Odigitria
Odigitria is the archaeological site of an ancient Minoan religious complex, which includes two tholos tombs located near the modern Odigitria Monastery in the Asterousia mountains of southern Crete.
The tombs are dated from Early Minoan I to Middle Minoan IA and were excavated in 1979 by N. Dimopoulou and in 1980 by Antonis Vasilakis. They were in use for more than 1,000 years. Artifacts found include seals, amulets, necklaces, gold diadems, stone blades, stone vases, pots and a gold bracelet.
References
- Swindale, Ian "Odigitria"[1] Retrieved 21 May 2006
External links
- http://www.minoancrete.com/odiyitria.htm
34°58′31″N 24°47′59″E / 34.9753°N 24.7998°E / 34.9753; 24.7998
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- Minoan art
- Minoan chronology
- Minoan pottery
- Minoan seals
- Minoan palaces
- Minoan religion
- Minoan eruption
- Peak sanctuaries
Palaces | |
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Settlements |
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Tombs |
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Sanctuaries |
- Aegina Treasure
- Akrotiri Boxer Fresco
- Hagia Triada Sarcophagus
- Horns of Consecration
- Snake goddess figurines
- La Parisienne (fresco)
- Lustral basin
- Prince of the Lilies
- Stirrup jar
- Harvester Vase
- Kamares ware
- Kouloura
- Knossos board game
- Minoan Genius
- Minoan frescoes from Tell el-Dab'a
- Malia altar stone
- Malia Pendant
- Minoan Moulds of Palaikastro
- Minoan Bull-leaper
- Papoura Hill Circular Structure
- Vasiliki ware
- Wall Paintings of Thera
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