Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-mkpzs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T03:46:28.419Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

SARDINIA AND CYPRUS: AN ALTERNATIVE VIEW ON CYPRIOTES IN THE CENTRAL MEDITERRANEAN

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 January 2017

Get access

Abstract

Recent research reveals what we term a ‘discourse of certainty’ regarding an assumed predominant socio-economic and cultural impact of Late Bronze Age Cypriotes or Mycenaeans on the local peoples of Sardinia and/or Sicily and Italy, not least in terms of a systematic, seaborne trading network extending from the Cyprus to the Tyrrhenian Sea. ‘Minimalist’ approaches to such a phenomenon have a long and venerable but more limited pedigree. In this study, we question why minimalist views have been so summarily dismissed in much current literature that seeks to evaluate an eastern Mediterranean presence or influence in the central Mediterranean. We focus on Sardinia, and on the range of Cypriot or ‘Cypriot-type’ materials found there. We consider the nature of the Cypriot–Sardinian relationship, and suggest that we should decouple foreign objects from foreign agents. We question several of the perceived Cypriot influences on Sardinian artefacts, and consider possible alternative mechanisms and routes of exchange between the east and central Mediterranean. We outline and discuss the array of presumed or actual Cypriot artefacts found on Sardinia, and argue that these do not add up to a ‘significant’ corpus of Late Cypriot materials and connections.

Recenti ricerche indicano come sia riconoscibile un predominante ipotetico impatto socioeconomico e culturale cipriota o miceneo sulle popolazioni locali della Sardegna e/o della Sicilia e dell'Italia nella Tarda Età del Bronzo, non da ultimo anche come conseguenza di un network commerciale marino che si estendeva da Cipro al mar Tirreno. Approcci di tipo ‘minimalistico’ a questo fenomeno hanno un pedigree prestigioso e consistente, seppure più limitato. In questo studio si intende discutere le ragioni per le quali le visioni minimaliste sono state così sommariamente rigettate in buona parte della letteratura corrente che cerca di valutare una presenza o influenza mediterranea orientale nel Mediterraneo centrale. Ci si focalizza in particolar modo sulla Sardegna e sui materiali ciprioti o di ‘tipo cipriota’ lì rinvenuti. Si prende in considerazione la natura delle relazioni sardo-cipriote e si avanza l'ipotesi che si dovrebbero disgiungere gli oggetti stranieri dagli ‘agenti’ stranieri. Si mettono in discussione molte delle influenze cipriote supposte/percepite sui manufatti sardi e si considerano possibili meccanismi alternativi e diversi percorsi di scambio tra il Mediterraneo orientale e centrale. Si delinea e discute inoltre la gamma di manufatti ciprioti presunti o effettivi rinvenuti in Sardegna e si sostiene come questi concorrano realmente a non delineare affatto un significativo corpus di materiali e connessioni tardo ciprioti.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © British School at Rome 2017 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Alberti, G. (2005) The earliest contacts between southeastern Sicily and Cyprus in the Late Bronze Age. In Laffineur, R. and Greco, E. (eds), Emporia: Aegeans in the Central and Eastern Mediterranean (Aegaeum 25(1)): 343–51. Liège, Université de Liège/Austin (TX), University of Texas at Austin.Google Scholar
Bachhuber, C. (2006) Aegean interest on the Uluburun ship. American Journal of Archaeology 110: 345–63.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bass, G.F. (1967) Cape Gelidonya: A Bronze Age Shipwreck (Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 57(8)). Philadelphia, American Philosophical Society.Google Scholar
