Kavousi Vronda
Kavousi Vronda is an archaeological site in eastern Crete, Greece, located about 1.25 km south of the modern village of Kavousi, a historic village in the municipality of Ierapetra in the prefecture of Lasithi. It is situated in the northern foothills of the Thripti Mountains overlooking the Gulf of Mirabello, at an elevation of 427 m above sea level. The ancient name of the site is unknown. "Vronda", as it was called by the pioneering archaeologist Harriet Boyd Hawes|Harriet Boyd at the beginning of the 20th century, is a local toponym; the entire ridge and surrounding area are also referred to as "Xerambela". Most of the visible remains on the site belong to a "Dark Age" settlement dating to the Late Minoan IIIC period and a slightly later, Early Iron Age cemetery.
History of the site
Investigations by the Kavousi Project have recovered evidence of human activity on the Vronda ridge as early as the Final Neolithic period and continuing, with interruptions, through the end of the Bronze Age and transition to the Iron Age. Later remains attest to limited occupation and use of the site during the Venetian, Ottoman and even Modern periods.- The earliest traces of human activity at the site date to the Final Neolithic period, and consist of two stone celts and several fragments of pottery. Although not found in primary contexts or undisturbed strata, the amount of pottery suggests some type of small-scale habitation at Vronda during this period.
- Occupation of the site during the Prepalatial and Late Prepalatial periods is attested primarily by substantial amounts of ceramic material deposited as fill during the construction of later buildings. Although no architectural remains are preserved from the Prepalatial period, the types and quantities of ceramic vessels suggest that feasting and drinking rituals may have taken place at the site in Early Minoan II. Petrographic analysis indicates that some of the pottery was not produced locally, but may have come from the western Isthmus of Ierapetra, demonstrating that the Prepalatial inhabitants of Vronda participated in a wide network of exchange with other sites in eastern Crete. Far less diagnostic material that could be assigned to the Early Minoan III–Middle Minoan IA period was recovered; this may indicate a major change in the size and nature of the settlement, perhaps related to a restructuring of settlements and a disbursement of population to smaller sites in the area.
- The earliest preserved architectural remains date to the Protopalatial period, when a substantial building was constructed on the eastern side of the summit; a Minoan kernos found in a partially paved courtyard nearby to the south may date from the same era. Ceramic remains associated with Building P suggest elite feasting and drinking activities, while a clay nodulus implies some type of administrative function. Evidence for other Protopalatial structures consists of a fragmentary wall on the eastern slope and several deposits of pottery used in later fills on the summit, the southeast slope, and the west slope.
- Evidence for occupation during the Neopalatial period consists of only a few walls and a pit on the summit, and substantial deposits of Neopalatial pottery used in later leveling fills. The site apparently went out of use at the end of the Neopalatial period ; most of the architecture may have been dismantled or destroyed when the site was re-inhabited in the Late Minoan IIIC period.
- In the Late Minoan IIIC period, the site was occupied by a small settlement covering an area of at least 0.50 hectares. Established only slightly later in time than either the Late Minoan IIIC habitation at nearby Kavousi Kastro or the much larger settlement at Karphi above the Lasithi Plateau, the Vronda settlement eventually consisted of about 20 houses, a large building on the summit that may have been the home of the community leader and a place for ritual feasting and drinking ceremonies, a freestanding temple or shrine of the "Goddess with Upraised Arms", and a kiln. The settlement may have been used for four generations before it was abandoned at the very end of the Late Minoan IIIC period. Although it is unknown why the inhabitants left or where they went, it is likely that at least some of them moved up to the higher settlement at Kavousi Kastro, which seems to have become the dominant site in the Kavousi region from the 11th through the 8th centuries BCE.
- The abandoned settlement was subsequently used as a burial ground, possibly by the descendants of the original villagers in an attempt to maintain group identity or legitimize territorial claims based on ancestry. During the Subminoan, Protogeometric, and early Geometric periods, inhumation burials were placed in small, stone-built, corbelled tholos tombs, generally located at the northern and northwestern edges of the former settlement. Eleven tholos tombs are known, but only two were found unrobbed. In the Late Geometric and Orientalizing periods, cremation burials were placed in stone-built enclosures, often within the rooms of the long-abandoned and partially collapsed houses of the Late Minoan IIIC settlement. Approximately 30 cist graves were discovered by the Kavousi Project. Evidence suggests that the cremations took place on a pyre built within each enclosure and the cremated remains were left in situ. Since the graves were used on multiple occasions for men, women, and children, they most likely represent family burial spaces. The cemetery at Vronda went out of use completely in the Late Orientalizing period.
- The site seems to have been largely uninhabited from the late 7th century BCE until the Venetian period, when small buildings were constructed on the summit and southern slope. From the same period is a partially excavated building with associated alonia some 200 meters to the north of the Vronda summit. Later periods are represented only by few ceramic remains or miscellaneous artifacts.