Ægean archæeology; an introduction to the archæeology of prehistoric Greece . Fig. 32. — Mycenaean ( with embossing de- K abandoned except for a short sign and circles. Cyprus. 6ca/e J. period of partial re-occupation, the local princes couldstill possess good objects of art, and could be buried withthem with a certain amount of funerary state. The, Prehistoric Tombs oj Knossos, p. iff. POTTERY 105 pottery shews its connexion with that of , thusdiffering from Mycenaean ware found elsewhere, andfine bronze vases and inlaid swords (one with a natural-istic engraving of wild


Ægean archæeology; an introduction to the archæeology of prehistoric Greece . Fig. 32. — Mycenaean ( with embossing de- K abandoned except for a short sign and circles. Cyprus. 6ca/e J. period of partial re-occupation, the local princes couldstill possess good objects of art, and could be buried withthem with a certain amount of funerary state. The, Prehistoric Tombs oj Knossos, p. iff. POTTERY 105 pottery shews its connexion with that of , thusdiffering from Mycenaean ware found elsewhere, andfine bronze vases and inlaid swords (one with a natural-istic engraving of wild goats and lions; Fig. 105) areclosely reminiscent of the older and finer objects of thesame class. We do not find in the Zaf er Papoura potterythe decadent forms of naturalistic objects which we. Fig. 33. —Cyprus; Mycenaean () filler. Scale \.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookpublisherlondo, bookyear1915