[First posted in AWOL 6 January 2009. Updated 24 September 2012]
Kommos Community home page
Since 1976 the University of Toronto, in collaboration with The
American School of Classical Studies at Athens and the Greek
Archaeological Service, has investigated the ancient site of Kommos in
south central Crete. In this first large-scale Canadian excavation in
Greece was revealed a prehistoric Minoan town with a group of large
civic structures, also an unusually well preserved Greek sanctuary built
over the Minoan remains and used for a thousand years. Study of the
Minoan town has been contributing new evidence about the inhabitants’
domestic economy, architectural talents, ceramic chronology, as well as
Late Bronze Age trading interconnections in the Mediterranean. Research
in the Greek Sanctuary has enhanced our understanding of Cretan temple
architecture, religion and ritual activity including animal sacrifice
and banqueting. In addition, the remains revealed important information
about Crete’s contacts with other lands during the early period of
Phoenician expansion to the West.
Excavation requires massive recording both while digging goes on and
later, when the remains are to be studied. Such recording and
interpreting are ongoing processes, culminating in publication which can
inform but can also serve as a foundation for other students of the
past to build upon. Publication allows the larger community to access
such knowledge. In this case, T-Space makes available a series of
records: not only the publication in the form of thick, richly
illustrated volumes, but preliminary levels of recording and
interpreting that acted as steps leading to final publication. The
preliminary stages in this case consist of excavation daybooks with the
day-by-day reports by the trench supervisors of discoveries made. There
also are preliminary reports of the results, some only in the excavation
archives, but others published separately in periodicals by senior
members of the excavation team.
Backing for this Kommos venture was provided by the publicly funded
Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, also by The
Institute for Aegean Prehistory founded by Malcolm Wiener, The
University of Toronto, as well as by individuals, including Lorne
Wickerson.
Site Area Terminology
General Observations
Collections in this community
Sub-communities within this community
Trench Notebooks and Trench Reports
Recent Submissions
Have other archaeological projects made this level of documentation available to the public?
License or copyright restriction are expressed on the item level. Many items are labeled with a
Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 Unported license. Items unmarked appear to have copyright in the published version.
Glad to see others interested in this awesome place!
ReplyDeleteFor additional information on the conservation of the Kommos archaeological site please visit our website at http://kommosconservancy.org