This volume brings together scholars to reflect on the work of Professor
A. Bernard Knapp and on some of the challenges thrown down in his
extensive scholarship. Knapp is a central figure in the pre and
proto-history of the Mediterranean in the last generation, and the
essays in this volume will be of interest and attention to a wide range
of scholars and students of Mediterranean pre- and proto-history. Topics
include studies of sites, places, materials and texts in the Levant,
Cyprus, Crete, Greece and Sicily and wider theory and method critiques
address connectivity and mobility, maritime archaeology, landscapes,
climate and environment, and publication history and practice in the
overall Mediterranean field. The authors comprise a mixture of senior,
mid-career, and rising junior scholars - from various backgrounds, in
order to offer a broad range of perspectives on the state and future of
the archaeology of Cyprus and the wider Mediterranean.