Begemann, F., Schmitt-Strecker, S., Pernicka, E. and Lo Schiavo, F. (2001) Chemical composition and lead isotopy of copper and bronze from Nuragic Sardinia. European Journal of Archaeology 4: 4385.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bietti Sestieri, A.M. (1984) Central and southern Italy in the Late Bronze Age. In Hackens, T., Holloway, N.D. and Holloway, R.R. (eds), Crossroads of the Mediterranean (Archaeologia Transatlantica 2): 55122. Providence (RI), Brown University Center for Old World Archaeology and Art.Google Scholar
Bietti Sestieri, A.M. (1988) The Mycenaean connection and its impact on the central Mediterranean societies. Dialoghi di Archaeologia 6: 2351.Google Scholar
Blake, E. (2008) The Mycenaeans in Italy: a minimalist position. Papers of the British School at Rome 76: 134.Google Scholar
Blake, E. (2014) Late Bronze Age Sardinia: acephalous cohesion. In Knapp, A.B. and van Dommelen, P. (eds), The Cambridge Prehistory of the Bronze and Iron Age Mediterranean: 96108. New York, Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Braudel, F. (1972) The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II I . London, William Collins Sons.Google Scholar
Broodbank, C. (2013) The Making of the Middle Sea: A History of the Mediterranean from the Beginning to the Emergence of the Classical World. London, Thames and Hudson.Google Scholar
Campus, F. and Leonelli, V. (2000) La tipologia della ceramica nurgica 1: Il materiale edito. Sassari, BetaGamma.Google Scholar
Catling, H.W. (1964) Cypriot Bronzework in the Mycenaean World. Oxford, Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Cazella, A. and Recchia, G. (2013) Malta, Sicily, Aeolian islands and southern Italy during the Bronze Age: the meaning of a changing relationship. In Alberti, M.A. and Sabatini, S. (eds), Exchange Networks and Local Transformations: Interaction and Local Change in Europe and the Mediterranean from the Bronze Age to the Iron Age: 8091. Oxford, Oxbow Books.Google Scholar
De Miro, E. (1999) Un emporio miceneo sulla costa sud della Sicilia. In La Rosa, V., Palermo, D. and Vagnetti, L. (eds), Epi ponton plazomenoi: 439–49. Rome, Scuola Archeologica Italiana di Atene.Google Scholar
Ferrarese Ceruti, M.L. (1997a) Ceramica micenea in Sardegna (nota preliminare). In Antona, A. and Schiavo, F. Lo (eds), Archeologia della Sardegna preistorica e protostorica: 269–76. Nuoro, Sardinia, Poliedro.Google Scholar
Ferrarese Ceruti, M.L. (1997b) I vani c, p, q, del complesso nuragico di Antigori. In Antona, A. and Schiavo, F. Lo (eds), Archeologia della Sardegna preistorica e protostorica: 437–43. Nuoro, Sardinia, Poliedro.Google Scholar
Ferrarese Ceruti, M.L. (1998) Remarks on the presence of Nuragic pottery on Lipari. In Balmuth, M.S. and Tykot, R.H. (eds), Sardinia and Aegean Chronology: Towards the Resolution of Relative and Absolute Dating in the Mediterranean (Studies in Sardinian Archaeology 5): 335. Oxford, Oxbow Books.Google Scholar
Ferrarese Ceruti, M.L., Vagnetti, L. and Lo Schiavo, F. (1987) Minoici, Micenei, e Ciprioti in Sardegna nella seconda metà del II millennio a.C. In Balmuth, M.S. (ed.), Studies in Sardinian Archaeology 3: Nuragic Sardinia and the Mycenaean World (British Archaeological Reports, International Series 387): 737. Oxford, British Archaeological Reports.Google Scholar
Fiorentini, G. (1993–4) Attività di indagini archeologiche della Soprintendenza Beni Culturali e Ambientali di Agrigento. Kokalos 3940: 717–33.Google Scholar
Frost, H. (1970) Some Cypriot stone anchors from land sites and from the sea. Report of the Department of Antiquities, Cyprus: 1424.Google Scholar
Gale, N.H. and Stos-Gale, Z.A. (1987) Oxhide ingots from Sardinia, Crete and Cyprus and the Bronze Age copper trade: new scientific evidence. In Balmuth, M.S. (ed.), Studies in Sardinian Archaeology 3: Nuragic Sardinia and the Mycenaean World (British Archaeological Reports, International Series 387): 135–78. Oxford, British Archaeological Reports.Google Scholar
Gale, N.H. and Stos-Gale, Z.A. (2012) The role of the Apliki mine in the post c. 1400 bc copper production and trade networks in Cyprus and in the wider Mediterranean. In Kassianidou, V. and Papasavvas, G. (eds), Eastern Mediterranean Metallurgy and Metalwork in the Second Millennium bc : 7082. Oxford, Oxbow.Google Scholar
