Kavousi Project

The Kavousi Project (also known as the Kavousi Excavations) was a multidisciplinary program of archaeological investigations (active seasons of fieldwork: 1978–1984, 1987–1992) in the area of Kavousi, a historic village at the eastern end of the Gulf of Mirabello in East Crete, Greece.[1] The objective of the project was to restudy a number of archaeological sites originally investigated by the pioneering American archaeologist Harriet Boyd [Hawes] in the early years of the 20th century,[2] focusing on the Greek Dark Age sites of Kavousi Vronda and Kavousi Kastro, but also including tombs at nearby Aloni, Plaï tou Kastrou, and Skouriasmenos, all located in the northern foothills of the Thripti Mountains of eastern Crete.

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View of the archaeological sites of Kavousi Kastro (indicated by a circle) and Kavousi Vronda (indicated by a star), looking east from the (Institute for Aegean Prehistory Study Center for East Crete in Pacheia Ammos) (2014).
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Panoramic view of the main archaeological sites above Kavousi village, looking south from the modern road (2012). From left to right: Azoria (A), Kastro (K), and Vronda (V).

The Kavousi Project was directed by Geraldine C. Gesell (University of Tennessee), Leslie Preston Day (College of Wooster; later, Wabash College), and William D.E. Coulson (University of Minnesota; later, American School of Classical Studies at Athens). The research and fieldwork were conducted with permission from the Greek Ministry of Culture, under the auspices of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens and the 24th Ephorate of Prehistoric and Classical Antiquities of the Greek Archaeological Service. Major financial supporters of the Kavousi Project included the University of Tennessee, the Institute for Aegean Prehistory, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the National Geographic Society, the American Philosophical Society, the American Council of Learned Societies, the David A. Packard Foundation, the David and Lucile Packard Foundation, the Samuel H. Kress Foundation, the Joullian Foundation, Mr. Richard L. Sias and Mrs. Jeannette F. Sias, and many others.[3]

History of Research

In 1974, Geraldine C. Gesell and Leslie Preston Day initiated a project to locate a number of ancient sites previously investigated by early American archaeologists in the Isthmus of Ierapetra, many of which were not marked accurately on maps of the time.[4] By 1978, this informal survey was narrowed to sites in the area of Kavousi. In the same year (1978), Gesell and Day were joined by William D.E. Coulson to establish the Kavousi Project. When formal excavations at the sites of Vronda and Kastro began in 1987, the Kavousi Project became known as the Kavousi Excavations. A brief chronological outline of the work is as follows:

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Panoramic view of the Kavousi area, looking west from the archaeological site of Azoria (2012). The location of Kavousi Kastro is indicated by a circle (at left); the location of Kavousi Vronda is indicated by a star. The modern village of Kavousi is visible in the plain below (at right).
Kavousi as seen from the harbor of the Minoan settlement on Pseira island (from north). The location of Kavousi Vronda is indicated by a star; the location of Kavousi Kastro is indicated by a circle (2000).

Today, select antiquities discovered by the Kavousi Project and Kavousi Excavations are on display in the Archaeological Museum of Agios Nikolaos and in the Archaeological Collection of Ierapetra. Other artifacts, notebooks, original drawings and plans, and photographic contact sheets are housed in the Institute for Aegean Prehistory Study Center for East Crete (INSTAP-SCEC) in Pacheia Ammos in eastern Crete, Greece. The primary photographic archives (black-and-white film negatives) are curated by the Department of Classics at the University of Tennessee (Knoxville); copies of color slides and some other materials are also preserved in the W.D.E. Coulson Archives and Library in the Department of History, Archaeology and Social Anthropology at the University of Thessaly (Volos, Greece).

Archaeological Sites Investigated

Kavousi Vronda

Main article: Kavousi Vronda
View of Kavousi Vronda from the south, with the island of Pseira in the distance
View of Kavousi Vronda from the south (2001), with the island of Pseira in the distance.

