The Minoans
The Minoan civilisation of Bronze Age Crete, discovered and
named by Arthur Evans, flourished between about 3000 and 1100 BC.
Minoan culture was characterised by the dominance of the great
palaces - large, complex buildings that probably acted as
administrative, agricultural and religious centres. These centres
appeared soon after 2000 BC, and may eventually have achieved
island-wide control. Palaces have been excavated at Knossos,
Phaistos, Mallia and Kato Zakro, and others may originally have
existed.
While the palace-based economy linked Minoan Crete to
civilisations of the Near East and Egypt, Minoan achievements
particularly influenced the Aegean islands and the Greek mainland.
Cretan artistic traditions included the production of fine pottery,
fresco painting, the creation of small-scale sculptures in faience,
bronze and ivory, and accomplished miniature work on seal-stones
and in jewellery. Such craftsmanship was widely admired and
exported, and laid the foundations for Mycenaean art.
The Minoans were not Greek, and their language remains unknown.
Their dominant position in the eastern Mediterranean may partly
have depended on power at sea. Ultimately, though, the
Greek-speaking Mycenaeans were to prove stronger and came to
control the society which was the source of so much of their
cultural inheritance.