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The Minoans (Lost Civilizations) [Hardcover]

Don Nardo (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

August 6, 2004
Long before the rise of the classical Greeks and their famous achievements, Crete and nearby Aegean islands were the home of the Minoans, who fashioned Europe's first advanced culture. From the discovery of the great palace at Knossos in 1900, to new theories about the Minoans' demise, a noted scholar of ancient Greece tells the story of this enigmatic vanished people. (20010601)

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Well-written, well-researched...Boxed sidebars provide additional information...black-and-white photos, maps, and reproductions highlight important points in the text."
-- School Library Journal (June 2001) (School Library Journal 20010501)

"This excellent presentation incorporates information about archeological study and projects that led to revealing the history of that area. Chapters trace this ancient land from its early settlements and agrarian societies...through the growth of city-states and empires to their demise. The text is highly readable, material is well-organized; and black-and-white photographs, reproductions, and maps are well integrated. The addition of quotes from many primary archeological sources makes this a vivid study...An extensive bibliography and list suggested reading round out a welcome and useful addition to sources on ancient cultures."
-- School Library Journal (June 2001) (School Library Journal 20010301)

"A clear and informative presentation. Six chapters cover the rise and fall of this early civilization as well as information on daily life, architecture, artisans, royalty, religious beliefs, and scientific understanding. Sidebars provide additional facts...The black-and-white photos of artifacts and sites provide additional information. A solid resource where ancient history is a part of the curriculum."
-- School Library Journal (May 2001) (School Library Journal 20010215)

"The use of quotations from primary and secondary scholarly sources provides a firsthand glimpse into the period and the personal views on a number of topics. Informative black-and-white photographs, reproductions, and maps appear throughout. A well-written, solidly researched study."
-- School Library Journal (March 2001) (School Library Journal )

"Nardo gives a sense of the change throughout the civilization's long history as well as the stability it brought to the ancient world through, among other things, its administration of law. Among the black-and-white illustrations, many works of art are reproduced...the texts are quite readable and authoritative. Well-researched, well-organized, enlightening overviews."
--Booklist ( Febraury 2001) (Booklist )

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 12 and up
  • Hardcover: 112 pages
  • Publisher: Lucent Books; 1 edition (August 6, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 159018565X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1590185650
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 7.1 x 0.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12.8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,217,873 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Don Nardo is a historian and award-winning writer who specializes in the ancient world, especially the civilizations of Greece and Rome. He began as a actor and worked with the National Shakespeare Company before turning to writing screenplays and teleplays and, soon afterward, devoting much of his time to historical research and writing. In the past two decades, he has published nearly two hundred volumes on diverse historical topics. And having earned numerous favorable reviews, he is widely recognized as the country's leading writer of historical works for young adults. He is also versed in various other subjects and as a result is frequently asked by publishers to write books on a number of scientific and literary topics.

Mr. Nardo also composes and arranges orchestral music, having started composing in his early teens. Over the years he has turned out more than eighty musical works, including 2 symphonies, 4 string quartets, several concertos, a film score, incidental music for stage productions, and several commissions, the most recent a double concerto for violin and Portuguese guitar written for two noted musicians. He is also the resident composer and arranger for the Amadis Orchestra, based in Connecticut. For more information, see his official web site at www.nardopublishing.com and his more extensive biography at Wikipedia.


 

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23 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars What we know (and how we know it) about the Ancient Minoan Civilization, May 28, 2006
This review is from: The Minoans (Lost Civilizations) (Hardcover)
Unfortunately there is only color photograph for Don Nardo's look at "The Minoans" for the Lost Civilizations series, and that is the one on the cover. The good news is that it is of the most famous of all Minoan paintings, the Bull Leaping Fresco, which shows three young Minoans in various stage of somersaulting over a huge bull. The bull is impressive enough, but it is the beautiful shade of Minoan blue that always captures my eye ("The Ladies in Blue Fresco" is also pretty impressive). So while this look at the Minoans is filled with photographs of their frescoes and ruins, we only get a taste of how colorful they were (and still are, in some regards).

