39
38
was modestly exploited in the surrounding islands, and a few flakes were found in
Western Anatolian, the Cyclades and Crete. emeri, polished metabauxite and jadeitite
celts from naxos and syros circulated in nearby Cycladic islands, and also reached
Keos, euboeia and lesbos. Handsome conical marble beakers were found on Keos,
samos, naxos and as far north as Varna in Bulgaria. the raw materials have not
been analysed and their source(s) is unknown, but their similarity with the beakers
produced at Kulakzızlar in Aegean turkey (where later Kilia marble figurines would
be produced) minimally demonstrates contacts, if not exchange. schematic marble
figurines and marble figurine heads also became abundant. unfortunately, their
origin is unknown.
it is also possible that the Cycladic copper, silver and lead ores were locally worked
and traded in the late fifth and fourth millennium. smelting copper is attested in the
fourth millennium on the small island of giali in the dodecanese, and the copper
and silver ores from lavrion were smelted, possibly earlier at Kephala on Keos and
Kitsos in Attica. However, the golden strip found at the Zas cave on naxos must be
an import from the Balkans.
during the fourth millennium, Western Anatolia, so far actively involved in Aege-
an trade, seems to have favoured inland contacts with the east. further south, the
northern levant was also looking east, towards mesopotamia, while the southern
levant maintained contacts with egypt. nevertheless, many goods must have trav-
elled by coastal routes between the southern coast of Anatolia, the levant and egypt
(in particular metal ores and Anatolian obsidian). However, since none of these re-
sources are insular, inland trade routes cannot be ruled out. indeed, during all these
millennia, Cyprus, despite being the first island colonised by farmers from the levant,
remained “reticent”, as termed by Cyprian Broodbank, to external contacts and trade.
Cyprus’s isolation would come to an end later in the Bronze Age and the picture
of seafaring, long-range interaction and trade in the eastern mediterranean would
become profoundly altered. the contrast between the neolithic and Bronze Age in
fact holds true for the whole mediterranean basin. After the seventh and early sixth
millennium, when seafaring colonists scouted the mediterranean from east to West
and linked its two extremities, the mediterranean sea as such no longer existed in
the neolithic. multiple invisible but impassable frontiers were created that segmented
the mediterranean into multiple smaller basins. the eastern and Western mediter-
ranean became isolated from one another and there was little contact between the
tyrrhenian and the Adriatic, or the Aegean and the levant. the reopening of these
frontiers would be achieved in the Bronze Age, probably helped by important inno-
vations in boat craftsmanship.
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: