Everything about Late Helladic totally explained
Helladic is a modern term of archaeological origin to identify a sequence of periods characterizing the culture of mainland
ancient Greece during the
Bronze Age. The term is commonly used in
archaeology and
art history. It was intended to complement two parallel terms,
Cycladic, identifying approximately the same sequence with reference to the
Aegean Bronze Age, and
Minoan, with reference to the civilization of
Crete.
The scheme applies primarily to pottery and is a relative dating system. The pottery at any given site typically can be ordered into early, middle and late on the basis of style and technique. The total time window allowed for the site is then divided into these periods proportionately. As it turns out, there's a correspondeance between "early" over all Greece, etc. Also some "absolute dates" or dates obtained by non-comparative methods can be used to date the periods.
Absolute dates are preferable whenever they can be obtained. However, the relative structure was devised before the age of carbon dating. Most of the excavation was performed then as well. Typically only relative dates are obtainable. They form a structure for the characterization of Greek prehistory. Objects are generally dated by the pottery of the site found in associative contexts. Other objects can be arranged into early, middle and late as well, but pottery is used as a marker.
The three terms: Helladic, Cycladic, Minoan, refer to location of origin. Thus Middle Minoan objects might be found in the Cyclades. They are not on that account Middle Cycladic. The scheme tends to be less applicable on the periphery of the Aegean, such as the Levant. Pottery there might imitate Helladic or Minoan and yet be locally manufactured.
Periodization
The "early", "middle" and "late" scheme can be applied at different levels. Rather than use such cumbersome terms as "early early" archaeologists by convention use I, II, II for the second level, A, B, C for the third level, 1, 2, 3 for the fourth level and a, b, c for the fifth. Not all levels are present at every site. If additional levels are required, another "early", "middle" or "late" can be appended.
The Helladic period is subdivided as:
| Period
| Approximate Date
|
| Early Helladic I | 2800-2500
|
| Early Helladic II | 2500-2300
|
| Early Helladic III | 2300-2100
|
| Middle Helladic | 2100-1550
|
| Late Helladic I | 1550-1500
|
| Late Helladic II | 1500-1400
|
| Late Helladic III | 1400-1060
|
EH
» See also Aegean civilization
The
Early Helladic is marked by the arrival in Greece of an agricultural population that probably didn't speak an
Indo-European language, whose culture probably soon diverged from its origins in the
Cyclades. Very little is known of this society except that the basic techniques of bronze-working were first developed in Anatolia, and cultural contacts with Western Anatolia were maintained. Their arrival coincides with the beginning of the
Bronze Age in Greece. The Early Helladic period corresponds in time to the
Old Kingdom in
Egypt. Important Early Helladic sites are clustered on the Aegean shores of the mainland in Boeotia and Argolid (
Lerna,
Pefkakia,
Thebes,
Tiryns) or coastal islands such as
Aegina (Kolonna) and
Euboea (
Lefkandi,
Manika) and are marked by pottery showing Western Anatolian influences and the introduction of the fast-spinning version of the
potter's wheel. The large "longhouse" called a
megaron is introduced in EH II. The infiltration of Anatolian cultural models wasn't accompanied by widespread site destruction. No similar Early Helladic material has yet been positively identified in the interior of the Peloponnesus.
MH
The
Middle Helladic begins with the wide-scale settlement in Greece of a people whom archaeologists title the
Minyans; a group of monochrome burnished pottery from Middle Helladic (and EH III) sites was conventionally dubbed "Minyan" ware by Troy's discoverer
Heinrich Schliemann. Until about 1960, Gray Minyan ware was often identified as the pottery of northern invaders who destroyed Early Helladic civilization ca. 1900 BCE and introduced Middle Helladic material culture into the Greek peninsula; excavations at Lerna have revealed the development of pottery styles to have been continuous. In general, painted pottery decors are rectilinear and abstract until Middle Helladic III, when Cycladic and
Minoan influences inspire a variety of curvilinear and even representational motifs.
The Middle Helladic period corresponds in time to the
Middle Kingdom of Egypt. Settlements draw more closely together and tend to be sited on hilltops. Middle Helladic sites are located throughout the Peloponnese and central Greece (including sites in the interior of Aetolia such as Thermon) as far north as the
Spercheios River valley.
Malthi in
Messenia is the only Middle Helladic site to have been thoroughly excavated, but
Lerna V will be the type site when it's fully published (Rutter).
LH
The
Late Helladic is the time when
Mycenaean Greece flourished, under new influences from Minoan Crete and the Cyclades. Those who made LH pottery sometimes inscribed their work with a syllabic script recognizable as
a form of Greek. LH is divided into I, II, and III; of which I and II overlap
Late Minoan ware and III overtakes it. LH III is further subdivided into IIIA, IIIB, and IIIC. The table below provides the approximate dates of the
Late Helladic phases (LH) on the Greek Mainland.
| Period
| Approximate Date
|
| Protogeometric | 1000
|
| Sub-Mycenean | 1060-1000
|
| LHIIIC (Late) | 1090-1060
|
| LHIIIC (Middle) | 1130-1090
|
| LHIIIC (Early) | 1190-1130
|
| LHIIIB2 | 1230-1190
|
| LHIIIB1 | 1300-1230
|
| LHIIIA2 | 1350-1300
|
| LHIIIA1 | 1400-1350
|
| LHIIB | 1450-1400
|
| LHIIA | 1500-1450
|
| LHI | 1550-1500
|
LHI
The
LHI pottery is known from the fill of the
shaft graves of
Lerna and the settlements of Voroulia and Nichoria (
Messenia), Ayios Stephanos, (
Laconia) and
Korakou. Furumark divided the LH in phases A and B, but Furumark's LHIB has been reassigned to LHIIA by Dickinson. Some recent C-14 dates from the Tsoungiza site north of Mycenae indicate LHI there was dated to between 1675/1650 and 1600/1550 BC, which is earlier than the assigned pottery dates by about 100 years. The Bryn Mawr website (External links) gives 1675 to 1600 as conventional dates. The
Thera eruption also occurred during LHI (and LCI and LMIA), variously dated within the 1650-1625 BC span.
