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The Power of Technology in the Bronze Age Eastern Mediterranean - The Case of the Painted Plaster (Hardcover)
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The Power of Technology in the Bronze Age Eastern Mediterranean - The Case of the Painted Plaster (Hardcover)
Series: Monographs in Mediterranean Archaeology, v. 12
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In the past, Bronze Age painted plaster in the Aegean and the
Eastern Mediterranean has been studied from a range of different
but isolated viewpoints. One of the current questions about this
material is its direction of transfer. This volume brings both
technological and iconographic (and other) approaches closer
together: 1) by completing certain gaps in the literature on
technology and 2) by investigating how and why technological
transfer has developed and what broader impact this had on the
wider social dynamics of the late Middle and Late Bronze Age in the
eastern Mediterranean. This study approaches the topic of painted
plaster by a multidisciplinary methodology. Moreover, when human
actors and their interactions are placed in the centre of the
scene, it demonstrates the human forces through which transfer was
enabled and how multiple social identities and the
inter-relationships of these actors with each other and their
material world were expressed through their craft production and
organization. The investigated data from sixteen sites has been
contextualized within a wider framework of Bronze Age
interconnections both in time and space because studying painted
plaster in the Aegean cannot be considered separate from similar
traditions both in Egypt and in the Near East. This study makes
clear that it is not possible to deduce a one-way directional
transfer of this painting tradition. Furthermore, by integrating
both technology and iconography with its hybrid character, a clear
technological style was defined in the predominant al fresco work
found on these specific sites. The author suggests that the
technological transfer most likely moved from west to east. This
has important implications in the broader politico-economic and
social dynamics of the eastern Mediterranean during the LBA. Since
this art/craft was very much elite-owned, it shows how the smaller
states in the LBA, such as the regions of the Aegean, were capable
of staying within the large trade and exchange network that
comprised the large powers of the East and Egypt. The painted
plaster reflects a very visible presence in the archaeological
record and, because it cannot be transported without its artisans,
it suggests specific interactions of royal courts in the East with
the Aegean peoples. The painted plaster as an immovable feature
required at least temporary presence of a small team of painters
and plasterers. Exactly this factor forms an argument in support of
travelling artisans, who, in turn, shed light onto broader aspects
of contact, trade and exchange mechanisms during the late MBA and
LBA.
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