Giardino, C. (1992) Nuragic Sardinia and the Mediterranean: metallurgy and maritime traffic. In Tykot, R.H. and Andrews, T.K. (eds), Sardinia in the Mediterranean: A Footprint in the Sea (Monographs in Mediterranean Archaeology 3): 304–16. Sheffield, Sheffield Academic Press.Google Scholar
Giardino, C. (1995) Il Mediterraneo occidentale fra XIV ed VII secolo a.C: cerchie minerarie e metallurgiche. The West Mediterranean between the 14th and 8th Centuries b.c.: Mining and Metallurgical Spheres (British Archaeological Reports, International Series 612). Oxford, Tempus Reparatum.Google Scholar
Gillis, C. (1995) Trade in the Late Bronze Age. In Gillis, C., Risberg, C. and Sjöberg, B. (eds), Trade and Production in Premonetary Greece: Aspects of Trade (Studies in Mediterranean Archaeology and Literature 134): 6186. Jonsered: Paul Åströms Förlag.Google Scholar
Graziadio, G. (1997) Le presenze cipriote in Italia nel quadro del commercio Mediterraneo dei secoli XIV e XIII a.c . Studi Classici e Orientali 46: 681719.Google Scholar
Graziadio, G. and Guglielmino, R. (2011) The Aegean and Cypriot imports to Italy as evidence for direct and indirect trade in the 14th and 13th centuries bc . In Duistermaat, K. and Regulski, I. (eds), International Contacts in the Ancient Mediterranean: 309–26. Leuven, Uitgeverij Peeters en Department Oosterse Studies.Google Scholar
Green, J.N. (1973) An underwater archaeological survey of Cape Andreas, Castros, Cyprus, 1969–70: a preliminary report. In Blackman, D.J. (ed.), Marine Archaeology: 141–80. London, Butterworths.Google Scholar
Guerrero Ayuso, V.M. (2006) Nautas baleáricos durante la prehistoria (parte 1). Condiciones meteomarinas y navegación de cabotaje. Pyrenae 37: 87129.Google Scholar
Haldane, C. (1993) Direct evidence for organic cargoes in the Late Bronze Age. World Archaeology 24: 348–60.Google Scholar
Harding, A.F. (1984) The Mycenaeans and Europe. London, Academic Press.Google Scholar
Harpster, M. (2013) Shipwreck identity, methodology, and nautical archaeology. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 20: 588622.Google Scholar
Hirschfeld, N. (2001) Cypriots to the West? The evidence of their potmarks. In Bonfante, L. and Karageorghis, V. (eds), Italy and Cyprus in Antiquity: 1500–450 bc : 121–9. Nicosia, Costakis and Leto Severis Foundation.Google Scholar
Holloway, R.R. (1981) Italy and the Aegean, 3000–700 bc (Archaeologica Transatlantica 1). Louvain-la-Neuve, L'Université Catholique de Louvain.Google Scholar
Iacono, F. (2015) Feasting at Roca: cross-cultural encounters and society in the southern Adriatic during the Late Bronze Age. European Journal of Archaeology 18: 259–81.Google Scholar
Ialongo, N. (2013) I Santuario Nuragico di Monte S. Antonio di Siligo (SS). Studio analitico dei complessi culturali della Sardegna. Università degli Studi di Roma ‘La Sapienza’. Ph.D. thesis (Internet edition: http://padis.uniroma1.it/handle/10805/1490).Google Scholar
Jones, R.E. and Day, P. (1987) Aegean-type pottery on Sardinia: identification of imports and local imitations by chemical analysis. In Balmuth, M.S. (ed.), Studies in Sardinian Archaeology 3. Nuragic Sardinia and the Mycenaean World (British Archaeological Reports, International Series 387): 257–69. Oxford, British Archaeological Reports.Google Scholar
Jones, R.E., Levi, S.T., Bettelli, M. and Vagnetti, L. (2014) Italo-Mycenaean Pottery: The Archaeological and Archaeometric Dimensions (Incunabula Graeca 103). Rome, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche.Google Scholar
Karageorghis, V. (2002) Early Cyprus: Crossroads of the Mediterranean. Los Angeles, Getty Museum.Google Scholar
Karageorghis, V. (2011) Handmade burnished ware in Cyprus and elsewhere in the eastern Mediterranean. In Karageorghis, V. and Kouka, O. (eds), On Cooking Pots, Drinking Cups, Loomweights and Ethnicity in Bronze Age Cyprus and Neighbouring Regions: 87112. Nicosia, Leventis Foundation.Google Scholar
Kassianidou, V. (2009) Oxhide ingots in Cyprus. In Schiavo, F. Lo, Muhly, J.D., Maddin, R. and Mair, A. Giumlia (eds), Oxhide Ingots in the Central Mediterranean: 4181. Rome, Leventis Foundation, INSTAP and Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche.Google Scholar
Kilian, K. (1990) Mycenaean colonization: norm and variety. In Descoeudres, J.-P. (ed.), Greek Colonists and Native Populations: 445–67. Oxford, Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Knapp, A.B. (1986) Copper Production and Divine Protection: Archaeology, Ideology and Social Complexity on Bronze Age Cyprus (Studies in Mediterranean Archaeology, Pocketbook 42). Göteborg, P. Åströms Förlag.Google Scholar
Knapp, A.B. (1988) Ideology, archaeology and polity. Man 23: 133–63.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knapp, A.B. (1990) Ethnicity, entrepreneurship, and exchange: Mediterranean inter-island relations in the Late Bronze Age. Annual of the British School at Athens 85: 115–53.Google Scholar
Knapp, A.B. (1991) Spice, drugs, grain and grog: organic goods in Bronze Age eastern Mediterranean trade. In Gale, N.H. (ed.), Bronze Age Trade in the Mediterranean (Studies in Mediterranean Archaeology 90): 2168. Jonsered, Paul Åströms Förlag.Google Scholar
Knapp, A.B. (1999) The archaeology of mining: fieldwork perspectives from the Sydney Cyprus Survey Project. In Young, S.M.M., Pollard, A.M., Budd, P. and Ixer, R.A. (eds), Metals in Antiquity (British Archaeological Reports, International Series 792): 98109. Oxford, Archaeopress.Google Scholar
Knapp, A.B. (2008) Prehistoric and Protohistoric Cyprus: Identity, Insularity and Connectivity. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Knapp, A.B. (2012) Metallurgical production and trade on Bronze Age Cyprus: views and variations. In Kassianidou, V. and Papasavvas, G. (eds), Eastern Mediterranean Metallurgy and Metalwork in the Second Millennium bc : 1425. Oxford, Oxbow.Google Scholar
Knapp, A.B. (2013) Revolution within evolution: the emergence of a ‘secondary state’ on Protohistoric Bronze Age Cyprus. Levant 45: 1944.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knapp, A.B. and Cherry, J.F. (1994) Provenience Studies and Bronze Age Cyprus: Production, Exchange, and Politico-Economic Change (Monographs in World Archaeology 21). Madison (WI), Prehistory Press.Google Scholar
Knapp, A.B. and Demesticha, S. (2016) Mediterranean Connections: Maritime Transport Containers and Seaborne Trade in the Bronze and Early Iron Ages. London/New York, Routledge.Google Scholar
Lai, L. (2013) External role in the social transformation of Nuragic society? A case study from Sàrrala, eastern Sardinia, Middle Bronze to early Iron Age. In Alberti, M.A. and Sabatini, S. (eds), Exchange Networks and Local Transformations: Interaction and Local Change in Europe and the Mediterranean from the Bronze Age to the Iron Age: 92101. Oxford, Oxbow.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leidwanger, J., Knappett, C., Arnaud, P., Arthur, P., Blake, E., Broodbank, C., Brughmans, T., Evans, T., Graham, S., Greene, E.S., Kowalzig, B., Mills, B., Rivers, R., Tartaron, T.F. and Van de Noort, R. (2014) A manifesto for the study of ancient Mediterranean maritime networks. Antiquity 342. Online only: http://journal.antiquity.ac.uk/projgall/leidwanger342 Google Scholar
Leighton, R. (1999) Sicily before History: An Archaeological Survey from the Palaeolithic to the Iron Age. London, Duckworth.Google Scholar
Levi, S.T. (2004) Produzioni artigianali: la ceramica. Circolazione dei produtti e organizzazione della manufattura. In Genick, D. Cocchi (ed.), L'Età del Bronzo recente in Italia: 233–42. Viareggio, Mauro Baroni.Google Scholar
Lo Schiavo, F. (1985) Nuragic Sardinia in its Mediterranean Setting (Edinburgh University, Department of Archaeology, Occasional Paper 12). Edinburgh, University of Edinburgh Department of Archaeology.Google Scholar
Lo Schiavo, F. (1990) Copper oxhide and plano-convex ingots in Sardinia. In Schiavo, F. Lo, Maddin, R., Merkel, J., Muhly, J.D. and Stech, T., Metallographic and Statistical Analyses of Copper Ingots from Sardinia (Ministero per i Beni Culturali e Ambientali, Soprintendenza ai Beni Archaeologici per le Province de Sassari e Nuoro, Quaderni 17): 1540. Ozieri, Sardinia, Torchietto.Google Scholar