Settlement site, c. 427 meters above sea level, established slightly later than Kavousi Kastro and inhabited for up to four generations (around 120 years) before being abandoned at the very end of the Late Minoan IIIC period (c. 1050 BCE).[9] Vronda ("Thunder Hill"; Greek: Βροντάς or Βρόντας) was briefly explored by Harriet Boyd [Hawes] in 1900 and extensively excavated by the Kavousi Project from 1987 to 1992. At its greatest extent, the Vronda settlement covered an area of at least 0.50 hectares and consisted of about 20 houses, a large "special status" building on the summit that may have been the home of the community leader and a place for ritual feasting and drinking ceremonies (Building A-B), a freestanding temple or shrine of the "Goddess with Upraised Arms" (Greek: θεά μεθ’ υψωμένων χειρών) (Building G), and a kiln. In the Subminoan–Protogeometric periods (late 11th and 10th centuries BCE) — and continuing until the early Geometric period (9th century BCE) — Vronda was used as a cemetery for inhumation burials in at least 11 small, stone-built and corbeled tholos tombs. Located at the northern and northwestern edges of the Late Minoan IIIC settlement, these tholos tombs may have been constructed by the descendants of the original villagers, some of whom most likely had moved to the higher settlement at Kavousi Kastro. In the Late Geometric–Early Orientalizing periods (8th to 7th centuries BCE), numerous stone-built enclosures (cists) for cremation burials were constructed within and around the long-abandoned and partially collapsed Late Minoan IIIC houses and shrine. As an extensively excavated settlement from a single period of occupation, Kavousi Vronda provides insights into domestic activities, architecture, religion, and social organization of a community at the very beginning of the Greek Dark Ages (Late Minoan IIIC, or 12th to 11 centuries BCE). Its later cemeteries, used by the inhabitants of Kavousi Kastro and/or nearby Azoria until the mid-7th century BCE, attest to regional mortuary practices, rituals, and ideological concerns throughout the Early Iron Age.

Kavousi Kastro

Main article: Kavousi Kastro
View of Kavousi Kastro, looking east from the summit of Kavousi Vronda (2002).

Settlement site, c. 713 meters above sea level, founded early in the Late Minoan IIIC period (12th century BCE) and continuously inhabited down to the Orientalizing period (late 7th century BCE), after which the site was abandoned.[10] The Kastro ("Citadel" or "Castle"; Greek: Κάστρο) was briefly explored by Harriet Boyd [Hawes] in 1900 and extensively excavated by the Kavousi Project from 1987 to 1992. At its greatest extent, the settlement on the Kastro covered an area of at least 0.84 hectares. While most of the preserved architectural remains belong to the Late Geometric–Early Orientalizing phases (8th to 7th centuries BCE), there is ample evidence for the construction of walls, rooms, and houses in the Late Minoan IIIC and Protogeometric periods (12th to 10th centuries BCE), with renovations and additions over time. In particular, the Kastro settlement seems to have grown significantly at the end of the Late Minoan IIIC period. Since this is precisely the same time that the settlement at Kavousi Vronda was abandoned, it is likely that at least some of the population of Vronda was absorbed into the community at the Kastro. The Kastro may have become the dominant site in the Kavousi region from the 11th through the 8th centuries BCE. In the Late Geometric period (second half of the 8th century BCE), the excavated portion of the settlement included at least 21 houses, one of which (Building H) may have been a "special status" structure distinguished by its size and highly visible location on the western slope. Kavousi Kastro thus reveals a long sequence of occupation that provides insights into domestic activities, architecture, and social organization of a community throughout the entire Early Iron Age. Its well-preserved Late Geometric–Early Orientalizing (8th to 7th centuries BCE) settlement enhances our understanding of ancient society in a key period of Cretan history immediately before the transition to larger urban centers in the Archaic period (6th century BCE), such as at nearby Azoria.

Aloni (Skala)

Location of four tholos tombs, c. 300 meters southwest of Kavousi Kastro, originally excavated by Harriet Boyd [Hawes] and Blanche Wheeler in 1901 and reinvestigated by the Kavousi Project in 1981.[11] The tombs at Aloni ("Threshing Floor"; Greek: Αλώνι), also known locally as Skala ("Stairway" or "Ladder"; Greek: Σκάλα) are now designated Aloni I–IV. Only three tombs (Aloni I, II, and IV) were still preserved in 1981. Ceramic remains suggest periods of use in the Subminoan–Protogeometric, Geometric, and Late Geometric–Early Orientalizing periods. Based on their location and period of use, it is likely that these tombs formed part of a cemetery used by inhabitants of Kavousi Kastro.

