The sanctuaries of ancient Kythnos

Fiche technique

Format : Broché
Nb de pages : 156 pages
Poids : 610 g
Dimensions : 22cm X 28cm
Date de parution :
ISBN : 978-2-7535-7709-1
EAN : 9782753577091

The sanctuaries of ancient Kythnos

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chez Presses universitaires de Rennes

Collection(s) : Archéologie et culture

Paru le | Broché 156 pages

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Quatrième de couverture

The sanctuaries of ancient kythnos

The research conducted the past thirty years in the ancient capital of the Cycladic island of Kythnos (today called Vryokastro) has significantly enriched our knowledge about the material culture and the history of the island. The present book focuses on the sanctuaries of the ancient town. The site was settled in the beginning of the Early Iron Age and a series of urban sanctuaries along the crest of the inhabited hill were founded by the end of the 8th c. B.C. All seem to have been in their floruit during the Archaic and Classical periods, and the one at the North extremity of the Middle Plateau seems to have reached a wider fame in the Mediterranean.

During the Hellenistic period a monumetalisation of the sacred front of the city is observed. Thereafter, the material evidence suggests a gradual decline, which goes in pair with the historical fate of the island. By the 1st century B.C. the size of the city had shrank significantly, serving now occasionally also as a place for exile or as a pirates' nest, and the sanctuaries of the upper town were abandoned, with the exception of those of the central area, where certain new cults seem to have been installed. The town was altogether abandoned around the late 6th-early 7th c. A.D.

The book summarises the data deriving both from the systematic survey and excavations of the site, thus casting significant light to the sanctuaries and cults of the Kythnians, including those of Apollo and Artemis, Demeter, Aphrodite, Asclepios and the Samothracian Gods.

Biographie

Alexander Mazarakis Ainian, born in Athens in 1959, is Professor of Classical Archaeology at the University of Thessaly (Volos). He studied in Brussels (ULB) and London (UCL), where he obtained his PhD degree dealing with the origins of the Greek temple. In earlier years he worked at the Greek Archaeological Service of Attica and taught at the Ionian University of Corfu. He has taught and lectured as an invited professor in various universities of the USA, Paris and at Louvain-la-Neuve. He is the director of several European-funded research projects and of excavations in Greece (at Oropos, Kythnos, Skiathos and Soros in Thessaly). He is a member of the Archaeological Society, the German Archaeological Institute, Membre correspondant of the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres.
The author was awarded a Chaire Internationale Blaise Pascal, financed by the State and the Region Île-de-France, managed by the École Normale Supérieure.