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The
Bull-leaping Fresco (detail)
Industrial
Quarter

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The
area to the north of the Domestic Quarter was
dedicated to storage facilities and small workshops—in
the lower levels, at least. A doorway near the
east end of the East-West Corridor led into a
suite of that included a cellar room where the
filled contained a cache of flecked green porphyry
known as lapis Lacedaemonius along with
a couple of unfinished amphorae made out of the
same material. The stone had clearly fallen from
the level above when the floor collapsed so Evans
conculded that there must have been Lapidary’s
Workshop upstairs.
Beyond
to the room with the lapis is another with a bench
in one corner. Evans thought it was a school room
but it was more probably a Potters Workshop.
At the northern end of the suite was a small open
area known as the Court of the Stone Spout
because of a drain outlet that projected into
the court from high up the east wall. It was here
that the pieces of the famous Bull-leaping Frescoes
(top) were found, having evidently fallen
from a room in the next storey. Bits of a number
of similar scenes were found but this is the most
complete. Along the side of this block of rooms
is the East Portico, a four columned verandah
overlooking the valley of the Kairatos.
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(Above)
Plan of the Workshops
(Left)
Court of the Stone Spout |
The
north end of the Court of the Stone Spout opened onto
a passageway that led to the edge of the terrace. No
treads were found but presumably it was a stairway.
The terrace wall, which shows evidence of several rebuildings,
was severely damaged by the earthquake that finally
destroyed Knossos. However, Evans uncovered a large
block of masonry, which he called the East Bastion,
at the end of the aforementioned passageway. The bastion
included a postern and a set of steps that, after a
number of turns, led to the bottom of the terrace and
out to the meadows beyond. It was in this low-lying
ground between the palace and the Kairatos River that
Evans envisioned as the arena for the bull-games. Most
scholars, however, see the ‘bastion’ as
simply the service entrance for all of the nearby workshops.
Next to the Central Court is a rectangular block of
basement rooms including magazines equipped with large
storage jars and smaller rooms with cult vessels and
kitchen ware. Several of the rooms contained loom weights
that had fallen from the floor above, indicating that
weaving took place there. Fragments of painted plaster
and stucco reliefs together with a pair of column bases
suggest that a large hall of considerable importance
(Evans called it the East Hall) occupied
one of the upper storeys—perhaps the one level
with the Central Court. In the fill on the northern
edge of the block a number of faience plaques were found,
part of a panel (or group of panels) known as the Town
Mosaic. Originally, they probably decorated
a wooden box or chest but that has long since disintegrated.
The pieces include fragments of landscapes, animals,
marching soldiers and the prow of a ship but most notable
are the towers and houses of a seaside town. The buildings
are very carefully rendered and show many details of
construction that proved very useful to Evans in his
reconstruction of the palace. He thought the complete
composition was a siege scene, similar to the one that
appears on a silver vessel from Mycenae. A remarkably
similar version of the complete scene was found painted
on the walls of a house at Akrotiri on the island of
Thera (Santorini).
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Town
Mosaic |
Flotilla
Fresco from Akrotiri, Thera
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Running
north is the Passage of the Draught Board
(Evans found a game board made of crystal, faience
and ivory along with gaming pieces) which runs past
a room with a rather well preserved drainage system.
A downspout brought rainwater to a long stone conduit
which led to the outlet on the wall of the Court
of the Stone Spout. The corridor continues past
the North-East Hall and North-East
Magazines and, after a couple of turns,
ends up at the east side of the North Pillar
Hall. |
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