Thapsos
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Θάψος (Greek) | |
File:Tomb of Thapsos6.JPG
Thapsos had a large necropolis of cave tombs with vertical entrance shafts or dromos entry-corridors.
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Location | Priolo Gargallo, Province of Syracuse, Sicily, Italy |
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Coordinates | Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. |
Type | Settlement |
Site notes | |
Condition | Ruined |
Ownership | Public |
Management | Soprintendenza BB.CC.AA. di Siracusa |
Public access | Yes |
Website | Museo Archeologico Regionale Paolo Orsi |
Thapsos (Greek: Θάψος) was a prehistoric village in Sicily of the middle Bronze Age. It was found by the Italian archaeologist Paolo Orsi on the small peninsula of Magnisi, near Priolo Gargallo. In its vicinity was born the Culture of Thapsos, one of the most important prehistoric cultures in Sicily (identified with the people of Sicani).
Contents
History
The site is very interesting for its village - the first known city in Sicily[citation needed] - and for its rich necropolis. David Abulafia writes:
A settlement at Thapsos, an offshore island in eastern Sicily, offers evidence of a sophisticated, imported culture, Mycenaean in origin. The settlers created a grid-like town with streets up to four metres wide, spacious houses built round courtyards, and tombs full of Late Helladic wares from the Greek lands, suggesting 'a veritable foreign colony on the site'. Indeed, the closest analogy to the layout of the houses in Thapsos is to be found at the other end of the Mycenaean world, on Cyprus, at Enkomi near Famagusta. It is almost as if a blueprint for a trading colony had been created and then transformed into reality at both ends of the Mycenaean world. Thapsos has yielded very many small perfume containers of Mycenaean origin. For it was a centre of industry, specializing in the production of perfumed oils for an 'international' market. But Thapsos was not simply an offshoot of Mycenae. It produced plenty of coarse grey pottery in Sicilian styles, indicating that Thapsos contained a mixed population.[1]
Notes
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Bibliography
- S. Tusa, La Sicilia nella Preistoria, second edition, Palermo 1992.
External links
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- ↑ David Abulafia, The Great Sea:A Human History of the Mediterranean (Oxford University Press, 2011; ISBN 019975263X), pp. 34-35.
- Pages with reference errors
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- Articles with unsourced statements from August 2012
- Commons category link from Wikidata
- Archaeological sites in Sicily
- Buildings and structures in the Province of Syracuse
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- European archaeology stubs
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