Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2plfb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T00:05:11.515Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Beycesultan Excavations Second Preliminary Report, 1955

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 June 2015

Extract

The Second Excavating season at Beycesultan lasted from 1st May to 6th July, 1955. As a result of a motor accident on 30th April Mr. Seton Lloyd was unable to take charge of the work until 21st May and his place was taken by Mr. James Mellaart, Institute Fellow for 1955–56. The field staff also included Mr. G. R. H. Wright as architect and surveyor, Mrs. Wright as housekeeper and registrar, Mr. T. Burton Brown as visiting adviser, Mr. Maurice Cookson, whose services as photographer were kindly lent to us by the London Institute of Archaeology, and Mr. John Carswell as draughtsman. The Turkish Antiquities Department was represented by Bayan Nihal Dönmez, who relieved the Director of much administrative work. The expedition was once more housed in tents and rented accommodation in Menteş, village: thanks are again due to the Turkish Ministry of Education for the loan of the local school building as museum and workshop.

The season's work divided itself into three distinct phases. The first part of the excavations was confined to the eastern summit of the mound, where the great Burnt Palace had been discovered in 1954 (see Fig. 1), and consisted in the successive examination and clearance of the four uppermost levels (I–IV) over an area about thirty metres square, in order to gain access to the palace beneath. This work occupied the expedition throughout the greater part of May. The second phase was concerned with the extension of the palace excavations themselves in a north-westerly direction.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The British Institute at Ankara 1956

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

page 102 note 1 A first suspicion that so early a date would eventually have to be attributed to the palace was created by the discovery, during its excavation in 1954, of a limestone figurine (Plate XIIb) of a type which must clearly have survived from the Early Bronze Age.

page 118 note 1 Two comparable buildings, which are at present in the process of excavation by our Turkish colleagues, at Kültepe and Karahüyük (Konya), have unfortunately not yet reached a stage of investigation where detailed analysis is practicable.

page 120 note 1 cf. comparable features of the courtyard at Mallia.

page 120 note 2 e.g. in Chapouthier, F. and Charbonneaux, J., Fouilles exécutées à Mallia, Paris, 1928Google Scholar. Also reports in Études Crétoises, Vol. I, 1928Google Scholar, Vol. IV, 1936, and Vol. VI, 1942.

page 121 note 1 Though not in the Mallia Pillar Hall. See Études Crétoises, Vol. II, 1936, Pl. IV, 2Google Scholar.

page 122 note 1 Études Crétoises, Vol. VI, 1942, p. 9Google Scholar

page 123 note 1 Hutchinson, R. W., “Prehistoric town-planning in Crete,” Town Planning Review, XXI, No. 3Google Scholar.

page 123 note 2 That preferred by A. Goetze and B. Landsberger, which places Shamsi-Adad and Hammurabi at 1850 B.C.