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Article Issue 114.3

Mycenaean Dimini in Context: Investigating Regional Variability and Socioeconomic Complexities in Late Bronze Age Greece

Panagiota A. Pantou

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Proposed three-dimensional reconstruction of Megaron A and Megaron B at Dimini
Recent excavations at the Mycenaean town of Dimini in the Bay of Volos in Thessaly have led to the interpretation of this site by its excavator as the regional “palatial” administrative center. This article discusses the available archaeological evidence from all three known Mycenaean settlements in the Bay of Volos (Dimini, Kastro, and Pefkakia) and considers aspects of settlement pattern, architecture, artifact distribution, burial practices, and craft specialization in those settlements. In the analysis of the data, notions of different theoretical approaches are employed, such as heterarchy, power-sharing strategies, and factionalism, in addition to the traditional neo-evolutionary approach. The varied analytical perspectives of these interpretative models allow for a more complete understanding of the political organization and social change in the Bay of Volos during the Late Bronze Age and can expose regional variability in the Mycenaean world. It is argued that, based on present data, there is not sufficient archaeological evidence to suggest a central place hierarchy in the Bay of Volos. Ideological, economic, and political power at both settlement and regional level was not concentrated in one source, as the conventional “palatial” model proposes, but was shared across different groups and sectors of society.

Author bios

Volume 114 No. 3   
July 2010   
Table of Contents

Articles

Assembling King and State: The Statues of Manishtushu and the Consolidation of Akkadian Kingship
Melissa Eppihimer

Swords and Swordsmanship in the Aegean Bronze Age
Barry Molloy

Legendary Women and Greek Womanhood: The Heroines Pyxis in the British Museum
Anthony F. Mangieri

Parthian Influence on Vaulting in Roman Greece? An Inquiry into Technological Exchange Under Hadrian
Lynne C. Lancaster

Mapping Devotion in Roman Dura Europos: A Reconsideration of the Synagogue Ceiling
Karen B. Stern

Newsletter

Archaeology in Jordan, 2008 and 2009 Seasons
Donald R. Keller and Christopher A. Tuttle

Necrology

Elizabeth Lyding Will (1924–2009)
Nicholas K. Rauh

Museum Review

Beyond the Acropolis: New Installations of Greek Antiquities in Athenian Museums
Nassos Papalexandrou

Review Article

Local Responses to Roman Imperialism
Sarah A. Scott

Books Received

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