TY - BOOK AU - Wallace,Saro TI - Ancient Crete: from successful collapse to democracy's alternatives, twelfth to fifth centuries BC SN - 9780521112048 AV - DF261.C8 W35 2010 PY - 2010/// CY - Cambridge, New York PB - Cambridge University Press KW - City-states KW - Greece KW - Crete KW - History KW - Democracy KW - Social change KW - Landscapes KW - Social aspects KW - Group identity KW - Material culture KW - Crete (Greece) KW - To 67 B.C KW - Politics and government KW - Social conditions KW - Antiquities N1 - Includes bibliographical references (pages 401-445) and index; Introduction -- Method and structure -- Text perspectives -- Chronology, terminology, and dating methods -- The Late Bronze Age Cretan landscape and its use -- The broader framework: strategies of landscape use by the LBA-EIA transition -- Approaches to studying collapse: explanation and characterisation -- Settlement pattern in Crete -- Subsistence in the new settlement environment -- Settlement change outside Crete: islands and peninsulas -- Mainland central Greece: settlement priorities during and after collapse -- Constructing post-collapse society: inside Cretan settlements, circa 1200-1000 BC -- Focus on ceremonial and ritual practice within settlements -- Beyond settlements: the changing cultural landscape -- Mortuary space and practice in Crete and other areas -- The structure of collapse in Crete -- Introduction -- Long-distance contacts before and after the collapse horizon, circa 1300-1000 BC -- The social role of exotica -- Exchange structure inside post-collapse Crete -- Lift-off: east Mediterranean trade and the central Aegean from the tenth century -- Nothing to declare? Crete in the tenth through eighth centuries -- Modes and routes of exchange within Crete in the later EIA -- Crete's membership in the 'orientalising' and colonial worlds from the seventh century -- Main source of evidence discussed -- Settlement patterns (I): the nucleation phenomenon -- Settlement patterns (2): small sites, small-group identity, and trade -- Subsistence and land use in the expanding Cretan polities -- Inside settlements -- The mortuary record -- The ritual landscape and the construction of political identity -- The early Archaic horizon: correlates of state consolidation in the archaeological record -- The polis as place and as concept in Crete -- The value of 'classic' state formation models for PG-EA Crete, viewed in its Mediterranean context -- Introduction -- Special aspects of the Archaic to classical Cretan polis -- Cretan identities in historical perspective -- Serfdom and slavery in the construction of late Archaic to classical society: comparisons between Crete and other Aegean areas -- The public feasting tradition and its political significance in Crete and other areas -- A final comparison: democracy and its alternatives in the Aegean world ER -