TERRACOTTA LARNAX, 1400-1200 BCE, FROM CRETE. BRITISH MUSEUM This terracotta ossuary has rounded loop handles on both lid and box, and shows decoration in black paint that can still be barely made out. The front of the box (and presumably the back) has two recessed panels with quatrefoil and scale designs, while the lid has a pattern of tentacles. This comes from a British excavation at Rousolakkos, a Bronze Age city on the coast of Palaikastro near Mount Dicte, the legendary birthplace of Zeus. The larnax comes from toward the very end of the Bronze Age in Crete, when the island was ruled by Mycenaean Greeks facing the invading Sea Peoples, who would close out the period in chaos and destruction.
#SarcophagusSaturday at the #BritishMuseum surprises us with quite the little collection of #Minoan funerary furniture, like this terracotta #larnax or #ossuary from 1400-1200 BCE, found at Palaikastro in northeastern #Crete. This one has traces of painted decoration. #AncientBluesky 🏺