This book adopts an integrative approach to investigate the role of
monumental architecture in shaping social dynamics and power relations
on the island of Cyprus during the Late Bronze Age (LBA; c.1700-1050
BCE). Using such an approach, archaeologists studying ancient societies
elsewhere can analyze the relationship between the built environment and
human behaviour. Monumental buildings on Late Bronze Age Cyprus provided
contexts for social interactions, such as ceremonial feasting and cultic
rituals, that created social bonds and forged wider community
identities, while also materializing social boundaries and inequalities.
More than just spaces, these contexts were socially-constructed places,
imbued with identity and memory, that played an integral role in social
organization during this transformative period. This integrative
approach emphasizes the role of buildings in configuring movement and
encounter and in serving as the contexts for interactions through which
sociopolitical relations are developed, maintained, transformed and
reproduced. It investigates this using an interdisciplinary methodology
that integrates access analysis with the study of the materiality of
built environments and how they encode and communicate meanings and
shape the experiences of those who interact with them.