Petsofas

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Petsofas (also spelt Petsophas) is an archaeological site in eastern Crete. It was the site of a Minoan peak sanctuary associated with the nearby palatial site of Palaikastro, and was used between the Middle Minoan I period (Template:Circa) and the Neopalatial period (that is, until shortly after Template:Circa).

The site consisted of a small enclosure, probably open to the air, in which thousands of clay figurines and burnt offerings were left in the early phase of the site's occupation. Unlike most peak sanctuaries, it continued to be used in the Neopalatial period, when the enclosure was built upon with a two-roomed structure, which seems to have continued to see ritual use on a smaller scale than the previous activity at the site. The figurines include representations of human beings, generally thought to stand for worshippers; sacrificial animals; and human limbs usually thought to be associated with requests for divine healing. In the Neopalatial period, objects deposited at the sanctuary included two libation tables inscribed in Linear A.

John Myres made the first excavations of Petsofas in 1903, making it the first Cretan peak sanctuary to be systematically excavated. Charles Trick Currelly finished the 1903 season, and the site was re-excavated in 1971 by Costas Davaras.

History

The peak sanctuary at Petsofas consists of a small enclosure, somewhat over Template:Convert in area,Template:Refn overlooking the palatial site of Palaikastro from the south.Template:Sfn The two sites are less than 30 minutes' walk apart, suggesting that they were closely associated.Template:Sfn Petsofas was first used in the Middle Minoan I period (Template:Circa),Template:Refn whose latter part is included in the Protopalatial period of Minoan civilisation.Template:Sfn Like most Minoan peak sanctuaries, it is located on a prominent mountain top, and readily visible from the nearest known contemporary habitation sites.Template:Sfn It was one of the few peak sanctuaries to remain in use during the Neopalatial period (that is, after Template:Circa).Template:Refn

Six clay figurines, humanoid, with their fists held to their chests. Most are male; one female figurine has a large, bell-shaped skirt.
Clay humanoid figurines found at Pesofas, Protopalatial period

The enclosure at Petsofas was filled with a thick layer of ash.Template:Sfn This layer contained several thousand clay figurines of both humans and animals,Template:Sfn including anatomical models known as "votive limbs". These are generally believed to have been offered by worshippers seeking divine healing,Template:Sfn though other proposed interpretations include Jeremy Rutter's suggestion that they are parts of complete figurines,Template:Sfn and that of Martin P. Nilsson that they may have been intended to stand in for real body parts in a ritual of sacrifice or dismemberment.Template:Sfn Among the figurines is a model of a pregnant woman, possibly offered by a dedicant hoping for safety in childbirth.Template:Sfn Most of the figures seem to have been offered during the earlier Protopalatial period, particularly a few decorated in the Kamares style, though others seem to be Neopalatial: among the Neopalatial material are objects inscribed in the Cretan Linear A script.Template:Sfn The humanoid figurines are generally taken to represent worshippers rather than deities, on the bassis of their ordinary-seeming clothing, while the animals are considered to stand for sacrificial offerings.Template:Sfn

There is no definitive evidence of buildings in the first (Protopalatial) phase of the site's use:Template:Sfn Bogdan Rutkowski suggests that it was an open-air enclosure with a few altars.Template:Sfn In the Neopalatial period, a building was constructed above the layer of ash and offerings, consisting of two small rectangular rooms. One of these rooms had a bench approximately Template:Convert in height and a rough stone lamp; almost nothing of the second was preserved.Template:Sfn It is possible that cultic activity continued in this building, as it had in the preceding enclosure, but this seems to have been on a smaller scale: Katrin Müller considers it unproven whether this was in truth a cultic building, or if the structure was considered sacred.Template:Sfn

Archaeological study

Petsofas was the first Cretan peak sanctuary to be systematically excavated,Template:Sfn by John Myres in 1903 as part of a British School at Athens (BSA) expedition to Palaikastro.Template:Sfn Myres excavated the site from April, with what Robert Carr Bosanquet, the director of the BSA, described as "brilliant results", particularly on the basis of Myres's finds of human and animal figurines.Template:Sfn At the end of the season, Myres returned to his academic post in Oxford, and the Canadian Charles Trick Currelly took over the excavation, approximately doubling the number of finds recovered.Template:Refn

It was re-excavated by Costis Davaras in the summer of 1971.Template:Sfnm in response to reports that fragments figurines had been discovered at and potentially looted from the site.Template:Sfn This excavation explored areas to the east and south of the LM I building, not excavated in 1903, and discovered what Davaras considered the main deposits made at the sanctuary: these included two libation tables, inscribed in Linear A,Template:Sfn dating to the Neopalatial period.Template:Sfn In 2014, Christine Morris and Alan Peatfield described Petsofas as the best known of all the excavated Minoan peak sanctuaries.Template:Sfn

References

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Works cited

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Further reading

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Template:Minoan civilization