Lo Schiavo, F. (1995) Cyprus and Sardinia in the Mediterranean: trade routes toward the west. In Karageorghis, V. and Michaelides, D. (eds), Cyprus and the Sea: 4560. Nicosia, University of Cyprus, Cyprus Ports Authority.Google Scholar
Lo Schiavo, F. (2001) Late Cypriot bronzework and bronzeworkers in Sardinia, Italy and elsewhere in the west. In Bonfante, L. and Karageorghis, V. (eds), Italy and Cyprus in Antiquity, 1500–450 bc : 131–52. Nicosia, Leventis Foundation.Google Scholar
Lo Schiavo, F. (2003a) The problem of early tin from the point of view of Nuragic Sardinia. In Giumlia-Mair, A. and Schiavo, F. Lo (eds), The Problem of Early Tin (British Archaeological Reports, International Series 121–32). Oxford, Archaeopress.Google Scholar
Lo Schiavo, F. (2003b) Sardinia between east and west: interconnections in the Mediterranean. In Stampolidis, N.C. and Karageorghis, V. (eds), Ploes … Sea Routes … Interconnections in the Mediterranean 16th–6th c. bc : 1533. Athens, Leventis Foundation.Google Scholar
Lo Schiavo, F. (2005a) Early documents on Nuragic metallurgy. In Schiavo, F. Lo, Giumlia-Mair, A., Sanna, U. and Valera, R. (eds), Archaeometallurgy in Sardinia: From the Origin to the Early Iron Age (Monographies Instrumentum 30): 289–96. Montagnac, France, Editions Monique Mergoil.Google Scholar
Lo Schiavo, F. (2005b) Oxhide ingots, Cyprus and Sardinia. In Schiavo, F. Lo, Giumlia-Mair, A., Sanna, U. and Valera, R. (eds), Archaeometallurgy in Sardinia: From the Origin to the Early Iron Age (Monographies Instrumentum 30): 305–31. Montagnac, France, Editions Monique Mergoil.Google Scholar
Lo Schiavo, F. (2006) Ipotesi sulla circolazione dei metalli nel Mediterraneo centrale. In Genick, D. Cocchi (ed.), Atti della XXXIX Riunione Scientifica, Materie prime e scambi nella preistoria italiana: 1319–27. Florence, Istituto Italiano di Preistoria e Protostoria.Google Scholar
Lo Schiavo, F. (2008) Oxhide ingots in the central Mediterranean: recent perspectives. In Tzachili, I. (ed.), Aegean Metallurgy in the Bronze Age: 277–45. Athens, Ta Pragmata.Google Scholar
Lo Schiavo, F. (2009) Oxhide ingots in Sardinia. In Schiavo, F. Lo, Muhly, J.D., Maddin, R. and Mair, A. Giumlia (eds), Oxhide Ingots in the Central Mediterranean (Biblioteca di Antichità Cipriote 8): 225407. Rome, Istituto di Studi sulle Civilità dell'Egeo e del Vicino Oriente.Google Scholar
Lo Schiavo, F. (2013a) I lingotti ‘a forma di pelle di bue’ da S. Anastasia (Borgo) e da Sète, nel quadro della problematica della navigazione e degli scambi nel Mediterraneo centrale. In Pergola, P. and Schiavo, F. Lo (eds), Les lingots peau-de-bœuf et la navigation en Méditerranée centrale (Patrimone d'une Île 4): 1532. Ajaccio, Éditions Alain Piazzola.Google Scholar
Lo Schiavo, F. (2013b) Commento preliminare su un'applicazione plastica particolare dal nuraghe Coi Casu (S. Anna Arresi-CA). In Pergola, P. and Schiavo, F. Lo (eds), Les lingots peau-de-bœuf et la navigation en Méditerranée centrale (Patrimone d'une Île 4): 52–5. Ajaccio, Éditions Alain Piazzola.Google Scholar
Lo Schiavo, F., Antona, A., Bafico, S., Campus, F., Cossu, T., Fonzo, O., Forci, A., Garibaldi, P., Isetti, E., Lanza, S., Leonelli, V., Perra, M., Puddu, M.G., Relli, R., Rossi, G., Sanges, M., Usai, A. and Usai, L. (2004) La Sardegna: articolazioni cronologiche e differenziazioni locali – la metallurgia. In Genick, D. Cocchi (ed.), L'Età del Bronzo recente in Italia: 357–83. Viareggio, Italy, M. Baroni.Google Scholar
Lo Schiavo, F. and Campus, F. (2013) Metals and beyond: Cyprus and Sardinia in the Bronze Age Mediterranean network. Pasiphae 7: 147–58.Google Scholar
Lo Schiavo, F., Macnamara, E. and Vagnetti, L. (1985) Late Cypriot imports to Italy and their influence on local bronzework. Papers of the British School at Rome 53: 171.Google Scholar
McCaslin, D. (1980) Stone Anchors in Antiquity: Coastal Settlements and Maritime Trade-Routes in the Eastern Mediterranean ca.1600–1050 b.c. (Studies in Mediterranean Archaeology 61). Göteborg, P. Åströms Förlag.Google Scholar
