Lesson 6 Bibliography: The Early Minoan Period: The Tombs
P. P. Betancourt, “Tomb 4 at Pseira: Evidence for Minoan Social Practices,” in J. M. A. Murphy (ed.), Prehistoric Crete: Regional and Diachronic Studies on Mortuary Systems (Philadelphia 2011) 85-102.
E. M. Bonney, “A Reconsideration of Depositional Practices in Early Bronze Age Crete,” Aegean Archaeology 8[2005-2006] (2009) 31-50.
E. M. Bonney, “From Performing Death to Venerating the Ancestors at Lebena Yerokambos, Crete,” in A. Dakouri-Hild and M. J. Boyd (eds.), Staging Death: Funerary Performance, Architecture and Landscape in the Aegean (Berlin 2016) 275-296.
K. Branigan, “The Tombs of Mesara: New Tombs and New Evidence,” BICS 22(1975) 200-203.
K. Branigan, “Early Minoan Society: The Evidence of the Mesara Tholoi Reviewed,” in Aux origines de l’hellénisme: la Crète et la Grèce: Hommage à Henri van Effenterre (Paris 1984) 29-37.
K. Branigan, “Body-counts in the Mesara Tholoi,” in EILAPINI: Tomos timetikos gia ton Kathegete Nikolao Platona (Heraklion 1987) 299-309.
K. Branigan, “Ritual Interference with Human Bones in the Mesara Tholoi,” in R. Laffineur (ed.), THANATOS: Les coutumes funéraires en Égée à l'Age du Bronze [Aegaeum 1] (Liège 1987) 43-50.
K. Branigan, “Funerary Ritual and Social Cohesion in Early Bronze Age Crete,” Journal of Mediterranean Studies 1(1991) 183-192.
K. Branigan, “The Nearness of You: Proximity and Distance in Early Minoan Funerary Behaviour,” in K. Branigan (ed.), Cemetery and Society in the Aegean Bronze Age [Sheffield Studies in Aegean Archaeology 1] (Sheffield 1998) 13-26.
T. Carter, “Reverberation of the International Spirit: Thoughts upon ‘Cycladica’ in the Mesara,” in K. Branigan (ed.), Cemetery and Society in the Aegean Bronze Age [Sheffield Studies in Aegean Archaeology 1] (Sheffield 1998) 59-77.
M. Cultraro, “La brocchetta dei vivi per la sete dei morti: riconsiderazione delle camerette a sud della grande tholos di Haghia Triada,” in Pepragmena tou H' Diethnous Kretologikou Synedriou (Heraklion 2000) A1: 309-326.
E. E. Galligan, From Tholos to Palace: Individual and Corporate Identity in Prepalatial Burials and Seal Iconography (MA thesis, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 2007).
E. Gerontakou, “Dyo Mesominoïkoi apothetes sto nekrotapheio tou Platanou,” in A. Vlachopoulos and K. Birtacha (eds.), ARGONAUTIS: Timetikos tomos yia ton Kathegete Christo G. Douma apo tous mathetes tou sto Panepistimio Athenon (1980-2000) (Athens 2003) 303-330.
L. Girella and S. Todaro, “Secondary Burials and the Construction of Group Identities in Crete between the Second Half of the 4th and 2nd Millennia BC,” in M. Mina, S. Triantaphyllou, and Y. Papadatos (eds.), An Archaeology of Prehistoric Bodies and Embodied Identities in the Eastern Mediterranean (Oxford 2016) 171-179.
L. Goodison, “From Tholos Tomb to Throne Room: Perceptions of the Sun in Minoan Ritual,” in R. Laffineur and R. Hägg, POTNIA. Deities and Religion in the Aegean Bronze Age [Aegaeum 22] (Liège/Austin 2001) 77-88.
Y. Hamilakis, “Eating the Dead: Mortuary Feasting and the Politics of Memory in the Aegean Bronze Age Societies,” in K. Branigan (ed.), Cemetery and Society in the Aegean Bronze Age [Sheffield Studies in Aegean Archaeology 1] (Sheffield 1998) 115-132.
E. Hatzaki, “Visible and Invisible Death. Shifting Patterns in the Burial Customs of Bronze Age Crete,” in M. Relaki and Y. Papadatos (eds.), From the Foundations to the Legacy of Minoan Society [Sheffield Studies in Aegean Archaeology 12] (Oxford 2018) 190-209.
B. Legarra Herrero, Mortuary Behaviour and Social Organization in Pre- and Protopalatial Crete (Ph.D. dissertation, University College, London 2007).
