Three amphora handles (Fig. 1), of Mycenaean type, bear the only possible traces of Cypriot writing found in Bronze Age Italy, and they are the only known possible direct traces of Cypriot participation in trade with the western Mediterranean in the Late Bronze Age. In this paper, I proceed first with a brief description of the marked handles and their provenience; second, I illustrate their Cypriot associations; and finally I discuss possible implications of this identification
Mycenaean decorated pottery has been found in significant quantities on Cyprus and was clearly the f...
Marks scratched or painted on the Late Bronze Age (LBA) pottery of the eastern Mediterranean are oft...
The Early-Middle Bronze Age in Cyprus (c. 2300-1650 BCE) is still poorly understood, in spite of Cy...
Many different types of evidence provide clues to the nature of commercial exchange among the region...
Based on her study of distribution patterns, Vronwy Hankey suggested that Cyprus or Cypriots played ...
Thousands of Late Bronze Age vases were traded among the nations of the eastern Mediterranean littor...
Based on her study of distribution patterns, Vronwy Hankey suggested that Cyprus or Cypriots played ...
none2siMarks incised or painted on Eastern Mediterranean pottery from the Late Bronze Age – generica...
Most signs incised into Late Helladic/Late Minoan III pottery are related in form and method of appl...
Potmarks lie in a no-man\u27s land, not quite within the usual parameters of ceramic studies, not us...
Large, bold marks are painted or incised on the handles or bases of thirty-seven pictorial vases. Th...
The study of Cypriot Late Bronze Age (LBA) writing had reached one of its apogees in the summer of 1...
Twelve potmarks have been recorded among the finds from Tel Mor (Fig. 6.1). They are all simple mark...
Pottery made in the aegean during the Late Bronze Age has been found widely distributed in many part...
An isolated sign on a pot meant something to someone in antiquity, but we cannot "read" the potmark ...
Mycenaean decorated pottery has been found in significant quantities on Cyprus and was clearly the f...
Marks scratched or painted on the Late Bronze Age (LBA) pottery of the eastern Mediterranean are oft...
The Early-Middle Bronze Age in Cyprus (c. 2300-1650 BCE) is still poorly understood, in spite of Cy...
Many different types of evidence provide clues to the nature of commercial exchange among the region...
Based on her study of distribution patterns, Vronwy Hankey suggested that Cyprus or Cypriots played ...
Thousands of Late Bronze Age vases were traded among the nations of the eastern Mediterranean littor...
Based on her study of distribution patterns, Vronwy Hankey suggested that Cyprus or Cypriots played ...
none2siMarks incised or painted on Eastern Mediterranean pottery from the Late Bronze Age – generica...
Most signs incised into Late Helladic/Late Minoan III pottery are related in form and method of appl...
Potmarks lie in a no-man\u27s land, not quite within the usual parameters of ceramic studies, not us...
Large, bold marks are painted or incised on the handles or bases of thirty-seven pictorial vases. Th...
The study of Cypriot Late Bronze Age (LBA) writing had reached one of its apogees in the summer of 1...
Twelve potmarks have been recorded among the finds from Tel Mor (Fig. 6.1). They are all simple mark...
Pottery made in the aegean during the Late Bronze Age has been found widely distributed in many part...
An isolated sign on a pot meant something to someone in antiquity, but we cannot "read" the potmark ...
Mycenaean decorated pottery has been found in significant quantities on Cyprus and was clearly the f...
Marks scratched or painted on the Late Bronze Age (LBA) pottery of the eastern Mediterranean are oft...
The Early-Middle Bronze Age in Cyprus (c. 2300-1650 BCE) is still poorly understood, in spite of Cy...