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more titles of the subject:
Pax Minoica Revisited centers on the question of the ‘Minoan state’ in the Aegean during the 17th–15th centuries BCE and includes interconnected subjects such as the exact definition of ‘Pax Minoica’ and the role of Minoan warfare, the meaning of ‘Minoan Thalassocracy’ (the military role of the Minoan navy, as outlined by Thucydides), models of colonisation, ethnicity and cultural transformation. It includes a variety of approaches ranging from theoretical models to more traditional art historical analysis and the reconstruction and consideration of historical processes. Its aim therefore is to present new evidence, research and ideas on the subjects associated with the ‘Pax Minoica’ that challenge (or justify) Arthur Evans’ original concept of a Minoan expansion and colonization.
In 11 original articles by 12 international specialists active in the fields of Aegean archaeology and Egyptology, these subjects are of fundamental significance for our understanding of Neopalatial Crete and the Minoanised regions of the Aegean. They are re-examined under the impact of recent archaeological evidence, but also by the re-evaluation of old and inadequately published material. Regarding the geographical focus of the individual contributions, several of them shed light on the inner-Cretan political situation during the Neopalatial period, while others investigate the interconnections between Crete and the Aegean islands as well as those with Early Mycenaean mainland Greece. In addition, two contributions by Egyptologists focus on the relationship between Egypt and Minoan Crete during this crucial period. |