Monastiraki, Crete

Monastiraki is the archaeological site of an ancient Minoan town on the island of Crete.

Geography

The site is on the plain of Amari, west of the Ida massif. Monastiraki is 38 kilometres (24 miles) from Rethymnon.

Archaeology

Monastiraki was first excavated during World War II by the German Archaeological Institute. Excavations began again in 1980 by the University of Crete. Three areas have now been excavated. In the early 1980s an Italian team excavated a small area at the north end of the site where the first store of seals was found. Nearby is the area that was illegally excavated by the Germans during the Second World War. Their excavation was based on the notebooks of the noted British archaeologist J. D. S. Pendlebury, who was captured and executed by the Germans after the Battle of Crete. The Germans concluded that Monastiraki was a small site and their excavations were not extensive. Greek archaeologists have recently revisited the German excavations with some interesting results.

The main part of the excavation lies to the south of these two areas and is under the supervision of Greek archaeologist Athanasia Kanda. There is not very much published in the public domain, and photography is still forbidden at the site, a ruling enforced by the local villagers who allow visitors onto the site.

Monastiraki likely dates to the Middle Minoan Old Palace period and was destroyed at the same time as the old palaces. Its importance for archaeology, then, lies in the fact that it was not subsequently built on and remains one of the best examples of Middle Minoan archaeology on the island. It is clearly located on a strategically important site, dominating the Amari Valley which connects the south coast of Crete to the west of Phaistos with the north coast of Crete at present day Rethymno. It is quite likely that Monastiraki was developed by Phaistos inhabitants founding a satellite center. (Hogan, 2007)

The site may have been a palace, and has thus far yielded a complex of buildings, including storehouses, two archive rooms of earthenware stamps and sanctuaries.

References

  • Willetts, R.E. 1977 The Civilization of Ancient Crete ISBN 1-84212-746-2
  • C.Michael Hogan, Phaistos Fieldnotes, The Modern Antiquarian (2007)

Coordinates: 35°13′49″N 24°40′17″E / 35.2303°N 24.6713°E / 35.2303; 24.6713


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