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Head of a goddess figure from Palaikastro

12/18/2009

New Publication: Archaeologies of Cult

Timothy Wardell

Archaeologies of Cult: Essays on Ritual and Cult in Crete in Honor of Geraldine C. Gesell (Hesperia Supplement 42), edited by Anna Lucia D’Agata and Aleydis Van de Moortel, can now be added to the corpus of studies on the much-debated aspect of religion in Iron and Bronze Age Cretan life. Twenty-eight former students and colleagues contribute articles in honor of Geraldine C. Gesell, an archaeologist and pioneer in the field of religious cults. Among the variety of approaches presented here, many make reference to the “goddess with upraised hands,” a ubiquitous figurine in Crete that was central to a number of Gesell’s many books and articles. The methodological approaches and focal points of the contributors are diverse. The first section of this volume deals with ritual actions: the deposition of objects such as vessels and figurines, the veneration of naturally occurring objects (ecofacts), and harvest rites. The second sets forth the places where these actions took place, shrines and sanctuaries. The nature of the objects of ritual practice are discussed, many unpublished finds. A return to the aspect of place conveys the significance of sacred peaks, the siting of sanctuaries upon them, and the importance of their intervisibility. A combined bibliography, with publication dates from 1900 to forthcoming, indicates the copious scholarship on this contentious aspect of Cretan studies.

The book is available for purchase through our distributor, David Brown Book Company in North America (+1 800 791 9354) and Oxbow Books (+44 (0)1865 241249) in Europe and the Rest of the World. You can order online through our website. The order will be directed to the closest distributor’s office.

The Hesperia Supplement series (ISSN 1064-1173) presents book-length studies in the fields of Greek archaeology, art, language, and history. The series was started in 1937 and was originally designed to accommodate extended essays too long for inclusion in the journal Hesperia. Since that date the Supplements have established a strong identity of their own, and are now recognized as one of the most prestigious publication venues in Greek studies. They range in format from single author monographs, through excavation reports, to major edited collections on topics of interest to researchers in classics, archaeology, art history, and Hellenic studies.