Not found at Thera, but extant in late LHI from Messenia; and therefore likely commencing after the eruption, is a material culture known as "Peloponnesian LHI".(
On the Late Helladic I of Akrotiri, Thera
) This is characterised by "tall funnel-like Keftiu cups of Type III"; "small closed shapes such as squat jugs decorated with hatched loops ('rackets') or simplified spirals"; "dark-on-light lustrous-painted motifs", which "include small neat types of simple linked spiral such as varieties of hook-spiral or wave-spiral (with or without small dots in the field), forms of the hatched loop and double-axe, and accessorial rows of small dots and single or double wavy lines"; and also the "ripple pattern" on "Keftiu" cups. These local innovations continued into the LHIIA styles throughout the mainland.
LHII
The description of the
LHIIA is mainly based on the material from Kourakou East Alley. Domestic and Palatial shapes are distinguished. There are strong links between LHIIA and LMIB.
LHIIB began before the end of LMIB, and sees a lessening of Cretan influences. Pure LHIIB assemblages are rare and originate from Tiryns, Asine and Korakou. C-14 dates from Tsoungiza indicate LHII was dated to between 1600/1550 and 1435/1405 BC, the start of which is earlier than the assigned pottery date by about 100 years, but the end of which nearly corresponds to the pottery phase. In Egypt, both periods of LHII correspond with the beginning of its "Imperial" period, from
Hatshepsut to
Tuthmosis III.
LHIII
LHIII and LMIII are contemporary. Toward LMIIIB, non-Helladic ware from the Aegean ceases to be homogenous; insofar as LMIIIB differs from Helladic, it should at most be considered a "sub-Minoan" variant of LHIIIB.
The uniform and widely spread
LHIIIA:1 pottery was originally defined by the material from the Ramp house at Mycenae, the palace at
Thebes (now dated to LHIIIA:2 or LHIIIB by most researchers) and
Triada at
Rhodes. There is material from Asine, Athens (wells),
Sparta (
Menelaion),
Nichoria and the 'Atreus Bothros', rubbish sealed under the
Dromos of the Treasury of
Atreus at
Mycenae as well. C-14 dates from Tsoungiza indicate LHIIIA:1 should be more nearly 1435/1406 to 1390/1370 BC, slightly earlier than the pottery phase, but by less than 50 years. LHIIIA:1 ware has been found in
Maşat Höyük in
Hittite Anatolia. In 2003, Kuniholm et al. according to
dendrochronology dated "at least three pieces of wood" in Maşat's last known building to 1375 +4/-7 BCE ("Dendrochronological Dating in Anatolia" p. 46), but hadn't offered their methods to peer review as of June 2006. Their group's methods have been critiqued, for example
Keenan
.
The
LHIIIA:2 pottery marks a Mycenaean expansion covering most of the Eastern Mediterranean. There are many new shapes. The motifs of the painted pottery continue from LHIIIA:1 but show a great deal of standardization. In Egypt, the
Amarna site contains LHIIIA:1 ware during the reign of
Amenhotep III and LHIIIA:2 ware during that of his son
Akhenaten; it also has the barest beginnings of LHIIIB. LHIIIA:2 ware is in the
Uluburun shipwreck, which sank in the 14th century. Again, Tsoungiza dates are earlier, 1390/1370 to 1360/1325; but LHIIIA:2 ware also exists in a burn layer of
Miletus which likely occurred early in Mursilis II's reign and therefore some years prior to
Mursili's eclipse in 1312 BCE. The transition period between IIIA and IIIB begins after 1320 BCE, but not long after (Cemal Pulak thinks before 1295 BCE).
The definition of the
LHIIIB by Furumark was mainly based on grave finds and the settlement material from
Zygouries. It has been divided into two sub-phases by E. French, based on the finds from Mycenae and the West wall at Tiryns.
LHIIIB:2 assemblages are sparse, as painted pottery is rare in tombs and many settlements of this period ended by destruction, leaving few complete pots behind.
LHIIIB pottery is associated in the Greek mainland palaces with the Linear B archives. (Linear B had been in use in Crete since
Late Minoan II.) Pulak's proposed LHIIIA/B boundary would make LHIIIB contemporary in Anatolia with the resurgent
Hittites following
Mursili's eclipse; in Egypt with the 19th Dynasty, also known as the Ramessides; and in northern Mesopotamia with
Assyria's ascendancy over
Mitanni. The end of LHIIIB is associated with the destruction of
Ugarit, whose ruins contain the last of that pottery. The Tsoungiza date for the end of LHIIIB is 1200/1190. The beginning of LHIIIC, therefore, is now commonly set into the reign of Queen
Twosret. The
LHIIIC has been divided into LHIIIC:1 and 2 by Furumark, based on materials from tombs in Mycenae, Asine,
Kephalonia and Rhodes. In the 1960s, the excavations of the Citadel at Mycenae and of
Lefkandi in
Euboea yielded stratified material that allowed the ss. There is a lot of regional variation in the LHIIIC, especially in the later phases. Late LHIIIC pottery is found in
Troy VIIa and a few pieces in
Tarsus. It was also made locally in the
Philistine settlements of Ashdod, Ashkelon, Ekron, Gath, and Gaza.
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