Universitätsbibliothek HeidelbergUniversitätsbibliothek Heidelberg
Metadaten

Evans, Arthur J.
The Palace of Minos: a comparative account of the successive stages of the early Cretan civilization as illustred by the discoveries at Knossos (Band 1): The Neolithic and Early and Middle Minoan Ages — London, 1921

DOI Page / Citation link:
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.807#0533

DWork-Logo
Overview
Facsimile
0.5
1 cm
facsimile
Scroll
OCR fulltext
M. M. Ill: KNOSSIAN FAIENCE: THE BEADS 491

law the paler tones of the earlier Egyptian tradition are here, as a rule,
superseded by a much deeper, bluish green hue, though some of the beads
were almost white, or parti-coloured white and green. The more oval type
(6) reproduces a contemporary Egyptian form, and the same is true of the
1 segmented' beads (a).

This 'segmented' type has an exceptional archaeological importance. History of
It clearly originated in the Early Egyptian practice of threading together merited^"

Variety.

GROUP OF SEPARATE BEADS (PALE BLUE)
AByD0S,PR0TODVNASTIC,AL5O SUCCEEDING PERIODS

2 MAHASNA Xl'-h DYN
deep blue green

7. XIXT-H DYN
[blue green]

c i300

4.XVIII DYN

3.XVIII DVN

[3*4. blue green surface [turquoise and
ver> vitreous] c.1500 bc-4 pale ultramarine]

c 1575 .o

5-TELL-EL-AMARNA 6.TELL-f l-AMARNA FABRIC

cezer
c i37«5 b.c.

S.9. CREMATION DEPOSIT GUROB

StTY II C I2I4- I209
8.YELLOW PAST E 9. BLUE GREEN BURNT

10. ain SHEMS
c-i20o ~ iioo
pale blue GREEN

ii.i2tell defenneh
xxvith Dy/S c60o.b.c
VE ry pale gla2e

EGYPT

® OLE

13 6 14 temple repositories
kwos505 c-1600 b-c.
pale blue green
m m.lll

FUENTE ALAMO SPAIN
bluish green&white

5.e.5pain.

Cb3 ^X/i^X^Xiiii^

15-MACE BEARERS TOMB
KNOSSOS L.M.lll.a
C woo b-C'
(very pale- blue green)

MINOAN

16.pmaestos

pale blue
c-1400
lm. 111 a

17. CYPRO-MINOAN
ENKOMI [CI350-I250.BC]
18 LIDIR-LEDRAE

L.M.III. G.

BARROW. KINGSTON
peverell wilt.s

LAKE
w i lts

BRITISH I5LES [ EARLY BRONZE AGE BARROWS.]

Fig! 352. Segmented Types of Faience Beads.

bloxworth
down,dorset
[very pale|

STEVE NSTCN
AV R

separately short flat beads so as to form small groups, which led to the more
convenient device of moulding them in one, as lone single beads, the sections
of their original subdivisions surviving as grooves. Traces of this practice
appear already under the Xlth Dynasty,1 but the ordinary segmented form
of bead does not appear in Egypt, so far as the existing evidence goes, till
after the close of the Middle Kingdom.'2 That it was current, however, at

1 Beads belonging to the latest elements in 2 A 'bulged' version of the segmented
the cemetery of Mahasna(Ashmolean Museum) type appears to go back to the Xllth
present the 'twisted' type, No. 2. Dynasty.
 
Annotationen