In his Introduction on The Limitations of the Sources, Nardo explains why we know so little about the Minoans in contrast with the other primary Bronze Age civilization in Greece, in Mycenae, establishing the idea that they are a people without a history (we know about the mythical King Minos, but not one name of a real Minoan). Consequently, there is a question as to whether the traditional views held about the Minoans are realistic or not. What is not in dispute, is that they were Europe's first advanced culture, and deserve to be remembered as such. It is not surprising, then, that Nardo's first chapter is about Arthur Evans and the Discovery of Minoan Civilization, because that is really where the great city of Knossos that he excavated in 1900 enters history.

Subsequent chapters cover what is known and surmised about this ancient culture. Chapter Two, Farming, Finances, and Trade in Minoan Crete, tells what is figured out about their economic system (e.g., a collective system, bees were important), Chapter Three, Political and Social Life in the Minoan Towns looks at what has been learned, or guessed at, from the various frescoes that have been uncovered. This leads to the look at Minoan Painting, Architecture, Crafts, and Writing in Chapter Four. This has some interesting points about the Knossos palace based on reconstructions, and the key features and techniques of Minoan art (there is also a fascinating sidebar on Michael Ventris' deciphering of the Linear B alphabet proving it was an early form of Greek). Chapter Five, Minoan Religious Places, Gods, and Rituals gets into their believe systems, which involved both cave sanctuaries and mountaintop shrines, along with the palace-centers. We also find out a little about Minoan deities such as the snake goddess. and how there are echoes of Minoan religion in some of the myths we know about (e.g., Deadalus).

The final chapters talk about what happened to the Minoan Civilization. Chapter Six, The Minoans at War and the Mycenaean Conquest, looks at what is known about the ancient Cretans as warriors from both myth (e.g., Homer's "Iliad" has then fighting at Troy under Idolmeneus) and history (e.g., a fresco indicating Minoan chariots). Nardo also covers the evidence that the Minoans were dominating the Myceneans before the mainlanders conquered the island. Chapter Seven, Minoan Civilization Is Crippled by a Volcanic Eruption, covers the eruption of Thera ca. 1625-1500 B.C. that devastated the Minoans. In his Epilogue, Nardo looks at The End of Minoan-Mycenaean Civilization, which paved the way for the glory days of Ancient Greece. Because there is so little that is really known about the Minoans, Nardo does an excellent job of documenting why we know what we know, so that young students can have an appreciation for how archaeologists and historians come to their conclusions.

The back of the book contains detailed Notes for the text, a Chronology that from B.C. goes from ca. 6000 when the first human habitations appear in Crete to ca. 355 when Plato wrote the "Tinaeus" and the "Critias," which describe the ancient land of Atlantis, and then jumps to A.D. from 1870, when archaeologist Heinrich Schliemann discovers the remains of Troy to 2004, when excavations continued to unearth and study the remains of a recently discovered large Minoan town, which lies buried beneath the modern Greek city of Khania. Nardo provides not only a list of books and web sites For Further Reading, but also the Works Consulted for this effort, which are divided into major works, other important works (primary sources), modern sources (both books and periodicals). Other titles in the series include looks at "The Ancient Greek," "The Aztecs," "The Celts," "The Etruscans," "The Han Dynasty," and "The Vikings."
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars a very helpful and interesting book, July 7, 2007
This review is from: The Minoans (Lost Civilizations) (Hardcover)
This book told me everything I wanted to know about the subject and it was well writen and obviously very well reserched. The author has done a lot of other books about ancient civilazations and really knows his stuff. I have reveiwed some of those books and, like this one, given them high ratings. Anybody looking for facts about ancient times should check out his books.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent Summary of What is Known about an Important Ancient People, December 2, 2008
By 
B. Hatley (Houston, Texas) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Minoans (Lost Civilizations) (Hardcover)
There is a lot of good information packed into this rather short book about the Minoans, an ancient people located in the area of the eastern Mediterranean. It chronicles their civilization from about 2200 BC to 1100 BC, and describes it from the apparent height of its power to its final subjugation and assimilation by mainland Greeks. It is amazing how much information researchers have been able to glean from ancient storytellers, geological evidence and archaeological remains. With this information and almost no written records from the Minoans themselves, they have pieced together an exciting and surprising picture of their characteristics and history. It also explains how stories about such things as the Minotaur and Atlantis might well have gotten started.
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