Macnamara, E. (2002) Some bronze typologies in Sardinia and Italy from 1200 to 700 bc, their origin and development. In Paoletti, O. and Perna, L. Tamagno (eds), Etruria e Sardegna centro-settentrionale tra l'Età del Bronzo finale e l'arcaismo: 151–74. Pisa, Istituti Editorali e Poligrafici Internazionali.Google Scholar
Malone, C., Stoddart, S. and Whitehouse, R. (1994) The Bronze Age of southern Italy, Sicily and Malta c. 2000–800 b.c. In Mathers, C. and Stoddart, S. (eds), Development and Decline in the Mediterranean Bronze Age (Sheffield Archaeological Monographs 8): 167–94. Sheffield, J.R. Collis Publications.Google Scholar
Manning, S.W. and Hulin, L. (2005) Maritime commerce and geographies of mobility in the Late Bronze Age eastern Mediterranean: problematizations. In Blake, E. and Knapp, A.B. (eds), The Archaeology of Mediterranean Prehistory: 270302. Oxford, Blackwell Publishing.Google Scholar
Marazzi, M. and Tusa, S. (2005) Egei in Occidente. Le più antiche vie maritime alla luce dei nuovi scavi sull'isola di Pantelleria. In Laffineur, R. and Greco, E. (eds), Emporia: Aegeans in the Central and Eastern Mediterranean (Aegaeum 25 (2)): 599609. Liège, Université de Liège/Austin (TX), University of Texas at Austin.Google Scholar
Marazzi, M., Tusa, S. and Vagnetti, L. (1986) (eds) Traffici Micenei nel Mediterraneo: problemi storici e documentazione archeologica (Magna Graecia 3). Taranto, Sicily, Istituto per la Storia e l'Archeologia della Magno Grecia.Google Scholar
Mayr, A. (1901) Die vorgeschichtlichen Denkmäler von Malta. Abhandlunger der Königlish Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften 21: 645721.Google Scholar
Militello, P. (2004) Commercianti, architetti ed artigiani: riflessioni sulla presenza micenea nell'area Iblea. In Rosa, V. La (ed.), Le presenze Micenee nel territorio Siricusano: 295336. Padua, Bottega d'Erasmo.Google Scholar
Militello, P. (2005) Mycenaean palaces and western trade: a problematic relationship. In Laffineur, R. and Greco, E. (eds), Emporia: Aegeans in the Central and Eastern Mediterranean (Aegaeum 25(2)): 585–97. Liège, Université de Liège/Austin (TX), University of Texas at Austin.Google Scholar
Monroe, C.M. (2010) Sunk costs at Late Bronze Age Uluburun. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 357: 1933.Google Scholar
Muhly, J.D. (2003) Trade in metals in the Late Bronze Age and Iron Age. In Stampolidis, N.C. and Karageorghis, V. (eds), Ploes … Sea Routes … Interconnections in the Mediterranean, 16th–6th c. bc : 141–50. Athens, University of Crete, Leventis Foundation.Google Scholar
Palmer, R. (2003) Trade in wine, perfumed oil and foodstuffs: the Linear B evidence and beyond. In Stampolidis, N.C. and Karageorghis, V. (eds), Ploes … Sea Routes … Interconnections in the Mediterranean, 16th–6th c. bc : 125–40. Athens, University of Crete, Leventis Foundation.Google Scholar
Peet, T.E. (1910) Contributions to the study of the prehistoric period in Malta. Papers of the British School at Rome 5: 141–63.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pernicka, E. (2014) Provenance determination of archaeological metal objects. In Roberts, B.W. and Thornton, C. (eds), Archaeometallurgy in Global Perspective: Methods and Syntheses, 239–68. Berlin, Springer.Google Scholar
Perra, M. (2009) Osservazioni sull'evoluzione sociale e politica in età nuragica. Rivista di Scienze Preistoriche 59: 355–68.Google Scholar
Phelps, W., Lolos, Y. and Vichos, Y. (1999) (eds) The Point Iria Wreck: Interconnections in the Mediterranean ca. 1200 bc . Athens, Hellenic Institute of Marine Archaeology.Google Scholar
Pulak, C. (1998) The Uluburun shipwreck: an overview. International Journal of Nautical Archaeology 27: 188224.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pulak, C. (2008) The Uluburun shipwreck and Late Bronze Age trade. In Aruz, J., Benzel, K. and Evans, J.M. (eds), Beyond Babylon: Art, Trade, and Diplomacy in the Second Millennium bc , 289310. New York/New Haven (CT)/London, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Renfrew, A.C. (1975) Trade as action at a distance: questions of integration and communication. In Sabloff, J.A. and Lamberg-Karlovsky, C.C. (eds), Ancient Civilization and Trade, 359. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.Google Scholar
