Robert Koehl has long considered processions to have played an integral role in Aegean Bronze Age societies. Therefore, when assembling a volume to honor his retirement from Hunter College, contributing authors were asked to focus attention on this subject. Processions are a unique social phenomenon in that they engage large groups with a singular purpose or outcome, acting as a cohesive force in societies. Yet they are elusive both in Aegean art and texts, which has challenged the participants in this volume to approach the subject from various viewpoints, providing evidence of ritual and ceremonial places, pathways and practices, based on archaeological and, in one instance, textual evidence. Artistic depictions in a variety of media provide a means of identifying settings, participants and the possible roles they play, while specific ritual objects are the subject of some contributions, their context and imagery offering another means of enhancing our picture of processions. Papers concentrate mainly on evidence from Crete, the Cyclades and the Greek mainland, with additional perspectives from abroad, these geographic divisions forming the basic outline of the volume.
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The Pylos Ta Series and the Process of Inventorying Ritual Objects for a Funerary Banquet - Thomas G. Palaima: Download
Introduction: Processions
Tributes
Robert B. Koehl: Publications
Crete
Processions Aplenty: From Elite Palatial Parades to Mass Population
Pilgrimages in Middle and
Late Minoan Crete Malcolm H. Wiener
Processions in Aegean Iconography III: Where did they Take Place? Fritz
Blakolmer
The Theatral Area of Knossos Colin Macdonald
The Kilts on the Cupbearer and Men on the Procession Fresco from Knossos
Bernice R. Jones and Valerie Bealle
Minoan Processions Leading to Marvelous Destinations at Mochlos Jeffrey S.
Soles
Dressed Bodies in Motion: Toward a Sensorial Understanding of Funerary Ritual
in Prepalatial Crete Cynthia S. Colburn
Dance or Procession? A Ritual Scene on a Fruit-stand from Protopalatial
Phaistos, Crete Luca Girella
Rhyton Clusters in Neopalatial East Crete: Identity and the Ceremonial
Prerogatives of the House Brian S. Kunkel
Reapers Rout or Mariners March? Reconsidering the Harvester Vase from
Ayia Triada J. A. MacGillivray
Deimatic Display or Natures Apotropaia: The Meaning and Function of the
Octopus Iconography in the Bronze Age Aegean Michele Mitrovich
From Deep Waters to High Places: Reassessing the Ceremonial Significance of
Triton-shells at Neolithic Phaistos (Crete) Simona V. Todaro
The Cyclades
The Armed Warriors Procession: 1000 Years of Iconographic Development
Philip P. Betancourt
Rhyta at Bronze Age Phylakopi on Melos Jason W. Earle
Ocular Signs of Ecstatic Possession and Procession in Aegean Art Karen
Polinger Foster
Greek Mainland
Late Bronze Age Iklaina and Processional Architecture Michael Nelson
Tribute from the Griffin Warrior at Pylos Jack L. Davis and Sharon R.
Stocker
Processions in non-palatial Contexts: Social Ambitions and Narrative Idioms
in Mycenaean Greece Iphiyenia Tournavitou
Processions, Participants, People, and the Palace: Musings from Fragments
James C. Wright
The Creature of the Rings: An Unusual Jug Rhyton from LH IIIC Tiryns
Eleftheria Kardamaki, Maria Kostoula, Joseph Maran, and Alkestis
Papadimitriou
The Pylos Ta Series and the Process of Inventorying Ritual Objects for a
Funerary Banquet Thomas G. Palaima
Evoking the Deceased in Mycenaean Mortuary Ritual Mary K. Dabney
For at this Place the Sea Comes Nearest to Athens. Funerary Processions
in Archaic Athens Stella Chryssoulaki and Ioannis Pappas
Cyprus, Syria, the Levant, and Egypt
From Stasis to Repetition: Tracing Processional Movements in Prehistoric
Cyprus Eleni Mantzourani
Approaching Divinity in the Near East and the Aegean: Animals, Monsters,
Demons, and Masked
Human Processions Joan Aruz and Judith Weingarten
A Snapshot of a Victory Procession: A Winged Deity from Alalakh Wielding a
Dagger K. Aslhan Yener
The Iron Age Adventures of the God with the Fenestrated Axe Assaf
Yasur-Landau
Offerings for Eternity: Egypt, Nubia, and the Puzzle of the Egyptian Faience
Vessel from Alalakh Morena Stefanova
A Courtly Affair: Proceeding from Keftiu and all Islands in the Middle to
the Theban Necropolis Nisha Kumar
Italy
Clues of Bronze Age Processions in the Central Mediterranean Marco
Bettelli, Elisabetta Borgna and Sara Tiziana Levi