Ayios Georgios
Room A on the left, with the cut chamber on the right
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The villa known as Ayios Georgios is located on a hill known as Prophitis
Elias, not far from Praissos. The villa was built on four terraces and
covers an area of 700 square metres. The north and west parts of the hill
are very steep and part of the complex there has disappeared due to landslips.
The building is not very well preserved, but the upper terraces have survived
better than the lower ones.
The site was entered through the opening next to the west wall of Room
A. It is thought that this room may have served as an anteroom for the
complex, given the high quality of the masonry of this wall. Opposite
room A, a chamber was cut in the rock and was probably unroofed. This
seems also to have formed part of the entrance to the complex.
The lowest terrace -- the eastern part of the complex -- is the least
well preserved. The next terrace up, rooms E, Z, H and È, show signs of
a later phase of building. Unfortunately it is not possible to understand
how it would have appeared because Early Christian burials have destroyed
most of this part of the site.
The staircase to the top terrace
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The most important parts of the building stood on the top two terraces
and each terrace comprised a series of rooms which were accessed from
an open-air corridor on the East side. So rooms Ë, M, N, Î, O and Ð on
the second terrace were accessed from the corridor I-K to their east.
The rooms on the top terrace were served by a staircase from the south,
of which nine steps remain in situ. At the top of the steps was a partly
paved corridor which was the centre of the whole building complex. From
here it was possible to reach the rooms on the top terrace and quite likely
the first floor rooms of the buildings on the second terrace (Ë, Ì, Í,
Î, Ï, Ð).
As Lefteris Platon points out, "the quality of the construction
of the rooms on the top terrace was the highest in the whole complex and
it gives to this quarter the aspect of an independent unit. Its east facade,
with the dentations to which the Minoans were much attached, was built
with large, limestone blocks and would be very impressive to people climbing
the two staircases. The rooms were spacious and communicated in couples
through doors opening in the partition walls. The north and south ends
of the top terrace building probably terminated in verandas, parts of
which have disappeared down the slopes."
Rooms Ë, Ì, Í, Î, Ï, Ð on the second terrace
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While pottery found at the site points to a destruction date of LM IA,
the fact that this style of pottery surived in eastern Crete until the
end of LM IB suggests a later destruction date.
The top terrace contained the storerooms as a number of large jars and
other vessels were found there. Rooms B1 and Ø yielded grape-pressing
equipment, millstones and a potter's wheel. The stone benches found here
were almost certainly related to the production processes that took place
here.
On the second terrace, rooms M, N, Î, Ï, Ð, a large number of loom weights
were found, indicated that weaving looms had existed on the first floor.
Nicholas Platon, the original excavator of the site, considered this area
to house the living quarters, in particular for the women. The lowest
terrace also had another wine press and possibly a kitchen. Missing from
the site were valuable objects and objects that had a religious or ceremonial
signifcance. It has recently been discovered that the villa at Ayios Georgios
did not stand alone and that most likely there was a small settlement
nearby. However, the building was placed in the most favourable location
in the valley. The exact relationship of this building to the surrounding
settlement and to the Palaces is not known, but it is likely, as Lefteris
Platon argues, that "the main function was the exploitation of the
delimited agricultral zones surrounding it."
Room Ø on top terrace
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Room X on top terrace
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Corridor between top and middle terraces
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Middle terrace viewed from NE
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