Hesperia

Aegean Prehistory without Schliemann

by Michael Fotiadis

Hesperia, Volume 85, Issue 1
Page(s): 91-119
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2972/hesperia.85.1.0091
Year: 2016
VIEW ONLINE

ABSTRACT:

When Heinrich Schliemann appeared in the Aegean in the 1870s, prehistoric archaeology in Greece was headed for a future very different from the one that subsequently materialized. The discoveries at Hisarlik and Mycenae changed the course of that trajectory. I concentrate on the emergent field of prehistoric archaeology in Greece as it was before those discoveries, and I discuss briefly their effects on the field. The radical reorientation of the field in the last quarter of the 19th century provides the opportunity to reflect on the components of archaeological significance that shaped the development of prehistoric archaeology in Greece.