Abstract

Most archaeologists argue that the Aegean was cut off from the Near East in the tenth century B.C., but a new position is winning favor, seeing Iron Age Greece as a periphery to a Lcvantinc core. In this paper, I argue for a more complex model of negotiated peripherality. I try to understand how Greeks made sense of the East. For this, variations in local leadership were crucial Political changes in the Near East c. 1050 B.C. reduced contacts, and in the central Aegean, a new mythology emerged, stressing isolation in time and space and making sense of these shrinking horizons. People deliberately emphasized isolation in ritual, with one exception, a remarkable burial at Lefkandi c. 975 B.C. This inverted normal symbolic practices, using Orientalizing antiques and burial customs which throughout the first millennium were linked to the idea of a vanished race of semidivine heroes. This opposition between an inward-turned present and an expansionist past remained central to ancient Greek social structure..The tenth-century world-view explained isolation and decline; but I concentrate on the ninth century, in which contacts revived. I argue that some leaders struggled to preserve the model of isolation, while others embraced the East, or sought compromise. I trace these style wars at five sites, showing how the use of orientalia generally declined after 850 B.C., although Greek contact with Syria intensified. By 800 B.C. Greeks had negotiated among themselves a new relationship to the Near East, making it less threatening to the traditional order.

Highlights

  • IntroductionI concentrate on a small area, the Aegean, and on the particularities of its relationships with the Near East between about 1000 and 800 B.C. I follow this course, rather than offering a set of high-level theoretical abstractions, for two main reasons

  • In this paper, I concentrate on a small area, the Aegean, and on the particularities of its relationships with the Near East between about 1000 and 800 B.C

  • I begin my story after the destruction of the palaces of the Bronze Age, around 1200 B.C., and the opening of the so-called "Dark Age." Population fell, political centralization decrea-.ed, and advanced crafts, including writing, disapp eared

Read more

Summary

Introduction

I concentrate on a small area, the Aegean, and on the particularities of its relationships with the Near East between about 1000 and 800 B.C. I follow this course, rather than offering a set of high-level theoretical abstractions, for two main reasons. Because small-scale empirical studies are vital for the health of any grand theory; and second, because the grand sweep docs not pay enough attention to the way knowledgeable actors construct core-periphery relations. In my title I use Nick Kardulia-.'s expression "negotiated peripherality," because Greek-. In these two centuries developed competing visions of their own dependence on the Near Ea-.t, and combined these senses of space with different understandings of time a-. In my title I use Nick Kardulia-.'s expression "negotiated peripherality," because Greek-. in these two centuries developed competing visions of their own dependence on the Near Ea-.t, and combined these senses of space with different understandings of time a-. part of a complex ideological struggle

The Greek Dark Age
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call