When Sir Arthur Evans was establishing the chronology of the Minoan
period at Knossos in the early twentieth century, Robert Carr Bosanquet
and his team from the British School at Athens began to define the
contemporary sequence at Palaikastro in eastern Crete. One of the aims
of the recent British School excavations at Palaikastro is to refine the
early excavators results and to explore social, political and
environmental change within the Cretan Bronze Age. The discovery of two
wells with undisturbed layers of the LM IB to LM IIIA2 periods (the
fifteenth and fourteenth centuries BC) provided a rare opportunity to
study the pottery chronology and development in detail, but also to look
at diet, foreign connections, and religious practices at that time. One
surprise was the discovery of the remains of several dogs related to the
modern Cretan Tracer Hound. Another was part of an exquisite stone vase
with dolphins carved in relief. This volume gives the first detailed
template of LM IB to LM IIIA2 pottery at Palaikastro along with final
reports on the wells excavation and complete contents by members of the
international team of specialists who excavate at Palaikastro.