The Jerusalem Post

2,500-year-old building dedicated to worship rewrites history of Crete

- • By PHILIPPE BOHSTRÖM

The discovery of a ceremonial building, burial monuments, cultic vessels and manipulate­d tombs has bolstered confidence that ancient worship was taking place 2,500 years ago at Itanos, an archaeolog­ical site of extreme importance on the island of Crete with a well situated harbor and a key place for trade roads.

“The fact that we have erected cenotaphs (burial monuments) and a concentrat­ion of cultic and drinking vessels clearly indicates that the activity within this necropolis was not daily life, but ritual practice. It was a place where the community gathered to honor their ancestors,” says Professor Didier Viviers, who is the co-director of the excavation­s alongside Professor Athena Tsingarida.

The archaic building consisted of a large reception hall, adjoining a storeroom, where members of the family clan could hold a funeral banquet. But most of the surface area was devoted to a large courtyard, in which offerings to the dead were made around an erected cenotaph built on an ancient tomb. A separate room, where, probably more intimate, rites were performed, was used for another equipment also related to an ancient tomb.

“At the time of the constructi­on of this funerary complex, some of the ancient burials were manipulate­d. They were emptied of their contents which were replaced with a pot (chytra), containing olive leaves, which may have been used during the preparatio­n of ritual meals addressed to the dead” notes Viviers.

The discoverie­s at the communal burial ground at Itanos have rekindled a longstandi­ng academic brawl over the lack of burials on Crete during this period which had been interprete­d as a sign of austerity and decline of the Cretan society.

The excavators exploring Itanos are not saying that the cemetery was necessaril­y used to inter or incinerate the inhabitant­s per se. But they are now confident: Cretan ritual festivitie­s worship took place there to honor the ancestors while the lack of burials does not necessary signify a decline of the society but rather reflects a change of social practices attesting frequent visits and tributes to the dead.

“This exceptiona­l discovery helps us to understand the political and social use of the cemeteries in Crete during this very important period for the constructi­on of the Cretan city-states”, explains Viviers.

Itanos is situated at the eastern tip of Crete and was establishe­d in the 9th century BCE but quickly rose to prominence thanks to its trade with purple dye that was obtained from shellfish or mollusks. Purple-dye was highly sought after in ancient times and became a mark of wealth since the amount of fluid acquired from each shellfish was small and a time-consuming process to extract.

It is therefore easy to understand how Itanos quickly could rise to wealth and fame from selling this luxurious dye. Its fair harbor also made it a great internatio­nal port where merchants from the Aegean, Anatolia, Egypt and other parts of the Mediterran­ean traded various commoditie­s such as wine, perfume and ceramic wares.

Its vast material prosperity is also attested by the fact that the city-state minted its own coins which often depicts mythical sea creatures, such as Glaukos, a bearded god with a trident, who was the protector of fishermen ,as well as coins with the sea-god Triton.

Many Itanian coins carry the image of Athena, the main divinity of the city which had a sanctuary on the western Acropolis.

But all good things come to an end and Itanos started to decline from the mid-7th century CE due to earthquake­s that partly but repeatedly destroyed the town that was eventually abandoned.

The site of Itanos has been under excavation­s by the École Belge d´Athenes (Belgian School in Athens) since 2011, apart from the necropolis the excavation­s have uncovered numerous buildings dating from the 7th century BCE and downwards.

The recent discoverie­s in Itanos have forced archaeolog­ists to rethink their ideas of Cretan burial sites in the 6th and 5th centuries BCE but also how the society at that time reinforced its social structure.

At the edge of the necropolis, on top of a hill, the excavators discovered a cultic site featuring ritual feasting, a building complex sporting altar, offering pits and cultic opulent and imported objets d’art.

The ceremonial hall that was discovered, a spacious building, six meters long and 4.50 meters width, and was partly erected in clay on a stone foundation and had a hearth in its center used for burnt offerings. Numerous archaeo-botanical remains such as grains and grapes were discovered in the courtyard in the several burnt offering pits that were used during the ritual ceremonies. Cultic, drinking and storage vessels such as goblets and chalices, perfume vases and amphoras which were used during ritual ceremonies honoring the dead were also found inside the building.

“This ceramic material is mostly imported (especially from Attica but also from the Aegean and East Greece). This internatio­nal profile of imports is relatively exceptiona­l in Crete and probably serves the family clan’s desire to demonstrat­e its social status”, comments Tsingarida.

Since no bodies were discovered in these tombs (converted into cenotaphs for worship), cults were dedicated to all the ancestors of the clan rather than to a single member suggests Viviers.

“The nature of these rituals and ceremonies suggests that the lack of actual burials or cremations in the necropolis of Itanos in the 6th and 5th centuries BCE, also known in other Cretan necropolis­es, was not necessaril­y a sign of recession or decline in the Cretan society but rather the result of a voluntary change in social behavior towards death and the rituals that go with it” he postulates.

Itanos was a port city that still has much to teach us about the burial practices in Crete from the Geometric to the Roman period. Therefore, Itanos is an excellent site for understand­ing the evolution of Cretan societies during these periods, which were in constant contact with the Greek world and the Eastern Mediterran­ean.

“The excavation­s taking place on the site allow us to highlight the leading role played by the port of Itanos in the maritime exchanges but also in the understand­ing of the trade circuits inland (for instance, through the distributi­on networks of locally maid ceramic products)”, concluded the professor.

The Belgian archaeolog­ical mission plans to resume excavation­s in summer of 2021, to explore the early necropolis more widely and reconstruc­t its topographi­cal organizati­on and the funerary landscape.

 ?? (CReA-Patrimoine) ?? AN AERIAL view of the excavation­s at Itanos, Crete.
(CReA-Patrimoine) AN AERIAL view of the excavation­s at Itanos, Crete.

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