THE ‘FRYING PANS’ OF THE EARLY BRONZE AGE AEGEAN: AN EXPERIMENTAL APPROACH TO THEIR POSSIBLE USE AS LIQUID MIRRORS* |
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Authors: | D. A. PAPATHANASSOGLOU CH. A. GEORGOULI |
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Affiliation: | Department of Physics, Section of Astrophysics, Astronomy and Mechanics, University of Athens, Panepistimiopolis, 15784 Athens, Greece |
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Abstract: | The so‐called ‘frying pans’ are peculiar vessels, most of them made of terracotta, flat and shallow, usually decorated on the outside part and dated to the Early Bronze Age. They were unearthed mostly in the Cyclades, in Crete and on the Helladic mainland. There are also a few artefacts made of stone and of bronze, from the Cyclades and Asia Minor, respectively. The intended purpose of these objects is disputed. Several interpretations exist for their function, the earliest one being that of liquid mirror vessels. We investigated the mirror hypothesis experimentally, by testing trays with attributes similar to those of the original ‘frying pans’, filled with a series of liquids familiar to the people of the time and the place where those vessels were made. The criterion employed was the contrast of mirror images. We conclude that, provided that some minimal prerequisites are met, the ‘frying pans’ are quite appropriate as liquid mirror vessels. |
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Keywords: | ‘ FRYING PANS’ EARLY BRONZE AGE CYCLADIC CIVILIZATION ANCIENT MIRRORS LIQUID MIRRORS |
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