ARCHAEOLOGY OF EARLY ARCHAIC GREECE

Academic year
2023/2024 Syllabus of previous years
Official course title
ARCHEOLOGIA DELL'ALTO ARCAISMO GRECO SP.
Course code
FM0015 (AF:448854 AR:258532)
Modality
On campus classes
ECTS credits
6
Degree level
Master's Degree Programme (DM270)
Educational sector code
L-ANT/07
Period
2nd Semester
Where
VENEZIA
Moodle
Go to Moodle page
The course is part of the master's degree course in Ancient Civilizations (courses in Archeology and Philology, Literature and History of Antiquity). It offers an in-depth analysis of the development of the Greek civilization between the end of the Bronze Age and the Early Iron Age (XII-VII century BC) through particularly significant sites of mainland Greece, Cyclades, Crete, and Dodecanese.
It is expected that at the end of the course the student will know:
- the research methodologies applied to the study of Early Greece
- the historical and theoretical foundations of the discipline
and will be able to:
- contextualise sites of Ancient Greece (Mainland, Crete and Cyclades) from XII to VII cent. B.C.
- correlate events occurring in different areas of the Eastern Mediterranean world (mainland Greece, Crete, Cyclades) from XII to VII cent. B.C.
- carry out a critical analysis of the artistic productions of Early Greece
- recognize and analyze contexts and classes of materials that are fundamental for the areas and the periods discussed
- formulate hypotheses and discuss specific topics of Early Greece
- evaluate critically crucial aspects of Early Greece
- communicate data and topics concerning the Early Greece with technical language and proper terminology
- consult critically bibliographic tools in order to address in-depth studies and analyses.
The student is required to have a basic knowledge of Greek history, Prehistory and Protohistory of the Eastern Mediterranean and Classical Archeology, all disciplines present in the first level courses.
The course proposes to analyse, in the broad geographical context of the whole Aegean world, the archaeological data dated between the end of the Bronze Age and the beginning of the Iron Age (XII-VII cent. BC), a long period defined in the past Dark Ages due to the rare archaeological data available and the absence of contemporary written sources. This complex period, characterized by numerous political, social and economic changes, constitutes the key phase for understanding the origin of Greek civilization, born after the end of the Mycenaean world. After a geographical and chronological introduction, the course first examines the history of research and then addresses the main phenomena highlighted in the Aegean area with particular attention to the cases of continuity and discontinuity attested in the various archaeological contexts. The course will deal with the political organization/s after the destruction of the Mycenaean palaces: from the centralized palace system, which disappeared towards the end of the 13th century, to the new political structures in constant evolution that will give life, starting from the 8th century, to the poleis or Greek cities-States. The occupation of the territory will be another specific issue examined through the study of different sites in mainland Greece and in the Greek islands.
For the academic year 2023/2024, the second part of the course and the didactic seminar will be devoted to the cult places of Crete between the XIII and the VIII cent. BC.
Testi manualistici fondamentali/handbooks :
O. DICKINSON, The Aegean from Bronze Age to Iron Age, Routlege, London-New York, 2006 (chapters 3-9)
I. LEMOS & A. KOTSONAS (eds.), A Companion to the Archaeology of Early Greece and the Mediterranean, I-II, New York 2019 (chapters 2.2, 2.5, 2.9).
Book chapters:
A. D'AGATA, A. VAN DE MOORTEL (edd), Archaeologies of Cult: Essays on Ritual and Cult in Crete in Honor of Geraldine C. Gesell. Hesperia Supplement 42, Princeton 2009 (chapters to be defined).
The exam will be in oral form, but includes also the presentation of an essay on a specific topic assigned to each student. For the exam it is necessary: 1) to study the suggested books; 2) to participate to the seminar that will take place at the end of the classes (date to be set). During the seminar, each student will present a Power Point presentation on a specific topic, which has to be presented also in a written form (essay). Individual oral presentations will be followed by a final discussion, to which all students are required to participate. During the exam, the level of preparation of the student will be verified through: 1) questions on the suggested books; 2) evaluation of the essay and relative oral presentation held during the seminar.
Conventional with multimedia support.
Students will be provided with texts and images relating to the course using the multimedia platform of the university
Italian
Attendance, although not compulsory, is highly recommended.
oral
Definitive programme.
Last update of the programme: 11/03/2023