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factbase-ancient-history/civilizations/minoan-civilization.md
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# Minoan Civilization
## Overview
The Minoan civilization (~30001450 BCE) on Crete was the first advanced civilization in Europe, known for elaborate palace complexes, vibrant frescoes, and the undeciphered Linear A script. @t[~3000 BCE..~1450 BCE]
## Key Facts
- Region: Crete and Aegean islands @t[~3000 BCE..~1450 BCE]
- Period: ~30001450 BCE @t[~3000 BCE..~1450 BCE]
- Major sites: Knossos, Phaistos, Malia, Zakros @t[~3000 BCE..~1450 BCE]
- Writing: Cretan hieroglyphs, Linear A (undeciphered); succeeded by Linear B (Mycenaean, deciphered 1952)
- Named by: Arthur Evans, after the mythical King Minos [^1]
## Palace Periods
Scholars divide Minoan history into four phases based on palace construction [^3]:
- **Prepalatial** (~30001900 BCE): Early settlements; no palace centers yet @t[~3000 BCE..~1900 BCE]
- **Protopalatial (Old Palace)** (~19001700 BCE): First palace complexes built at Knossos, Phaistos, and Malia @t[~1900 BCE..~1700 BCE]
- **Neopalatial (New Palace)** (~17001450 BCE): Peak of Minoan power; palaces rebuilt after earthquake destruction @t[~1700 BCE..~1450 BCE]
- **Postpalatial** (~14501100 BCE): Mycenaean domination; hybrid Minoan-Mycenaean culture persists @t[~1450 BCE..~1100 BCE]
## Achievements
- Palace complexes at Knossos (up to 1,300 rooms) [^1]
- Advanced plumbing and drainage systems [^1]
- Vibrant fresco art depicting nature, rituals, and bull-leaping [^1]
- Extensive maritime trade network reaching Egypt, the Levant, the Cyclades, and Anatolia [^2] [^3]
- Minoan colony at Akrotiri on Thera (Santorini), preserved under volcanic ash [^3]
## Religion
Minoan religion centered on a goddess figure associated with nature, snakes, and fertility, worshipped in palace shrines and open-air peak sanctuaries. Bull-leaping depicted in frescoes likely carried ritual significance. Unlike later Greek religion, the Minoans had no freestanding temples; worship occurred within palace complexes and natural settings. [^1] [^3]
## Writing Systems
- **Cretan hieroglyphs** (~21001700 BCE): Earliest Minoan script, used on seals and clay tablets @t[~2100 BCE..~1700 BCE]
- **Linear A** (~18001450 BCE): Administrative script used across Minoan sites; still undeciphered @t[~1800 BCE..~1450 BCE]
- **Linear B** (~14501200 BCE): Adapted by Mycenaeans from Linear A; deciphered by Michael Ventris in 1952; records an early form of Greek @t[~1450 BCE..~1200 BCE] [^4]
## Decline
The Minoan civilization declined after ~1450 BCE, possibly due to the Thera eruption (~1628 BCE), Mycenaean invasion, or a combination of factors [^2]. @t[..~1450 BCE] The Thera eruption predates the palace destructions by roughly 150200 years, suggesting it weakened but did not immediately destroy Minoan civilization. Mycenaean Greeks subsequently dominated Crete, forming a hybrid culture that persisted until ~1100 BCE. @t[~1450 BCE..~1100 BCE]
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[^1]: Evans, A. *The Palace of Minos at Knossos* (19211935)
[^2]: Driessen, J. & Macdonald, C. *The Troubled Island* (1997)
[^3]: Cartwright, M. "Minoan Civilization." *World History Encyclopedia* (2012). https://www.worldhistory.org/Minoan_Civilization/
[^4]: Ventris, M. & Chadwick, J. *Documents in Mycenaean Greek* (1956)