- Al Mina
Al Mina was an ancient city on the Mediterranean coast of northern
Syria , in the estuary of theOrontes , near present-daySamandag .Its excavator, Leonard Wooley, considered it to be an early Greek trading colony, founded a little before
800 BC , in direct competition with thePhoenicia ns to the south. He argued that substantial amounts ofGreek pottery at the site established its earlyEuboea n connections, while the Syrian and Phoenician cooking pottery reflected a cultural mix typical of an emporium.Wooley's critics point out that he discarded coarse undecorated utilitarian wares, and that the relative numbers of Greek, Syrian and Phoenician populations have not been established.Lehmann (2005).] The controversy whether Al Mina is to be regarded as a native Syrian site, with Syrian architecture and cooking pots and a Greek presence, or as an
Iron Age Greek trading post, occupies specialists. [R. Kearsley, "Greeks Overseas in the 8th Century B.C.: Euboeans, Al Mina and Assyrian Imperialism,"; J. Boardman, "The Excavated History of Al Mina," in "Ancient Greeks West and East", ed. G. Tsetskhladze (Leiden, Boston, 1999); Waldbaum (1997).]It served as an entrepôt for cultural influences that accompanied trade with
Urartu and the shortest caravan route toAssyria n cities of upperMesopotamia . Through Al Mina and Greek traders inCyprus [Greek traders are also present at Tarsos and somewhat later at Tell Sukas, see Burkert (1992), p. 11.] thePhoenician alphabet , and much technology besides, were transmitted toEuboea and mainland Greece in the eighth century BC.Burkert (1992).] Al Mina was destroyed about 700, perhaps bySennacherib , who repressed a rebellion at Tarsos in 696, but it was immediately rebuilt. Pottery recovered from later levels of the site show that a Greek presence remained at Al Mina through the fourth century, with pottery imported fromMiletus and deftly imitated locally, apparently by Greek potters.The excavations at Al Mina were initiated in 1936 by
Leonard Woolley , who was disappointed in not finding aBronze Age port and soon moved his interests to the earlier, more urbane site ofAlalakh . Al Mina has been largely overlooked in popular surveys. [Such as Eric M. Meyers (ed.), "The Oxford Encyclopaedia of Archaeology in the Near East" 1997, which barely makes passing reference.] Later work considered Al Mina as key to understanding the role of early Greeks in the east at the outset of theOrientalizing Period of Greek cultural history.Wooley identified Al Mina with
Herodotus ' Posideion, but more recent scholarship places Posideion atRas el-Bassit . [Waldbaum (1997).]Notes
References
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*——— (1990). "Al Mina and history" "Oxford Journal of Archaeology" 9 pp 169-90. DOI|10.1111/j.1468-0092.1990.tb00221.x
*Braun, T.F.R.G. (1982). "The Greeks in the Near East" in "Cambridge Ancient History" III.3 (Cambridge University Press).
*cite book |title=The Orientalizing Revolution: Near Eastern Influences on Greek Culture in the Early Archaic Age |last=Burkert |first=Walter |authorlink=Walter Burkert |coauthors= |year=1992 |publisher=Harvard University Press |location=Cambridge, MA |isbn=0-674-64363-1 |pages=
*Coldstream, J.N. (1982). "Greeks and Phoenicians in the Aegean" and P.J. Riis "Griechen in Phönizien" in H.G. Niemeyer, "Phönizier im Westen." Mainz, pp 261-72 and 237-55. ISBN 3-8053-0486-2
*Lehmann, G. (2005). “Al Mina and the East: A Report on Research in Progress,” in Alexandra Villing (ed.), "The Greeks in the East." London: British Museum Research Publication vol. 157, pp. 61-92. ISBN 0-86159-157-7
*cite book |title=Ports of Trade: Al Mina and Geometric Greek Pottery in the Levant |last=Luke |first=Joanna |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=2003 |publisher=Archaeopress |location=Oxford |isbn=1-84171-478-X |pages=
*cite journal |last=Waldbaum |first=Jane C. |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=1997 |month= |title=Greeks "in" the East or Greeks "and" the East?: Problems in the Definition and Recognition of Presence |journal=Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research |volume=305 |issue= |pages=1–17 |id= |doi=10.2307/1357743 |accessdate= |quote=
*cite journal |last=Woolley |first=Leonard |authorlink=Leonard Woolley |coauthors= |year=1948 |month= |title=The Date of al Mina |journal=Journal of Hellenic Studies |volume=68 |issue= |pages=148 |id= |doi=10.2307/626304 |accessdate= |quote=
*——— (1953). "A Forgotten Kingdom" (Harmondsworth: Penguin).
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