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Enkomi Bronze Figurines: Gods of Copper

Enkomi Bronze Figurines: Gods of Copper

Enkomi’s bronze figurines show how Late Bronze Age Cyprus fused religion with copper production, turning its key resource into divine protection and political legitimacy. The Horned God and the Ingot God were not decorative art but intentional symbols, linking sanctuaries, workshops, and administrative control inside one civic system. This article explains Enkomi’s trade position as Alashiya, what each figure was designed to communicate, and why their burial and survival still shape how we understand “sacred industry” on Cyprus. A City Between Mine and Sea Enkomi rose on a rocky plateau near a sheltered inlet that once opened to the sea. This position allowed it to function as both a port and a processing centre, linking the copper-rich Troodos Mountains to international trade routes that reached Egypt, the Levant, and the Aegean. Ancient texts refer to the kingdom of Alashiya as a copper supplier powerful enough to address pharaohs as equals. That status came directly from Enkomi's control of metal production. The city expanded dramatically during the Late Bronze Age, especially in the 14th and 13th centuries BCE. Its layout reveals planning rather than improvisation. Straight streets, large ashlar buildings, and massive fortifications point to centralised authority and long-term investment. This was not a marginal settlement. It was an industrial capital whose wealth depended on metal and whose religion reflected that…

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Archaeological Sites and Excavations in Cyprus

Archaeological Sites and Excavations in Cyprus

Beneath Cyprus's sunny beaches and pine-covered mountains lie layers of ancient civilizations waiting to be discovered. From 9,000-year-old Neolithic villages to Roman theaters still hosting performances, the island's archaeological sites tell the story of humanity's journey from Stone Age farmers to cosmopolitan Mediterranean traders - and remarkably, you can walk through most of them today. culture.gouv_fr A Living Museum Beneath Your Feet Cyprus is essentially one enormous archaeological site. Everywhere you turn - in downtown Larnaca, on clifftops overlooking the sea, hidden in mountain valleys - you'll find excavated ruins that reveal thousands of years of continuous human habitation. These aren't just piles of old stones; they're remarkably well-preserved windows into how people lived, worshipped, fought, and thrived across millennia. What makes Cyprus's archaeological landscape special is its completeness. You can trace the entire arc of Mediterranean civilization here: from Neolithic round-house villages to Bronze Age fortresses, from Phoenician temples to Greek theaters, from Roman bath complexes to early Christian basilicas. Each era built upon the last, creating stratified sites where one civilization's ruins literally rest atop another's foundations. From Stone Age Settlements to Classical Cities Cyprus's archaeological story begins over 11,000 years ago when the first humans arrived and found an island inhabited by pygmy hippos and dwarf elephants. By the 7th millennium BC, Neolithic farmers had established permanent…

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Omodos Medieval Architecture

Omodos Medieval Architecture

Omodos is a mountain village in the Limassol district of Cyprus, located 42 kilometers northwest of the city at an elevation of 810 meters. The village sits in the heart of the Krasochoria region, a wine-producing area in the Troodos foothills. The village square, covering 3,000 square meters and dating to 1910, stands as one of the largest in Cyprus. The architectural character of Omodos creates what many describe as a living museum, where centuries of building traditions remain visible in everyday structures. This preservation has made the village a protected heritage site and a key destination for those interested in traditional Cypriot architecture. Historical Background The village likely came into existence at the end of the Byzantine period, sometime around the 12th or 13th century. According to historical records, two earlier settlements called Pano Koupetra and Kato Koupetra existed on the east bank of the Cha-potami river. After these settlements dissolved, residents established a new community around the Monastery of the Holy Cross, creating what became modern Omodos. Historical tradition claims that Isaac Comnenos, the Byzantine despot of Cyprus from 1185 to 1191, took refuge in Koupetra after his defeat by the English King Richard the Lionheart, confirming that settlements existed in this area by 1191. Medieval records document the village during the Frankish period when Cyprus was under…

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