Aegaeum Vol. 25; Liège), 599610.Google Scholar
Marinatos, S. 1969. Excavations at Thera II (Athens).Google Scholar
Marinatos, S. 1970. Excavations at Thera III (Athens).Google Scholar
Marinatos, S. 1971. Excavations at Thera IV (Athens).Google Scholar
Marinatos, S. 1972. Excavations at Thera V (Athens).Google Scholar
Marinatos, S. 1974. Excavations at Thera VI (Athens).Google Scholar
Marinatos, S. 1976. Excavations at Thera VII (Athens).Google Scholar
Mayerson, P. 2001. ‘Jar stoppers and the sealing of winejars’, ZPE 136, 217–20.Google Scholar
Mcdonald, W.A. and Wilke, N.C. 1992. Excavations at Nichoria in Southwest Greece, vol. 2: The Bronze Age Occupation (Minneapolis, MN).Google Scholar
McGovern, P.E. and Hall, G.R. 2016. ‘Charting a future course for organic residue analysis in archaeology’, Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 23, 592622.Google Scholar
Mercklin, E. von 1935. ‘Neuerwerbungen der Antikenabteilung im hamburgischen Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe’, AA 50.1/2, 70159.Google Scholar
Moore, A.D. and Taylour, W.D. 1999. The Temple Complex. Well Built Mycenae: The Helleno-British Excavations Within the Citadel at Mycenae, 1959–1969, fasc.10 (Oxford).Google Scholar
Mountjoy, P. 1999. Regional Mycenaean Decorated Pottery (Rahden).Google Scholar
Mulder, S.F. 2007. ‘Jar stoppers, seals, and lids, 2000 season’, in Sidebotham, S.E. and Wendrick, W.Z. (eds), Berenike 1999/2000. Report on the Excavations at Berenike, Including Excavations at Wadi Kalalat and Siket, and the Survey of the Mons Smaragdus Region (Los Angeles, CA), 270–84.Google Scholar
Murray, M.A., Boulton, N. and Heron, C. 2000. ‘Viticulture and wine production’, in Nicholson, P.T. and Shaw, I. (eds), Ancient Egyptian Materials and Technology (Cambridge), 577608.Google Scholar
Nikolakopoulou, I. 2002. ‘Storage, storage facilities, and island economy: the evidence from LC I Akrotiri, Thera. Volume 1’ (unpublished PhD thesis, University of Bristol).Google Scholar
Onofrio, M. d’ 2007. ‘A preliminary survey of evidence for counters and tokens in the Aegean and Hellenic world’, in Onofrio, M. d’ (ed.), Tallies, Tokens & Counters. From the Mediterranean to India: A Cross-Cultural Approach (Naples), 85103.Google Scholar
Palaima, T. 1987. ‘Mycenaean seals and sealings in their economic and administrative contexts’, in Ilievski, P.H. and Crepajac, L. (eds), Tractata Mycenaea. Proceedings of the Eighth International Colloquium on Mycenaean Studies, Ohrid (Skopje), 249–66.Google Scholar
Palaima, T. (ed.) 1990. Aegean Seals, Sealings, and Administration (Aegaeum Vol. 5; Liège).Google Scholar
Panagiotopoulos, D. 2014. Mykenische Siegelpraxis: Funktion, Kontext und administrative Verwendung mykenischer Tonplombe (Munich).Google Scholar
Papadopoulos, J.K. 2002. “Παίζω ἢ χέζω? A contextual approach to pessoi (gaming pieces, counters, or convenient wipes?)”, Hesperia 71.4, 423–47.Google Scholar
Pini, I. 1964. Die Siegelabdrucke von Phästos (Berlin).Google Scholar
Pini, I. 1997. Die Tomblomben aus dem Nestorpalast von Pylos (Mainz).Google Scholar
Popham, M., Evely, D. and Sackett, H. 2006. ‘The site and its excavation’, in Evely, D. (ed.), Lefkandi IV. The Bronze Age. The Late Helladic IIIC Settlement at Xeropolis (Oxford and Northampton), 1136.Google Scholar
Pratt, C. 2016. ‘The rise and fall of the transport stirrup jar in the Late Bronze Age Aegean’, AJA 120.1, 2766.Google Scholar
Pulak, C. 1988. ‘The Bronze Age shipwreck at Ulu Burun, Turkey: 1985 campaign’, AJA 92.1, 137.Google Scholar
Rahmstorf, L. 2008. Tiryns XVI. Kleinfunde aus Tiryns. Terrakotta, Stein, Bein und Glas/Fayence vornehmlich aus der Spatbronzezeit (Wiesbaden).Google Scholar
Renfrew, C. 1985. The Archaeology of Cult: The Sanctuary at Phylakopi (London).Google Scholar
Rutter, J. 2006. ‘Neopalatial and later Minoan pottery’, in Shaw, J.C. and Shaw, M.C. (eds), Kommos V. The Monumental Minoan Buildings at Kommos (Toronto), 377630.Google Scholar
Rutter, J. 2017. House X at Kommos. A Minoan Mansion near the Sea, part 2: The Pottery (Toronto).Google Scholar
Shelmerdine, C. 1985. The Perfume Industry of Mycenaean Pylos (Gothenburg).Google Scholar
Shelton, K. 2015. ‘Pottery and Petsas House: recent research on LH IIIA2 Mycenae’, in Schallin, A.-L. and Tournavitou, I. (eds), Mycenaeans Up to Date. The Archaeology of the North-Eastern Peloponnese – Current Concepts and New Directions (Stockholm), 2736.Google Scholar
Spyropoulos, T.G. and Chadwick, J. 1975. The Thebes Tablets II (Salamanca).Google Scholar
