Following Oliver Dickinson€s successful The Aegean Bronze Age, this textbook is a synthesis of the period between the collapse of the Bronze Age civilization in the thirteenth and twelfth centuries BC...

Buy Now From Amazon

Following Oliver Dickinson€s successful The Aegean Bronze Age, this textbook is a synthesis of the period between the collapse of the Bronze Age civilization in the thirteenth and twelfth centuries BC, and the rise of the Greek civilization in the eighth century BC.

With chapter bibliographies, distribution maps and illustrations, Dickinson€s detailed examination of material and archaeological evidence argues that many characteristics of Ancient Greece developed in the Dark Ages. He also includes up-to-date coverage of the 'Homeric question'.

This highly informative text focuses on:

  • the reasons for the Bronze Age collapse which brought about the Dark Ages
  • the processes that enabled Greece to emerge from the Dark Ages
  • the degree of continuity from the Dark Ages to later times.

Dickinson has provided an invaluable survey of this period that will not only be useful to specialists and undergraduates in the field, but that will also prove highly popular with the interested general reader.



Similar Products

The Aegean Bronze Age (Cambridge World Archaeology)The Cambridge Companion to the Aegean Bronze AgeSea Peoples of the Bronze Age Mediterranean c.1400 BC-1000 BC (Elite)The Philistines and Aegean Migration at the End of the Late Bronze AgeThe Oxford Handbook of the Bronze Age Aegean (Oxford Handbooks)The End of the Bronze AgeCitadel to City-State: The Transformation of Greece, 1200-700 B.C.E.Bronze Age Greek Warrior 1600-1100 BC