Lesson 10 Bibliography: Middle Minoan Crete
A. Boskamp, “Minoan Storage Capacities (1): Graffiti on Pithoi in the Palace Magazines at Knossos,” BSA 91(1996) 101-112.
E. Brown, “Traces of Luwian Dialect in Cretan Text and Toponyms,” SMEA 28(1990) 225-237.
K. Christakis, “From Potter’s Mark to the Potter Who Marks,” in M. Mina, S. Triantaphyllou, and Y. Papadatos (eds.), An Archaeology of Prehistoric Bodies and Embodied Entities in the Eastern Mediterranean (Oxford 2016) 136-144.
P. M. Day, E. D. Oren, L. Joyner, and P. S. Quinn, “Petrographic Analysis of the Tel Haror Inscribed Sherd: Seeking Provenience within Crete,” in P. P. Betancourt, V. Karageorghis, R. Laffineur, and W.-D. Niemeier (eds.), MELETEMATA: Studies in Aegean Archaeology Presented to Malcolm H. Wiener as He Enters His 65th Year [Aegaeum 20] (Liège/Austin 1999) 191-196.
P. Faure, “Les divinités de Phaistos,” in Antichità Cretesi. Studi in onore di Doro Levi I (Catania 1973) 186-196.
A. Karnava, “The Tel Haror Inscription and Crete: A Further Link,” in R. Laffineur and E. Greco (eds.), EMPORIA. Aegeans in the Central and Eastern Mediterranean [Aegaeum 25] (Liège/Austin 2005) 837-843.
E. D. Oren, J.-P. Olivier, Y. Goren, P. P. Betancurt, G. H. Myer, and J. Yellin, “A Minoan Graffito from Tel Haror (Negev, Israel),” Cretan Studies 5(1996) 91-118.