Yannis Sakellarakis

Yannis A. Sakellarakis (Greek: Γιάννης Α. Σακελλαράκης; 1936 – October 28, 2010) was a prominent Greek archaeologist who specialized in Minoan Prehistory.

Yannis Sakellarakis
Born(1936-03-00)March , 1936
DiedOctober 28, 2010(2010-10-28) (aged 73–74)
Athens, Greece
NationalityGreek
Known forExcavation of Mt. Ida, Kythira, Archanes and Zominthos
Scientific career
FieldsArchaeology

Career

Sakellarakis studied archaeology at the University of Athens (Dept of History and Archaeology) and later pursued graduate studies at Heidelberg University, where he was awarded a doctorate in 1969.[1][2]

Sakellarakis taught at the Universities of Heidelberg, Hamburg and Athens. He served as the curator (1963-68) and then director (1980-87) of Heraklion Archaeological Museum in Crete and curator (1970-80) and later deputy director (1987-94) of the National Archaeological Museum in Athens.[3] He excavated sites at Archanes, Kythira and Mount Ida.

Sakellarakis attracted international attention in 1979, when, while excavating the hill of Anemospilia in Archanes with his wife Efi Sapouna-Sakellaraki, he discovered evidence for human sacrifice by the Minoans.[4][5] Another major discovery took place in 1982, when Sakellarakis unveiled a large, two-story Minoan building at Zominthos, a small plateau at an altitude around 1200 m in the northern foothills of Mount Ida (Psiloritis).

For his scientific achievements, Sakellarakis was awarded high honors and medals, including the Golden Cross of the Greek Order of Honour and the Gold Medal of the University of Crete. He was a member of the Academy of Athens and a corresponding member of the German Archaeological Institute and the Society of Antiquaries of London.

Personal life

Despite not being a Cretan by birth, Sakellarakis became strongly bonded to the island of Crete and its people, considering himself a naturalized Cretan. Sakellarakis was married to his colleague and long time coworker Efi Sapouna-Sakellaraki.[6]

gollark: Now, the diagram says "nginx". Nginx is also an important part of this setup. It is a reverse proxy allowing me to run all this slightly crazy stuff on one IP, and encrypt with "HTTPS" apiotechnology.
gollark: It also got a HTTP endpoint, available at https://radio.osmarks.net/random-stuff/current-song, which dumps the status etc. information in JSON for the frontend to read.
gollark: So this gained a loop polling MPD - remember, it has a client-server model, so other stuff can communicate with it. Use of MPD turned out to be a good design decision!
gollark: But that isn't very relevant here.
gollark: This also accreted a small admin interface and youtube-dl frontend, mostly as a result of an aborted attempt to implement SSO.

See also

References

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