Ruiz-Gálvez, M. (2014) Before the ‘gates of Tartessos’: indigenous knowledge and exchange networks in the Late Bronze Age far west. In Knapp, A.B. and van Dommelen, P. (eds), The Cambridge Prehistory of the Bronze and Iron Age Mediterranean: 196214. New York, Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Russell, A. (2010) Foreign materials, islander mobility and elite identity in Late Bronze Age Sardinia. In van Dommelen, P. and Knapp, A.B. (eds), Material Connections in the Ancient Mediterranean: Mobility, Materiality and Identity: 106–26. London, Routledge.Google Scholar
Russell, A. (2011) In the Middle of the Corrupting Sea: Cultural Encounters in Sicily and Sardinia between 1450–900 bc . University of Glasgow, Ph.D. thesis.Google Scholar
Rutter, J.B. (2006) Ceramic imports of the Neopalatial and later Bronze Age eras. In Shaw, J.W. and Shaw, M.C. (eds), Kommos: An Excavation on the South Coast of Crete by the University of Toronto under the Auspices of the American School of Classical Studies in Athens. Kommos V: The Monumental Minoan Buildings at Kommos: 646–88, 712–15. Princeton (NJ)/Oxford, Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Saltini Semerari, G. (2016) Towards an archaeology of disentanglement. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory (online only: DOI 10.1007/s10816-016-9277-z).Google Scholar
Sanna, U., Valera, R. and Lo Schiavo, F. (2003) (eds) Archeometallurgia in Sardegna: dalle origini al primo ferro. Cagliari, Università degle Studi di Cagliari e Consiglio Nazionale delle Richerche.Google Scholar
Smith, T.R. (1987) Mycenaean Trade and Interaction in the West Central Mediterranean (British Archaeological Reports, International Series 371). Oxford, British Archaeological Reports.Google Scholar
Stech, T. (1989) Nuragic metallurgy in Sardinia: third preliminary report. In Hauptmann, A., Pernicka, E. and Wagner, G.A. (eds), Old World Archaeometallurgy (Die Anschnitt, Beiheft 7): 3944. Bochum, Deutsches Bergbaumuseum.Google Scholar
Stockhammer, P. (2012) Performing the practice turn in archaeology. Transcultural Studies 2012(1): 742.Google Scholar
Stockhammer, P. (2015) Lost in things: an archaeologist's perspective on the epistemological potential of objects. In Böschen, S., Gläser, J. and Schubert, C. (eds), Material Objects as a Challenge to Empirical Research (Nature and Culture 10(3)): 269–83. New York/London, Berghahn Books.Google Scholar
Stos-Gale, S. and Gale, N.H. (1992) New light on the provenience of the copper oxhide ingots found on Sardinia. In Tykot, R.H. and Andrews, T.K. (eds), Sardinia in the Mediterranean: A Footprint in the Sea (Monographs in Mediterranean Archaeology 3): 317–46. Sheffield, Sheffield Academic Press.Google Scholar
Stos-Gale, S. and Gale, N.H. (2010) Bronze Age metal artefacts found on Cyprus — metal from Anatolia and the western Mediterranean. Trabajos de Prehistoria 67: 389403.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stos-Gale, Z.A., Maliotis, G., Gale, N.H. and Annetts, N. (1997) Lead isotope characteristics of the Cyprus copper ore deposits applied to provenance studies of copper oxhide ingots. Archaeometry 39: 83123.Google Scholar
Tanasi, D. (2004) Per un riesame degli elementi di tipo miceneo nella cultura di Pantalica Nord. In Rosa, V. La (ed.), Le presenze Micenee nel territorio Siricusano: 337–83. Padua, Bottega d'Erasmo.Google Scholar
Tanasi, D. (2005) Mycenaean pottery imports and local imitations: Sicily vs. southern Italy. In Laffineur, R. and Greco, E. (eds), Emporia: Aegeans in the Central and Eastern Mediterranean (Aegaeum 25 (2)): 561–69. Liège, Université de Liège/Austin (TX), University of Texas at Austin.Google Scholar
Tanasi, D. (2006) La necropoli protostorica di montagna di Caltagirone (Praehistorica Mediterranea 1). Milan, Polimetrica.Google Scholar
