Galatas
The room containing the hearth
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The "Palace" at Galatas was only discovered and excavated in the early 1990s.
Consequently it has not been fully written up yet. The site is located
30 kilometres south of Heraklion, near the villages of Galatas and Arkalochori.
From the site there are fine views towards southern Crete. Excavations
began in 1992 and in 1997 the archaeologist responsible for the excavations,
George Rethemiotakis, announced that a new Minoan Palace had been found
in the middle of a Minoan town.
The courtyard
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The large, paved central courtyard of the palace runs north-south and measures
16 metres by 32 metres. It was originally surrounded by a four-wing building.
Of the four wings the East wing is the best preserved, while the west and
south wings are very poorly preserved. The north wing is still waiting to
be excavated apart from a small stoa bordering onto the court. The north end
of the central court has a face of ashlars and some 50 blocks have masons'
marks on them. All the original frescoes have unfortunately been lost.
However, the site is very important as it contains a palace built only in
one period. Other palace sites contain remains from several palaces built
at different times. The site was originally occupied in EM I/EM II and later
in MM IB/MM II. No palace existed here during MM II and the East Wing was
constructed in MM IIIA. The West Wing dates from MM IIIB/LM IA and overlays
remains from the MM II period. The main phase of the complex dates from MM
IIIB-LM IA but it was already in decline before the LM IA destruction. There
are no traces of LM IB or LM III material at all.
For the first time in Minoan Crete a hearth was discovered together with a layer
of ash. The hearth measures 3 metres by 1.5 metres and was found in a room with
four pillars (see photos).
The East Wing measures 70 metres by 60 metres and was built between 1700
BCE and 1650 BCE. It was destroyed by fire and rebuilt during the second half
of the century. It was finally destroyed around 1500 BCE, probably by earthquakes.
Mr. Rethemiotakis claims that "the use of a monumental hearth in one
of the rooms, the preparation of meals in the kitchen and the banquets
offered in the room with the hearth and the room with the pillar and the
benches or even upstairs, the storing of goods in the store rooms along
with the personal appearances of the participants on the balconies toward
the town and the central court of the palace, represent a symbolic meeting
of the Town and the Palace which is ratified by the banquets". Unfortunately,
the site is not yet open to the public, although there are plans to turn
it into a major tourist attraction in the future.
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