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Middle and Late Bronze Age Metal Tools from the Aegean, Eastern ...

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gifts, while <strong>the</strong> Pera tools formed a metal hoard. The validity of <strong>the</strong> Pera cache as a<br />

legitimate hoard has been questioned; perhaps <strong>the</strong> collection’s implements were ga<strong>the</strong>red<br />

toge<strong>the</strong>r <strong>from</strong> a series of burials before being sold a complete set. 512<br />

The dominant MC<br />

tool type is <strong>the</strong> single/flat ax, which was found at almost every site. Chisels, shaft-hole<br />

axes, socketed chisels, <strong>and</strong> saws are also represented during this period. The MC sites are<br />

concentrated in <strong>the</strong> nor<strong>the</strong>rn part of <strong>the</strong> isl<strong>and</strong> as well as in <strong>the</strong> Troodos foothills. Very<br />

few implements <strong>from</strong> <strong>the</strong> sou<strong>the</strong>rn <strong>and</strong> eastern coastal regions are known, a pattern that<br />

shifts by <strong>the</strong> LBA. The changes in tool selection by <strong>the</strong> LC period are apparent just by <strong>the</strong><br />

different sites; only one site (Toumba tou Skourou) had carpentry/masonry tools <strong>from</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

MBA <strong>and</strong> LBA. Burials <strong>and</strong> hoards are <strong>the</strong> depositional context of choice in <strong>the</strong> MC<br />

period, while tools are scarce in LC burials.<br />

MC site<br />

Total carpentry/<br />

masonry tools<br />

Tool types<br />

Lapithos 78 67 single/flat axes; 10 chisels; 1 single/flat adze;<br />

Pera 25 15 single/flat axes; 5 chisels; 2 shaft hole axes; 1 drill;<br />

1 saw; 1 socketed chisel<br />

Politiko Lambertis 7 3 single/flat axes; 3 drills; 1 chisel<br />

Alambra 6 5 single/ flat axes; 1 shaft hole ax<br />

Makarska 6 2 single/flat axes; 2 shaft hole axes; 2 socketed chisels<br />

Karpass region 6 3 single/flat axes; 1 shaft hole ax; 1 chisel; 1 saw<br />

Ayia Paraskevi 5 3 single/flat axes; 2 shaft hole axes<br />

Pyrgos 4 2 single/flat axes; 2 chisels<br />

Arpera Mosphilos 2 2 single/flat axes<br />

Kalavasos – Panayia<br />

church<br />

2 2 single/flat axes<br />

Toumba tou Skourou 2 2 single/flat axes<br />

Vasilia Alonia 2 2 single/flat axes<br />

Table 4.25: <strong>Middle</strong> Cypriot carpentry/masonry tool distribution by site (sites with one tool are<br />

excluded)<br />

Sites <strong>from</strong> <strong>the</strong> Cypriot LBA:<br />

Tool consumption in <strong>the</strong> Cypriot LBA shifted to an entirely new set of sites.<br />

Despite this dramatic change, 80 percent of <strong>the</strong> tool types <strong>from</strong> <strong>the</strong> LBA were evident on<br />

512 Catling 1964, 278 note 1; Åström 1977-78.<br />

205

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