How To Use Knossos In A Sentence
-
Vaphio cups, found in a _tholos_ chamber-tomb near Amyclae, the men are "long-haired Achaeans," with heavy, pendent locks, like the man on a pyxis from Knossos, published by Mr. Evans; they are of another period than the close-cropped men of the vase and dagger.
Homer and His Age
-
Daedalus, the ancient scientist, was supposedly the architect of the palace at Knossos.
-
Daedalus, the ancient scientist, was supposedly the architect of the palace at Knossos.
-
Hood has suggested that the statue at Knossos may have looked like the snake goddess shown in faience in the Temple Repositories.
-
There are corridor-like store-rooms in the West Wing, though not as extensive as those at Knossos.
-
The monkey in the Knossos fresco was evidently a pet: it wears a red leather harness.
-
the Minoan palace at Knossos
-
The monkey in the Knossos fresco was evidently a pet: it wears a red leather harness.
-
Hood has suggested that the statue at Knossos may have looked like the snake goddess shown in faience in the Temple Repositories.
-
Daedalus, the ancient scientist, was supposedly the architect of the palace at Knossos.
-
Hood has suggested that the statue at Knossos may have looked like the snake goddess shown in faience in the Temple Repositories.
-
Many ancient Greek myths take their location from Minoan Crete more than ten centuries before Plato. Daedalus, the ancient scientist, was supposedly the architect of the palace at Knossos.
-
That might explain the Horns of Consecration motif in Knossos, pictured below, which start to look a lot like twin peaks much like the undoubtedly related Egyptian aker symbolism also pictured below.
The Minoan name for Minoa
-
The Knossos throne room has a magnificent throne flanked by wall paintings showing griffins and projects an image of divine power.
-
The intrigue, if one existed, was worthy of the inner circle of the Imperial court on far distant Knossos.
-
She wasn't hungry enough for a hotel lunch and had no intention of joining the afternoon excursion to the Minoan Palace of Knossos.
THE QUEST FOR K
-
For Evans, the Minoans were emphatically not pure Greek, and he would have been irritated to learn that the "Linear B" tablets, which he excavated at Knossos (and which remained undeciphered in his lifetime), were actually written in an early form of the Greek language.
Knossos: Fakes, Facts, and Mystery
-
The intrigue, if one existed, was worthy of the inner circle of the Imperial court on far distant Knossos.
-
Many ancient Greek myths take their location from Minoan Crete more than ten centuries before Plato. Daedalus, the ancient scientist, was supposedly the architect of the palace at Knossos.