Early GreeceHarperCollins UK, 19. des. 2013 - 368 síður Now available in ebook format. Within the space of three centuries, up to the great Persian invasion of 480BC, Greece was transformed from a simple peasant society into a sophisticated civilisation which dominated the shores of the Mediterranean from Spain to Syria and from the Crimea to Egypt - a culture whose achievements in the fields of art, science, philosophy and politics were to establish the canons of the Western world. The author of this book places this development in the context of Mediterranean civilisation, providing an account of the transformation that launched Western culture. |
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Síða
... Mycenean culture was uncertain, untilin1952 ayoung English architect, Michael Ventris, deciphered the tablets from the destruction levels at Pylos on the mainland and at Mycenean Knossos. The syllabic script knownas Linear B had been ...
... Mycenean culture was uncertain, untilin1952 ayoung English architect, Michael Ventris, deciphered the tablets from the destruction levels at Pylos on the mainland and at Mycenean Knossos. The syllabic script knownas Linear B had been ...
Síða
... Mycenean culture wasnot properly literate. Thus thecultureof the Myceneanworld has to be reconstructed almost entirely from archaeology, interms ofits material remains. Forif Greek mythshave been vindicated as containing ahistorical ...
... Mycenean culture wasnot properly literate. Thus thecultureof the Myceneanworld has to be reconstructed almost entirely from archaeology, interms ofits material remains. Forif Greek mythshave been vindicated as containing ahistorical ...
Síða
... Mycenean worldsuch as Cyprus, and widespread depopulation on the mainland. The archaeological evidence of a certain continuity inthedebased styleof subMycenean pottery serves to demonstrate the level to whichmaterial culture hadsunk ...
... Mycenean worldsuch as Cyprus, and widespread depopulation on the mainland. The archaeological evidence of a certain continuity inthedebased styleof subMycenean pottery serves to demonstrate the level to whichmaterial culture hadsunk ...
Síða
... Mycenean period thelanguage of the Linear Btabletswas recognizably Greek. In classical times Greek was split into variousdialects, more or less closely interrelated. The Doric dialect was spokenin the southern and eastern Peloponnese ...
... Mycenean period thelanguage of the Linear Btabletswas recognizably Greek. In classical times Greek was split into variousdialects, more or less closely interrelated. The Doric dialect was spokenin the southern and eastern Peloponnese ...
Síða
... Mycenean Greek, and Ionic can be seenasa development froma common original;the distribution of Ionicclearly reflects thesame of the Ionian migration; and, giventhe eventsas the legends continuity in Cyprus between Myceneanand classical ...
... Mycenean Greek, and Ionic can be seenasa development froma common original;the distribution of Ionicclearly reflects thesame of the Ionian migration; and, giventhe eventsas the legends continuity in Cyprus between Myceneanand classical ...
Efni
Myth Historyand Archaeology II Sources | |
the Economy XIV The Comingof the Persians XV The Leadership of Greece Sparta and Athens | |
Plate Section Date chart | |
Further reading General index About the Author | |
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