Stocker, S. and Davis, J. 2017. ‘The combat agate from the Grave of the Griffin Warrior at Pylos’, Hesperia 86.4, 583605.Google Scholar
Stockhammer, P. 2008. ‘Kontinuität und Wandel. Die Keramik der Nachpalastzeit aus der Unterstadt von Tiryns’ (unpublished PhD thesis, University of Heidleberg).Google Scholar
Stockhammer, P. 2009. ‘The change of pottery's social meaning at the end of the Bronze Age: new evidence from Tiryns’, in Bachhuber, C. and Roberts, R.G. (eds), Forces of Transformation. The End of the Bronze Age in the Mediterranean (Oxford), 164–9.Google Scholar
Stockhammer, P. 2011. ‘Household archaeology in LH IIIC Tiryns’, in Yasur-Landau, A., Ebeling, J.R. and Mazow, L. (eds), Household Archaeology in Ancient Israel and Beyond (Leiden and Boston, MA), 207236.Google Scholar
Sundelin, L.K.R. 1996. ‘Plaster jar stoppers’, in Sidebotham, S.E. and Wendrich, W.Z. (eds), Berenike 1995. Preliminary Report of the 1995 Excavations at Berenike (Egyptian Red Sea Coast) and the Survey of the Eastern Desert (Leiden), 297308.Google Scholar
Thomas, R. 2018. ‘Ptolemaic, Roman and Byzantine amphorae and stoppers’, 1–19 (available online <https://www.britishmuseum.org/pdf/Thomas_Ptolemaic_Byzantine_amphorae.pdf> accessed April 2019).+accessed+April+2019).>Google Scholar
Thomas, R. and Tomber, R. 2006. ‘Vessel stoppers’, in Maxfield, V. and Peacock, D. (eds), Survey and Excavation, Mons Claudianus, 1987–1993, vol. 3: Ceramic Vessels & Related Objects (Cairo), 239–58.Google Scholar
Tomlinson, J.E. and Day, P.M. 1995. ‘Comparison of AAS and NAA results’, in Tournavitou, I., The ‘Ivory Houses’ at Mycenae (London), 318–20.Google Scholar
Tournavitou, I. 1995. The ‘Ivory Houses’ at Mycenae (London).Google Scholar
Tzedakis, Y. and Martlew, H. 1999. Minoans and Mycenaeans. Flavours of their Time. National Archaeological Museum 12 July–27 November 1999 (Athens).Google Scholar
Unruh, J. 2007. ‘Ancient textile evidence in soil structures at the Agora excavations in Athens, Greece’, in Gillis, C. and Nosch, M.-L.B. (eds), Ancient Textiles. Production, Craft, and Society (Oxford), 167–72.Google Scholar
Van Damme, T. 2017a. ‘Euboean connections with eastern Boeotia: ceramics and synchronisms between Lefkandi and ancient Eleon’, in Tankosić, Z., Mavridis, F. and Kosma, M. (eds), An Island Between Two Worlds. The Archaeology of Euboea from Prehistoric to Byzantine Times (Athens), 171–82.Google Scholar
Van Damme, T. 2017b. ‘Life after the palaces: a household archaeology approach to mainland Greece during Late Helladic IIIC’ (unpublished PhD thesis, University of California, Los Angeles).Google Scholar
Van der Moortel, A. 2006. ‘Middle Minoan IA and protopalatial pottery’, in Shaw, J.C. and Shaw, M.C. (eds), Kommos V. The Monumental Minoan Buildings at Kommos (Toronto), 264377.Google Scholar
Verdan, S. 2013. Eretria XXII. Le sanctuaire d'Apollon Daphnéphoros à l’époque géométrique (Gollion).Google Scholar
Wace, A.J.B. 1922/3. ‘The Cyclopean Terrace Building’, BSA 25, 403–7.Google Scholar
Wace, A.J.B. 1949. Mycenae. An Archaeological History and Guide (Princeton, NJ).Google Scholar
Wace, A.J.B. 1953. ‘Mycenae, 1939–1952: Part I. Preliminary report on the excavations of 1952’, BSA 48, 118.Google Scholar
Wace, E.B. 1954. ‘Mycenae 1939–1953: Part VI. The Cyclopean Terrace Building and the deposit of pottery beneath it’, BSA 49, 267–91.Google Scholar
Weingarten, J. 1983. The Zakro Master and His Place in Prehistory (Gothenburg).Google Scholar
Weingarten, J. 1986. ‘The sealing structures of Minoan Crete: MM II Phaistos to the destruction of the palace of Knossos. Part I: the evidence until the LM IB destructions’, OJA 5.3, 279–83.Google Scholar
Weingarten, J. 1988. ‘The sealing structures of Minoan Crete: MM II Phaistos to the destruction of the palace of Knossos. Part II: the evidence from Knossos until the destruction of the palace’, OJA 7.1, 117.Google Scholar
Weingarten, J. 2012. ‘Minoan seals and sealings’, in Cline, E. (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of the Bronze Age Aegean (Oxford and New York), 317–28.Google Scholar
Wiencke, M. 1969. ‘Further seals and sealings from Lerna’, Hesperia 38.4, 500–21.Google Scholar
Young, R.S. 1939. Late Geometric Graves and a Seventh Century Well in the Agora (Hesperia Supp. Vol. 2; Princeton, NJ).Google Scholar
Younger, J. 1988. The Iconography of Late Minoan and Mycenaean Sealstones and Finger Rings (Bristol).Google Scholar
Younger, J. 2012. ‘Mycenaean seals and sealings’, in Cline, E. (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of the Bronze Age Aegean (Oxford and New York), 329–39.Google Scholar