Tanasi, D. (2009) Sicily at the end of the Bronze Age: ‘catching the echo’. In Bachhuber, C. and Roberts, R.G. (eds), Forces of Transformation: The End of the Bronze Age in the Mediterranean (BANEA Publication Series 1): 51–8. Oxford, Oxbow.Google Scholar
Tanasi, D. and Vella, N. (2014) Islands and mobility: exploring Bronze Age connectivity in the south-central Mediterranean. In Knapp, A.B. and van Dommelen, P. (eds), The Cambridge Prehistory of the Bronze and Iron Age Mediterranean: 5773. New York, Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Taylour, W. (1958) Mycenaean Pottery in Italy and Adjacent Areas. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Tomasello, F. (2004) L'architettura ‘micenea’ nel Siracusano. To-ko-do-mo a-pe-o o de-me-o-te? In Rosa, V. La (ed.), Le presenze Micenee nel territorio Siricusano: 187215. Padua, Bottega d'Erasmo.Google Scholar
Tusa, S. (1999) La Sicilia nella preistoria (Nuovo Prisma Collana Diretta da Antonino Buttitta 13). Palermo, Sellerio Editore.Google Scholar
Tusa, S. (2000) La società siciliana e il ‘contatto’ con il Mediterraneo centro-orientale dal II millennio a.C. agli inizi del primo millennio a.C. Sicilia Archeologica 98: 939.Google Scholar
Tusa, S. (2001) Siclila, Eolie, Flegrie e Micenei. In Marazzi, M. and Tusa, S. (eds), Preistoria dalle costa della Sicilia alle isole Flegree. Catalogo della Mostra, 258–60. Siracusa, Arnaldo Lombardi Editore.Google Scholar
Ugas, G. (1992) Considerazioni sullo sviluppo dell'architettura e della società Nuragica. In Tykot, R.H. and Andrews, T.K. (eds), Sardinia in the Mediterranean: A Footprint in the Sea (Monographs in Mediterranean Archaeology 3): 221–34. Sheffield, Sheffield Academic Press.Google Scholar
Vagnetti, L. (1998) Variety and function of the Aegean derivative pottery in the central Mediterranean in the Late Bronze Age. In Gitin, S., Mazar, A. and Stern, E. (eds), Mediterranean Peoples in Transition: Thirteenth to Early Tenth Centuries bce : 6677. Jerusalem, Israel Exploration Society.Google Scholar
Vagnetti, L. (2001) Some observations on Late Cypriot pottery from the central Mediterranean. In Bonfante, L. and Karageorghis, V. (eds), Italy and Cyprus in Antiquity, 1500–450 bc : 7796. Nicosia, Leventis Foundation.Google Scholar
Vagnetti, L. and Lo Schiavo, F. (1989) Late Bronze Age trade in the Mediterranean: the role of the Cypriots. In Peltenburg, E.J. (ed.), Early Society in Cyprus: 217–43. Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press.Google Scholar
van Dommelen, P. (1998) On Colonial Grounds: A Comparative Study of Colonialism and Rural Settlement in First Millennium bc West Central Sardinia (Leiden University Archaeological Studies). Leiden, Faculty of Archaeology, Leiden University.Google Scholar
van Dommelen, P. and Knapp, A.B. (eds) (2010) Material Connections in the Ancient Mediterranean: Mobility, Materiality and Mediterranean Identities. London, Routledge.Google Scholar
Vella, N.C. and Gilkes, O. (2001) The lure of the antique: nationalism, politics and archaeology in British Malta (1880–1964). Papers of the British School at Rome 69: 353–84.Google Scholar
Vianello, A. (2005) Late Bronze Age Mycenaean and Italic Products in the West Mediterranean: A Social and Economic Analysis (British Archaeological Reports, International Series 1439). Oxford, Archeopress.Google Scholar
Vianello, A. (2008) Late Bronze Age trade routes in the western Mediterranean. In Whittaker, H. (ed.), The Aegean Bronze Age in Relation to the Wider European Context (British Archaeological Reports, International Series 1745): 734. Oxford, Archaeopress.Google Scholar
Watrous, L.V., Day, P.M. and Jones, R.E. (1998) The Sardinian pottery from the Late Bronze Age site of Kommos in Crete: description, chemical and petrographic analyses, and historical context. In Balmuth, M.S. and Tykot, R.H. (eds), Sardinia and Aegean Chronology: Towards the Resolution of Relative and Absolute Dating in the Mediterranean (Studies in Sardinian Archaeology 5): 337–40. Oxford, Oxbow Books.Google Scholar
Webster, G.S. (2016) The Archaeology of Nuragic Sardinia (Monographs in Mediterranean Archaeology 14). Sheffield, Equinox.Google Scholar