Plaï tou Kastrou

Location of at least one stone-built tholos tomb on a slope c. 200 meters south of Kavousi Kastro, from which the British archaeologist Arthur Evans had obtained antiquities in 1896 and 1899.[12] The artifacts from the tomb at Plaï tou Kastrou ("Slope of the Kastro"; Greek: Πλάι του Κάστρου or Πλαγί του Κάστρου) date to the Subminoan–Early Protogeometric and Late Geometric–Early Orientalizing periods. Based on its location and period of use, it is likely that the tomb at Plaï tou Kastrou was used by inhabitants of Kavousi Kastro.

Skouriasmenos

Location of a well-built, stone tholos tomb, c. 500 meters southeast of Kavousi Kastro.[13] Although the tomb at Skouriasmenos ("Rusty Ridge"; Greek: Σκουριασμένος) had been systematically robbed prior to 1900, the architecture of the tomb is particularly well-preserved. When Harriet Boyd [Hawes] visited the site in 1900, she found several vessels dating to the Late Geometric–Early Orientalizing period. Based on its architectural sophistication, location, period of use, and contents, it is likely that the Skouriasmenos tomb was used by an important family or individual from the settlement at Kavousi Kastro.

Ridopoulia

Three small rock-shelters containing burials east of the modern village of Kavousi, on a terrace known locally as Ridopoulia (Greek: Ριδοπουλιά).[14] One rock-shelter (now designated Ridopoulia I), excavated by the Kavousi Project in 1981, had been previously robbed but contained fragments of Late Minoan III ceramics. Another rock shelter (Ridopoulia II) is said to have been cleared by a local landowner in the mid-20th century; a third tomb (Ridopoulia I) is said to have been excavated by a local landowner and American archaeologist Richard Seager in the early 20th century. Based on their location and period of use, it is likely that these tombs formed part of a cemetery used by a Late Minoan III settlement on the site of the modern Kavousi village.

Kavousi Excavation Series

In addition to numerous preliminary reports and thematic studies in academic journals and edited books, the comprehensive results of the Kavousi Project appear in the specialized volumes of the Kavousi Excavation Series, all published by INSTAP Academic Press.

Published (or in press)

In preparation

References

  1. Gesell, Day, and Coulson 1983; Gesell, Day, and Coulson 1985; Day, Coulson, and Gesell 1986; Gesell, Day, and Coulson 1988; Gesell, Day, and Coulson 1995; Gesell and Day in Haggis 2005, pp. xvii–xix; Gesell and Day in Day, Klein and Turner 2009, pp. xxv–xxvii.
  2. Boyd 1901
  3. Day, Klein and Turner 2009, pp. xxix–xxxi.
  4. Gesell, Day, and Coulson 1983; Gesell and Day in Day, Klein and Turner 2009, pp. xxv–xxvii.
  5. Gesell, Day, and Coulson 1992, pp. 120–123, figs. 16.2–4.
  6. Gesell, Day, and Coulson 1988; Gesell, Coulson, and Day 1991; Gesell, Day, and Coulson 1995.
  7. Haggis and Mook 1993; Haggis 2005.
  8. Morris 2002; Morris, Ammons, Timpson, and Foss in Haggis 2005, pp. 153–165.
  9. Boyd 1901, pp. 131–136; Gesell, Day, and Coulson 1983; Haggis 2005, pp. 134, site 77; Day, Klein, and Turner 2009; Day and Glowacki 2011; Day, et al. forthcoming.
  10. Boyd 1901, pp. 137–143; Gesell, Day, and Coulson 1983; Gesell, Day, and Coulson 1992; Coulson, Haggis, Mook, and Tobin 1997; Coulson 1998; Haggis 2005, pp. 136, site 80
  11. Gesell, Day, and Coulson 1983, pp. 410–412; Haggis 2005, pp. 134–135, site 78.
  12. Boyd 1901, pp. 149; Gesell, Day, and Coulson 1983, pp. 412–413; Haggis 2005, pp. 136–137, site 81.
  13. Boyd 1901, pp. 143–148; Gesell, Day, and Coulson 1983, pp. 412; Haggis 2005, pp. 136–137, site 81.
  14. Gesell, Day, and Coulson 1983, pp. 413–420; Haggis 2005, pp. 126–127, site 60.

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