Peak sanctuaries

Minoan peak sanctuaries are widespread throughout the island of Crete (Greece). Most scholars agree that peak sanctuaries were used for religious rites. In all peak sanctuaries, human and animal clay figurines have been found. Clay body parts, also called votive body parts, are also found in most peak sanctuaries. These open-air sanctuaries are found high in the mountains of Crete.

Eastern and east-central peak sanctuaries

Most peak sanctuaries are found in east and east-central Crete.

  • Petsofas is the only Minoan site with clay weasel and tortoise figurines
  • Traostalos
  • Kalamafki (also Kalamaki)
  • Ziros Korphi tou Mare
  • Xykephalo
  • Vigla (also Viglos)
  • Zou Prinias
  • Plagia
  • Etiani Kephala
  • Modi
  • Thylakas
  • Maza
  • Karfi

Central Crete peak sanctuaries

  • Iouktas is probably the earliest of the peak sanctuaries.
  • Tylissos (also Pyrgos Tylissos, not the same site as Pyrgos)
  • Gonies Philioremos

Western Crete peak sanctuaries

  • Vrysinas
  • Spili Vorizi
  • Atsipades in the Korakias mountains was fully excavated in the 1980s. Its many hundred clay figurines and other ceramics have been analysed in detail and will be presented in a forthcoming publication.

Other peak sanctuaries

This section is for peak sanctuaries mentioned in passing in articles where more research is needed before categorizing them.

gollark: Don't they also do syscalls and stuff?
gollark: So just flip between them instead?
gollark: Sort of defeats the point, doesn't it?
gollark: "Oh, this set of values is inconvenient, I'll go pick a new one."
gollark: Should you just *not* cling to ideals?

References

  • Chryssoulaki, Stella The Traostalos Peak Sanctuary: Aspects of Spatial Organisation Retrieved 19 January 2006
  • Jones, Donald W. 1999. Peak Sanctuaries and Sacred Caves in Minoan Crete. ISBN 91-7081-153-9
  • Kyriakidis, Evangelos. 2005. Ritual in the Aegean: The Minoan Peak Sanctuaries. London: Duckworth publishers
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.