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The prehistory of Cyprus: Problems and prospects
Authors:A. Bernard Knapp  Steve O. Held  Sturt W. Manning
Affiliation:(1) School of History, Philosophy and Politics, Macquarie University, 2109 Sydney, NSW, Australia;(2) No. 4 Zelgliweg, 8309 Breite, ZH, Switzerland;(3) Department of Classics, University of Reading, RG6 2AA Whiteknights, Reading, England
Abstract:The archaeological record of prehistoric Cyprus is rich, diverse, well-published, and frequently enigmatic. Regarded by many as a ldquobridgerdquo between western Asia and the Aegean, Cyprus and its past are frequently seen from scholarly perspectives prevalent in one of those two cultural areas. Its material culture, however, differs radically from that of either area. Apart from the early colonization episodes on the island (perhaps three during the pre-Neolithic and Neolithic), evidence of foreign contact remains limited until the Bronze Age (post-2500 B. C.). This study seeks to present the prehistory of Cyprus from an indigenous perspective, and to examine a series of archaeological problems that foreground Cyprus within its eastern Mediterranean context. The study begins with an overview of time, place, and the nature of fieldwork on the island, continues with a presentation and discussion of several significant issues in Cypriot prehistory (e.g., insularity, colonization, subsistence, regionalism, interaction, social complexity, economic diversity), and concludes with a brief discussion of prospects for the archaeology of Cyprus up to and ldquobeyond 2000rdquo.
Keywords:Cyprus  Eastern Mediterranean  island colonization  insularity  regionalism  complex society  metallurgical production/exchange  social theory  politics and archaeology
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