{"title":"克诺索斯:地层学博物馆发掘,1978-82。第四部分","authors":"P. Warren","doi":"10.2307/581127","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Knossos Part IV gives an account of the Late Hellenistic and Roman periods on the site, following upon the SubMinoan/Early Protogeometric-Hellenistic Part HI (AR 1984-85, 124-29). As before, the account is provisional. Catalogued vases of all periods stand (April 1988) at 1,841 and over half of a total unlikely to be less than 15,000 kg. of sherds has been studied. Study of the remainder is progressing and may require modification of details in the present report. For instruction in dating a number of Roman pieces I am very grateful to Dr J.W. Hayes and Mr L.H. Sackett. Mr Sackett has been specially helpful in providing parallel pieces from the much richer 1st and 2nd century A.D. levels over the Unexplored Mansion to the east. Drs D.J. Thompson and MJ. Price kindly dated the coins and Dr Jennifer Price identified and dated catalogued pieces of glass. Plan tracings in Figs. 1, 24 and 50 are the work of Mr David Smyth. It is intended that a final preliminary report, Part V, will present the main evidence for some substantial Minoan deposits, MMIALMIB, discovered and studied since Part I (AR 1980-81, 73-92). After an absence of buildings, though not of pits and wells, from around Late Protogeometric to about 250— 225 B.C., we find an expansion of the city in later Hellenistic times and building occupation, probably continuous, to at least the 2nd century A.D., followed by 4th and perhaps 5th century constructions. The surviving movable artefacts were not rich and good floor deposits were almost non-existent. The reason for this was that successive building levels often removed predecessors down to the foundations, while the ground slope down from west to east and the consequent and constant need for north-south retaining walls added to the stratigraphical complexity. Full interpretation of buildings is, therefore, not easy and sometimes not possible. Nevertheless this segment of Knossian late Hellenistic and Roman urban life does yield a number of interesting products.","PeriodicalId":53875,"journal":{"name":"Archaeological Reports-London","volume":"34 1","pages":"86 - 104"},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"1988-11-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.2307/581127","citationCount":"27","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Knossos: Stratigraphical Museum Excavations, 1978–82. Part IV\",\"authors\":\"P. Warren\",\"doi\":\"10.2307/581127\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Knossos Part IV gives an account of the Late Hellenistic and Roman periods on the site, following upon the SubMinoan/Early Protogeometric-Hellenistic Part HI (AR 1984-85, 124-29). As before, the account is provisional. Catalogued vases of all periods stand (April 1988) at 1,841 and over half of a total unlikely to be less than 15,000 kg. of sherds has been studied. Study of the remainder is progressing and may require modification of details in the present report. For instruction in dating a number of Roman pieces I am very grateful to Dr J.W. Hayes and Mr L.H. Sackett. Mr Sackett has been specially helpful in providing parallel pieces from the much richer 1st and 2nd century A.D. levels over the Unexplored Mansion to the east. Drs D.J. Thompson and MJ. Price kindly dated the coins and Dr Jennifer Price identified and dated catalogued pieces of glass. Plan tracings in Figs. 1, 24 and 50 are the work of Mr David Smyth. It is intended that a final preliminary report, Part V, will present the main evidence for some substantial Minoan deposits, MMIALMIB, discovered and studied since Part I (AR 1980-81, 73-92). After an absence of buildings, though not of pits and wells, from around Late Protogeometric to about 250— 225 B.C., we find an expansion of the city in later Hellenistic times and building occupation, probably continuous, to at least the 2nd century A.D., followed by 4th and perhaps 5th century constructions. The surviving movable artefacts were not rich and good floor deposits were almost non-existent. The reason for this was that successive building levels often removed predecessors down to the foundations, while the ground slope down from west to east and the consequent and constant need for north-south retaining walls added to the stratigraphical complexity. Full interpretation of buildings is, therefore, not easy and sometimes not possible. 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引用次数: 27
摘要
克诺索斯第四部分在SubMinoan/早期原始地理-希腊化部分HI (AR 1984- 85,124 -29)之后,对该遗址的晚期希腊化和罗马化时期进行了描述。和以前一样,这个帐户是临时的。所有时期已编目的花瓶(1988年4月)有1,841个,其中一半以上的重量不可能低于15,000公斤。对碎片进行了研究。对其余部分的研究正在进行中,可能需要修改本报告中的细节。我非常感谢j·w·海斯博士和l·h·萨克特先生为我指明了一些罗马文物的年代。萨基特先生在提供公元1世纪和2世纪更为丰富的未开发大厦东面的平行作品方面提供了特别的帮助。D.J.汤普森博士和MJ博士。普莱斯好心地为这些硬币注明了年代,詹妮弗·普莱斯博士对玻璃碎片进行了鉴定和注明了年代。图1、图24和图50中的平面图是David Smyth先生的作品。打算在最后的初步报告(第五部分)中提出自第一部分以来发现和研究的一些大量米诺斯矿藏(MMIALMIB)的主要证据(1980-81、73-92年)。从原始几何后期到公元前250 - 225年,没有建筑,但没有坑洞和井,我们发现在希腊化时代晚期,城市的扩张和建筑占领,可能持续到至少公元2世纪,随后是4世纪和5世纪的建筑。现存的可移动文物并不丰富,良好的地面沉积物几乎不存在。这样做的原因是,连续的建筑水平通常会将之前的建筑移到地基上,而地面从西向东倾斜,因此不断需要南北方向的挡土墙,这增加了地层的复杂性。因此,对建筑进行全面解读并不容易,有时甚至是不可能的。然而,这段克诺森晚期希腊和罗马城市生活确实产生了许多有趣的产品。
Knossos: Stratigraphical Museum Excavations, 1978–82. Part IV
Knossos Part IV gives an account of the Late Hellenistic and Roman periods on the site, following upon the SubMinoan/Early Protogeometric-Hellenistic Part HI (AR 1984-85, 124-29). As before, the account is provisional. Catalogued vases of all periods stand (April 1988) at 1,841 and over half of a total unlikely to be less than 15,000 kg. of sherds has been studied. Study of the remainder is progressing and may require modification of details in the present report. For instruction in dating a number of Roman pieces I am very grateful to Dr J.W. Hayes and Mr L.H. Sackett. Mr Sackett has been specially helpful in providing parallel pieces from the much richer 1st and 2nd century A.D. levels over the Unexplored Mansion to the east. Drs D.J. Thompson and MJ. Price kindly dated the coins and Dr Jennifer Price identified and dated catalogued pieces of glass. Plan tracings in Figs. 1, 24 and 50 are the work of Mr David Smyth. It is intended that a final preliminary report, Part V, will present the main evidence for some substantial Minoan deposits, MMIALMIB, discovered and studied since Part I (AR 1980-81, 73-92). After an absence of buildings, though not of pits and wells, from around Late Protogeometric to about 250— 225 B.C., we find an expansion of the city in later Hellenistic times and building occupation, probably continuous, to at least the 2nd century A.D., followed by 4th and perhaps 5th century constructions. The surviving movable artefacts were not rich and good floor deposits were almost non-existent. The reason for this was that successive building levels often removed predecessors down to the foundations, while the ground slope down from west to east and the consequent and constant need for north-south retaining walls added to the stratigraphical complexity. Full interpretation of buildings is, therefore, not easy and sometimes not possible. Nevertheless this segment of Knossian late Hellenistic and Roman urban life does yield a number of interesting products.