Langebeck, Francheska Marie

The Politics of Feasting: Civic Commensality and the Rise of the Polis in the Early Iron Age to Archaic Transition on Crete, ca. 700-500 BCE

Type:
Names:
Creator (cre): Langebeck, Francheska Marie, Thesis advisor (ths): Fitzsimons, Rodney, Degree committee member (dgc): Munson, Marit, Degree committee member (dgc): Moore, Jennifer, Degree granting institution (dgg): Trent University
Abstract:

The goal of this thesis is to explore the role that civic (i.e. state-sponsored)

feasting and drinking played in early polis (pl. poleis), or city-state formation on Crete in

the Early Iron Age to Archaic transition, ca. 700-500 BCE. Using the two recently

excavated civic feasting structures at the site of Azoria as a model for both "inclusive"

and "exclusive" forms of civic feasting, this project compares and contrasts the role that it

played at a number of other sites in central and east Crete. In order to categorize the

structures as either inclusive or exclusive, all forms of published evidence were examined

including the buildings' architecture and the socially valued goods and ceramics found

within the structures. Ultimately, this project demonstrates that in the 8th century BCE,

inclusive feasting rituals and association with the past were used as means of creating and

maintaining a strong group identity, which paved the way for the use of more exclusive

practices in the 7th century BCE, where sub-group identities and alliances were formed

amongst members of the larger group. However, at the sites where there was evidence for

multiple civic feasting venues it appears that by the 7th century BCE, the interplay of both

inclusive and exclusive forms of feasting was crucial to the process of identity formation

for the citizens of these proto-poleis.

Author Keywords: Archaic Crete, Commensality, Feasting, Identity Formation, Polis formation

2019