The
Minoan City of Palaikastro and the Sanctuary of Diktaian Zeus
Excavations
at Palaikastro have been carried out by members of the British
School at Athens in three separate series of campaigns. The first,
under the direction of R.C. Bosanquet and R.M. Dawkins in 1902-6,
revealed the main street and large houses at the southwest of
the Minoan town at Roussolakkos, the sanctuary of Diktaian Zeus,
outlying cemeteries and dwellings and the peak sanctuary on Petsophas.
The second, under the direction of L.H. Sackett and M.R. Popham
in 1962-3, concentrated on Block N at Roussolakkos and Minoan
occupation on Kastri. The third, international, campaign under
the direction of L.H. Sackett and J.A. MacGillivray from 1986
to the present was preceded by a topographical and magnetic survey
in 1983, and has discovered seven buildings in the north sector
of the town. In addition, rescue excavations by the Greek Archaeological
Service revealed a kiln, two houses to the east of the town and
more material from Petsophas.
The ancient harbour
city at Palaikastro comprises all the elements of a relatively
undisturbed Cretan Bronze Age township: cemeteries, peak sanctuary,
refuge site and quarries, and a road system providing it with
direct links to the surrounding countryside and beyond. The city
at Roussolakkos covered as many as thirty hectares, making it
the second largest Minoan urban centre after Knossos. The Bronze
Age cemeteries are on the routes out of the ancient town, to the
northwest and east, and on the slopes of Petsophas (254 m) and
Kastri (89 m). The remains of the most important Minoan peak sanctuary
in East Crete, the source of many terracotta figurines and stone
vases inscribed with Linear A (some mentioning Dikta), are situated
on the top of Mt. Petsophas. The promontory and hill of
Kastri was a refuge acropolis at the end of the Bronze Age (c.
1200-1100 BC.). The sandstone quarries, used in the finest architecture
in the town, are at Ta Skaria east of the ancient town, near the
Plaka cape. A network of roads beginning in the Old Palace period,
about 1900 BC., connected Roussolakkos with Minoan sites to the
south (Zakros) and west (Petras).
A sequence of
continuous occupation throughout the Bronze Age began in the Early
Minoan period. Two small, possibly familial, holdings were built
in EM IIA (ca. 3000 BC.). These were succeeded by a large structure
in EM IIB under the later Block X. By the MM IB-IIA periods, around
1900 BC., a well-planned town with foreign contacts (included
Egypt and Asia Minor) emerged at roughly the same time as fine
polychrome Kamares pottery and the first palaces appeared at Knossos
and Phaistos. This may imply that such a building also existed
at Palaikastro, though still undiscovered. There was widespread
destruction at the end of the Old Palace period, about 1760 BC.,
followed by the reconstruction of the town with an improved street
system with paving and drainage channels. There is evidence for
earthquake damage and unusual rainfall at the end of the MM IIIB
period, perhaps in 1628 BC., but again the town was rebuilt and
it is largely these remains that can still be seen today. This
Neopalatial town provides the clearest example of Minoan urban
planning, with wide streets defining large town blocks, impressive
ashlar facades and spacious main rooms with sunken central basins
surrounded by four columns. These were the dwellings of rich traders
who filled their storage rooms with finely decorated pottery and
stone vases, and kept track of their transactions on tablets written
in Linear A. This prosperous city was likely controlled by a palace,
also undiscovered. Earthquake damage and fallout of volcanic ash,
observed at a number of points throughout the site and presumably
the effects of the Thera eruption of 1530 BC., mark the end of
the LM IA period. Afterwards, some parts of the town seem to have
been abandoned and the area used for the digging of wells, in
one of which was found a fine stone rhyton decorated with dolphins.
There is new evidence for a sequence of fire destructions, most
likely due to human aggression during the LM IB period, ending
with widespread damage around 1475 BC. From the destruction levels
comes a wealth of fine objects including the Palaikastro Kouros,
the gold and ivory sculpture of a vibrant youth stepping forward,
a masterpiece of Minoan craftsmanship, found scattered in a square
and adjacent shrine.
In contrast to
other East Cretan Minoan towns, much of the city was rebuilt in
the LM II and LM IIIA1 periods, often on the same lines and after
the repair of the Main Street, but it suffered a further destruction
by fire early in the LM IIIA2 period, around 1370 BC., contemporary
with the final destruction of the palace at Knossos. A period
of extensive rebuilding in LM IIIA2-B ended with an earthquake
early in the LM IIIB period, around 1300 BC. The city seems to
have been abandoned at this point with occupation limited to a
small refuge settlement on the top of the Kastri hill during LM
IIIC.
A sanctuary in
honour of Diktaian Zeus occupied the area of Block X from the
Geometric period onward (8th century BC.). From a pit near Block
X, Bosanquet recovered the fragments of an inscription recording
the ‘Hymn to Diktaian Zeus’. In this hymn, probably composed in
the 4th or 3rd century BC., the young god is summoned to return
to Dikte, where his sacred altar stood. This leaves no doubt that
the temple site at Roussolakkos was Dikte, famed in antiquity
as the birthplace of Zeus. Here, the young god was hidden from
his jealous father Kronos. Grown up, he overthrew his father,
eventually returning to his birthplace to found the city which
the historian Diodorus of Sicily saw abandoned in the first century
BC.
During the early
centuries of cult at Roussolakkos, Diktaian Zeus was honoured
with bronze votive offerings of tripods, elaborately decorated
shields and other precious armour. Later, in the 6th century BC,
a temple was erected, which was rebuilt several times. Inscriptions
indicate that the sanctuary continued to function as an important
place of worship for the inhabitants of the cities in Eastern
Crete into the Hellenistic and Roman periods. A terracotta sima
with scenes of charioteers and warriors in relief, a series of
antefixes with gorgon heads and a frieze of lotus flowers and
palmettes are all that has yet been found of the temples that
stood on this site.
Illustrations
View of Bay with
Kastri & Petsofa
Town plan in
colour, indicating back-filled areas
Kouros and Petsofa-kouros
Three rhyta:
marine style from Delta, Dolphin from Well and Bull’s Head from
B7.
Sealing from
B5.
Ivory plaque
with water-bird from Block X.
Chariot sima |