The collapse of palatial society at the end of the Greek Bronze Age
in c.1200 BC has long been a subject of fascination and contention.
This monograph re-evaluates the different theories on this collapse
and possible areas of continuity, making full use of recent
archaeological data as well as the latest theoretical work on
collapse in the historical and archaeological record. Middleton
examines the consequences of the collapse thematically, covering
settlements, population mobility, rulership, elites and social
structure, and looks at how these played out in both palatial and
non-palatial areas. His study concentrates on mainland Greece, for
the most part excluding Crete from the discussion.
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