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Page 26
tion wall at Maa - Palaeokastro to Mycenaean Sea People because of its ' Cyclopean ' masonry and dogleg gate , which he has compared with the first gate at Mycenae . However , Fortin ( 1981 , 540-41 ; also Loader 1998 , 153 ) notes ...
tion wall at Maa - Palaeokastro to Mycenaean Sea People because of its ' Cyclopean ' masonry and dogleg gate , which he has compared with the first gate at Mycenae . However , Fortin ( 1981 , 540-41 ; also Loader 1998 , 153 ) notes ...
Page 213
A wall was stratigrapically above this pit and this led us to conclude that construction occurred ' sometime after 920 BC ” . This statement was deliberately phrased to acknowledge that it is impossible to work out exactly when the wall ...
A wall was stratigrapically above this pit and this led us to conclude that construction occurred ' sometime after 920 BC ” . This statement was deliberately phrased to acknowledge that it is impossible to work out exactly when the wall ...
Page 250
The walls , the surviving sections of which are on average 4.50-5 m high , slope at an angle of 55-60 degrees on the north - eastern ... Apart from its slope , the other important feature of the wall , which was probably high and made ...
The walls , the surviving sections of which are on average 4.50-5 m high , slope at an angle of 55-60 degrees on the north - eastern ... Apart from its slope , the other important feature of the wall , which was probably high and made ...
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Contents
WOUDHUIZEN The Foundation Charter of the Kamanas Town Fortifications | 1 |
A Review Article of its Publication Part | 4 |
HITCHCOCK Do you see a man skillful in his work? He will stand before | 17 |
Copyright | |
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Aegean Anatolia ancient appear Arabian Archaeology architectural associated Assyria authors Black Sea Bronze Age building burial centres century BC chapter chronology coins compared construction continued cultural Cypriot Cyprus detailed discussion early East Eastern empire evidence example excavations existence finds further grave Greek IGBulg illustrations important Indian indicate inscriptions interpretation Iran Iranian Iron Age Italy king Knossos known Late later Magee material Mediterranean Meer mentioned Minoan monuments Museum Muweilah Mycenaean noted origin parallels period Persian poleis polis political possible pottery present probably produced recent reference region remains Roman settlement shows similar Sinope social sources status structure suggests tion trade tradition University vessels volume western