C. Maggidis, “From Polis to Necropolis: Social Ranking from Architectural and Mortuary Evidence in the Minoan Cemetery at Phourni, Archanes,” in K. Branigan (ed.), Cemetery and Society in the Aegean Bronze Age [Sheffield Studies in Aegean Archaeology 1] (Sheffield 1998) 87-102.
C. Maggidis, “Minoan Burial Customs and Social Ranking at Archanes,” in A. Karetsou (ed.), Pepragmena tou H’ Diethnous Kretologikou Synedriou (Heraklion 2000) A2: 179-197.
P. McGeorge, “Intramural Infant Burials in the Aegean Bronze Age: Reflections on Symbolism and Eschatology with Particular Reference to Crete,” in O. Henry (ed.), Le mort dans la ville: Pratiques, contexts et impacts des inhumations intra-muros en Anatolie, du début de l’Âge du Bronze à l’époque romaine (Istanbul 2013) 1-19.
J. Murphy, “Ideology, Rites and Rituals: A View of Prepalatial Minoan Tholoi,” in K. Branigan (ed.), Cemetery and Society in the Aegean Bronze Age [Sheffield Studies in Aegean Archaeology 1] (Sheffield 1998) 27-40.
J. Murphy, “Private Life, Public Death: Contrasts in Minoan Prepalatial Society,” in A. Karetsou (ed.), Pepragmena tou H’ Diethnous Kretologikou Synedriou (Heraklion 2000) A2: 405-411.
J. Murphy, “Individual, Household, and Community after Death in Prepalatial and Protopalatial South-central Crete,” in K. T. Glowacki and N. Vogeikoff-Brogan (eds.), STEGA: The Archaeology of Houses and Households in Ancient Crete [Hesperia Supplement 44] (Princeton 2011) 51-58.
C. Papadopoulos, Death Management and Virtual Pursuits: A Virtual Reconstruction of the Minoan Cemetery at Phourni, Archanes. Examining the Use of Tholos Tomb C and Burial Building 19 and the Role of Illumination in Relation to Mortuary Practices and the Perception of Life and Death by the Living [BAR-IS 2082] (Oxford 2010).
I. Schoep, “The House Tomb in Context: Assessing Mortuary Behaviour in North-east Crete,” in M. Relaki and Y. Papadatos (eds.), From the Foundations to the Legacy of Minoan Society [Sheffield Studies in Aegean Archaeology 12] (Oxford 2018) 167-189.
I. Schoep and P. Tomkins, “’Death Is Not the End’: Tracing the Manipulation of Bodies and Other Materials in the Early and Middle Minoan Cemetery at Sissi,” in A. Dakouri-Hild and M. J. Boyd (eds.), Staging Death: Funerary Performance, Architecture and Landscape in the Aegean (Berlin 2016) 227-250.
J. Soles, “Social Ranking in Prepalatial Cemeteries,” in E. B. French and K. A. Wardle (eds.), Problems in Greek Prehistory (Bristol 1988) 49-61.
S. Triantaphyllou, “Kephala Petras: The Human Remains and the Burial Practices in the Rock Shelter,” in M. Tsipopoulou (ed.), Petras, Siteia: 25 Years of Excavations and Studies [Monographs of the Danish Institute at Athens 16] (Athens 2012) 161-170.
S. Triantaphyllou, “Managing with Death in Prepalatial Crete: The Evidence of the Human Remains,” in M. Relaki and Y. Papadatos (eds.), From the Foundations to the Legacy of Minoan Society [Sheffield Studies in Aegean Archaeology 12] (Oxford 2018) 141-166.
G. Vavouranakis, “Funerary Customs and Maritime Activity in Early Bronze Age Crete,” in G. Vavouranakis (ed.), The Seascape in Aegean Prehistory [Monographs of the Danish Institute at Athens 14] (Aarhus 2011) 91-118.
G. Vavouranakis, “Funerary Pithoi in Bronze Age Crete: Their Introduction and Significance at the Threshold of Minoan Palatial Society,” AJA 118(2014) 197-222.
G. Vavouranakis, “A Posthumanocentric Approach to Funerary Ritual and its Sociohistorical Significance: The Early and Middle Bronze Age Tholos Tombs at Apesokari, Crete,” in A. Dakouri-Hild and M. J. Boyd (eds.), Staging Death: Funerary Performance, Architecture and Landscape in the Aegean (Berlin 2016) 253-274.