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Chapter 1 - Artefacts and Contexts

from Part I - Aegean Neolithic Art

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 May 2022

Jean-Claude Poursat
Affiliation:
University of Clermont-Ferrand
Carl Knappett
Affiliation:
University of Toronto
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Summary

The establishment of a sedentary way of life in permanent villages; the beginnings of agriculture (cultivation of cereals and pulses) and animal domestication, which together replace hunting and gathering; and, not long after, the use of pottery: these are the profound changes that mark the shift from the hunter-gatherers of the Mesolithic to Neolithic culture. The Neolithic developed gradually from c.10,000 bc, initially in the ‘Fertile Crescent’ from Mesopotamia to northern Syria, then across the entire Near East. In Europe it established itself first in the Balkans, along the Danube, before reaching the Aegean world around 7000 bc.

The conditions under which this process of ‘Neolithisation’ occurred are still hotly debated. The Neolithic was in all likelihood introduced into Greece by an influx of farmers from the Levant and Anatolia – small groups ended up mixing with local populations, bringing their animals, cereals, and new practices.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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References

Further Reading

Alram-Stern, 1996: Alram-Stern, E., Das Neolithikum in Griechenland, mit Ausnahme von Kreta und Zypern, Wien.Google Scholar
Dietz, 2018: Dietz, S. et al. eds., Communities in Transition: The Circum-Aegean Area during the 5th and 4th Millennia BC, Oxford and Philadelphia, PA.Google Scholar
Efstratiou, 2013: Efstratiou, N., Karetsou, A., Ntinou, M. eds., The Neolithic Settlement of Knossos in Crete: New Evidence for the Early Occupation of Crete and the Aegean Islands, Philadelphia, PA.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Galanidou, and Perlès, 2003: Galanidou, N., Perlès, C. eds., The Greek Mesolithic: Problems and Perspectives, London.Google Scholar
Heurtley, 1939: Heurtley, W., Prehistoric Macedonia: An Archaeological Reconnaissance of Greek Macedonia (West of the Struma) in the Neolithic, Bronze and Early Iron Ages, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Perlès, 2001: Perlès, C., The Early Neolithic in Greece: The First Farming Communities in Europe, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sampson, 2019: Sampson, A., Palaeolithic and Mesolithic Sailors in the Aegean and the Near East, Newcastle upon Tyne.Google Scholar
Simmons, 2014: Simmons, A. H., Stone Age Sailors: Paleolithic Seafaring in the Mediterranean, Walnut Creek, CA.Google Scholar
Wace, and Thompson, 1912: Wace, A., Thompson, M., Prehistoric Thessaly, Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar

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