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An Early Minoan Sacred Cave at Arkalokhóri in Crete

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 October 2013

Extract

The village of Arkalokhóri in central Crete lies a short distance to the south-west of Lyttos. To the east of the village is an eminence to which the ruined church on the top has given the name of Prophetes Elias. Below the summit on the western slope is a cave, the mouth of which is shewn in Fig. 1. Many years ago the peasants found bronze objects and potsherds at this point, and began an excavation of the cave in the hope of finding buried treasure. On entering the cave they found more and more pieces of bronze, described as blades of knives and lances, as well as some beads, and in order to get more quickly to the bottom of the cave, where they supposed that the treasure would be, they broke up the greater part of it with dynamite. They say that they collected eighteen okes of bronze objects, for the most part rusted blades, and sold them in Candia as old metal. No report of this had ever reached me, but last year a peasant from Arkalokhóri brought some blades to the Candia Museum from this cave, and thus led me to go and make an examination of the place.

The mouth of the cave was then choked with large boulders which had fallen down from above; these I broke up and rolled down the slope. Beneath and amongst them I immediately began to find blades of swords and knives and double-axes, all of bronze with the exception of a small axe which was of silver. The area thus cleared after rolling away the boulders in front of the present cave, is about 4 metres in length, and in width from 1 to 2 metres, and seems to have been the floor of the original cave.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Council, British School at Athens 1913

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References

page 41 note 1 Explorations in Machlos, Fig. 28, xi, 6, p. 58 and Fig. 19, 1, p. 71.

page 41 note 2 As yet unpublished. See however The Year's Work in Classical Studies, 1906, p. 5; 1907, p. 13; 1908, p. 15.

page 41 note 3 One is figured in Ἀρχ. Ἐφ 1899, Pl. 9, No. 4. See also ibid. p. 86.

page 44 note 1 See Memorie dell' Instituto Lombardo Veneto di Lettere, xxi, Pl. x, Fig. 24 (1904) and Seager, , Explorations in Mochlos, Fig. 44, p. 74.Google Scholar

page 45 note 1 For the largest see Mem. dell' Inst. Lombardo Veneto di Lettere, xxi, Pl. ii, Fig. 5.

page 45 note 2 B.S.A. vi, p. 109.

page 45 note 3 B.S.A. viii, p. 101.

page 46 note 1 The manner in which the votive axes from the Psykhro cave were made is described by Hogarth, in B.S.A. vi, p. 109.Google Scholar

page 46 note 2 Op. cit. p. 35, Fig. 12 (ii, 46).

page 47 note 1 V. Mosso, , Le armi più antiche di rame e di bronzo (Reale Academia dei Lincei, anno ccciv, 1907).Google Scholar