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Minoan bull games |
As early as
8000 BC Cretans lived in caves and created pottery. A wave of
immigrants from Asia Minor, in 3000 BC, brought copper and seafaring skills. They sailed the Mediterranean to Egypt, and found cultures and technologies that had spread from Mesopotamia to the shores of Syria. And they created the
first great civilization of Europe.
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Male - 6500-5800 BC; Female 5300-4500 BC |
By 1800 BC the eastern Mediterranean was a veritable
international cauldron of 30 states, that fought, traded, exchanged
diplomats. Crete's distance from the turmoil of the Orient meant she could develop in
relative peace. Crete also absorbed the artist of the nearby Cyclades. Her own aesthetic, in turn, was in high demand throughout the Mediterranean.
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The Throne Room of Knossos, 1550 BC |
Palace ruins, 2500-1100 BC, have been found along the northern,
southern and eastern coasts of Crete. Knossos was the great power among many centers still being discovered beneath layers of world history. In 1700 BC, and again around 1400 BC, destruction came from
massive eruptions of the volcano Thera, from the island of Santorini, which sent tsunamis crashing onto
Crete. Subsequent invaders--Myceneans,
Dorians, Romans, Venetians and Turks--have left layers above the palace ruins.
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Found at Zakros, 1450BC |
Still, the Museum of Heraklion (which
was unfortunately mostly closed when we were there) is filled with
archeological finds, many still encrusted with dirt, still needing
conservators and restorers. What has been
cleaned and restored includes pottery, painted in a loose and wild
style with motifs from the natural world, cult objects such as the
powerful snake goddesses, beautiful jewelry to match the tombs of
Egypt, exquisite receptacles made from semi-precious stones, and
skillfully made creatures of reality and imagination. The museums of
Canea and Rethymnon have some of these objects, along with Crete's
Hellenistic and Roman art.
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Snake goddesses of Knossos, 1600 BC |
We first visited the Palace at Knossos. a sweltering
site which first appears as a
rather senseless ruin. One works hard to imagine the large, complex
palace. Its excavator Harold Evans has had fragments of it painted in what he has
understood to be the original style. The peripheral area provided visitors to the palace with lustral
baths, purification sites, and shrines for
consecration and sacrifice. The inner sanctum contains the famous
throne room, ostensibly for a goddess perhaps in the form of the
queen, as well as the royal living quarters.
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Prince of Knossos, 1550 BC |
From there we found the museum at
Heraklion under repair, the visit reduced to a few rooms of the most
iconic Minoan works. These include the snake goddesses,
bare-breasted and wide-eyed, the much restored King with his wavy
locks and insouciant pleasure-loving gait. Most interesting were the
many signet rings, for stamping individual seals of complex scenes.
One sees the evolution from highly skilled early work--figures from before 5,000 BC, the high achievements of the 1700-1450 BC, and
the eventual plunge into the geometric and archaic
periods. A new resurgence rises under Hellenism, marbles of
Isis/Aphrodite and Zeus/Pluto, with Cerberus from an Isis temple. And the sturdy half wild Philosopher of the Romans.
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Two bees of gold, each dropping honey on a comb, from Malia, 1800 BC |
Another day we visited the Palace
at Malia, amidst an endless string of beach resorts, but an old man showed us the way. This is where the
exquisite bee pendant was found. The Malian palace of red clay was rather austere, but a model of the site reveals it was sprawling, complex and
asymetrical (perhaps the reason for the myth of the labyrinth). Vastness and grandeur are now the dimmest memories
of red stone a few feet high. Present day Malia sits under a blue
dome of sky surrounded with exuberant green and bright oleanders, hibiscus and
cypresses, in a stiff sea breeze. It invites a few moments of
reflection and then simple Greek food, nestled into the green cafe.
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Central pillar of graves, object of worship |
Driving south from Rethymnon, we
visited Armenoi, a Minoan Necropolis in a quiet grove of small oaks.
Rock cut graves, sometimes chambers to walk around in, with a single
heavy pillar, are often guarded by spider webs. We entered each
grave with its mysterious niches, whose occupants of 1400 BC were on
average 28-35 years old, while women were often younger than 25,
buried with their fine pottery and jewelry.
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St. George, Agia Triada |
On the southern coast we visited Agia
Triada, a smaller and lovelier site above green hills, considered a
summer residence for the Minoan king. Most moving was the tiny
Byzantine church to St George, 14th c. frescoes still on the walls.
Then we drove to Phaestos, an
extraordinary ruin, with reconstructions drawn on informative
placards. Here one begins to see the grandeur, and one retreats to the
pines to thank the local deities.
We began to get the hang of decoding the ruins:
the shrine rooms and sacrificial slab, the
porticos and central courtyards, the storerooms of giant jars called
pithoi, and the more sheltered and luxurious megarons of the king and
queen.
Gournia, unlike the palaces, is a
Minoan village built up to a shrine on the hilltop. In the stupefying
heat I sat under a tree
and thought of the Minoans. What did they fear? The bulging eyed
snake goddess' spilling breasts? Omens in their buzzing world of
nature? Their rulers who somehow compelled someone to haul these
rocks up here?
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Theatral stairs at Phaestos |
We drove along the northeastern coast
where blue humps of land plunge into the sea, and ate wonderful
salads of seeds and dried tomatoes (instead of the fish the chef
wanted to cook before my eyes till I escaped his kitchen). The island
in view, Pseiris, had had a Minoan settlement. It had produced goods
and traded.
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Knossos |
Paleokastro, on the eastern coast was
where the giant tsunami had swept into Crete from Santorini's
earthquake about 1600 BC--dates are bit disputed. Though blocked by
a stubby rock mountain rising from the sea, the tsunami had smashed in sea-facing walls and destroyed life as it had been. We learned that the men had been 1.6
meters tall and the women 1.5 meters. Paleokastro has been largely
covered over again, to protect it, but the complete rooms were
apparent, in a rough stone that had presumably been encased in mortar
and covered, in the royal rooms, in gypsum.
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Kato Zakros, houses of nobles |
Finally we visited Kato Zakros, 4th
largest Minoan palace and center of artisans who forged the legendary
Minoan objets d'art from precious raw materials from Africa and Asia.
Excavation was ongoing. We chatted with a young
conservator who showed us how dirty and unpromising a fresco could be
before cleaning. She talked of how many
unrestored findings languish in Herakleion's store rooms.
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Palace at Knossos |
Mentioned frequently by the Egyptians, their artistic creations found throughout the Mediterranean, the Minoans remain a mystery. Though they had developed writing, it seems to have focused on commerce and accounting. And so many of the great, unwashed findings remain in the storerooms of Herakleion.
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