The modern discipline of archaeology developed in tandem with the expansion of European imperialism in the 19th and 20th centuries. Cyprus, ruled by Britain between 1878 and 1960, is a fascinating example of how archaeology was practiced and developed in a specific colonial context. This volume explores the mechanisms, the institutions and the characters who contributed to the development of Cypriot archaeology, often within a fraught political environment.
The 23 papers in this volume address aspects such as the role of local agents within a colonial environment; changing attitudes towards and interpretations of cultural heritage; the export of excavated materials and their onward journeys; the development of legal frameworks to prevent looting, and their practical application; co-operation and competition between different nation-states at the peak and decline of empires; the conflicts caused by economic priorities; and the impact of institutions and individuals who attempted to support or control rights over the heritage of the island. Through the lens of British-period Cyprus they trace the evolution of institutions and practices that remain important for archaeology in Cyprus to this day.
This volume will be of interest to archaeologists, cultural heritage practitioners, museums, and anyone with an interest in the history of Cyprus.
Preface and acknowledgments
Thomas Kiely, Anna Reeve and Lindy Crewe
By way of introduction. Empires and excavations in Cyprus 1878–1960
Thomas Kiely
PART 1: PEOPLE AND PLACES
Over the landscape, in the landscape? Knowledge and agency in Cypriot archaeology, 1870–1910
Michael Given
Dr Francis Henry Hill Guillemard (1852–1933) and the formation of the Cyprus Exploration Fund
Robert S. Merrillees and Thomas Kiely, with a note by Antoine Hermary
Was there an official German interest in the archaeology of Cyprus between 1878 and 1914?
Stephan Schmid
The Italian entomologist Giacomo Cecconi and Cyprus: a step towards the formation of the Cypriot collection in the National Archaeological Museum of Florence
Sebastiano Soldi
Colonial society and the dismissal of John Hilton, first Director of Antiquities in Cyprus
Nicholas Stanley-Price
Archaeological entanglements: Palestinian refugee archaeologists in Cyprus, Libya and Jordan
Sarah Irving
A clash of personalities, archaeological practices and empires at Enkomi
George Papasavvas
PART 2: POLITICS AND PRACTICES
The implementation of ‘imperial policy’ on the antiquities of Cyprus (1869–1935): targeted or circumstantial?
Despina Pilides
Of goats, monuments and men: George Jeffery and the early management of Waqf-owned medieval monuments in British Cyprus
Pertev Basri
Archaeological politics in colonial Cyprus: Imperialism, Hellenism, and the Eteocypriots
Raphael Marshall
Law and archaeology in British-period Cyprus: the case of Lapithos
Stella Diakou
Mining in the archives: the mining industry and Cypriot archaeology in the British colonial period
Vasiliki Kassianidou
Works and days of the Cyprus Survey Branch during the period 1955–1974
Lindy Crewe, Anna Georgiadou and Despina Pilides
Diving into the past: archival research results of the Cyprus Coastal Assessment Project (CCAP) and the history of the first underwater archaeological explorations in Cyprus
Panagiotis Theofanous, Maria Volikou and Despina Pilides
PART 3: LEGACIES AND RECEPTIONS
Exploring the legacy of imperialist logic: new theoretical approaches to the historiography of Cypriot sculpture
Catherine V. Olien
Cyprus and its antiquities at the British Empire Exhibition, 1924–1925
Anna Reeve
The Ancient Cyprus Collection at the British Museum: retracing stories of travelling antiquities, knowledge, and empire
Polina Nikolaou
National press coverage of the Swedish Cyprus Expedition
Kristian Göransson
The Diaspora of Cypriot Antiquities in Swansea
Ersin Hussein
Communicating archaeology in British-period Cyprus: from Ohnefalsch-Richter to Dikaios
Anastasia Leriou and Giorgos Vavouranakis
Prehistoric archaeology in the Republic of Cyprus: the first sixty years
A. Bernard Knapp
Cypriot Aphrodite, archaeological representation and British colonial discourse: a reappraisal
Christine E. Morris and Giorgos Papantoniou
References
Anna Reeve is an Early Career Research Associate in the Institute of Classical Studies at the University of London. Her PhD from the University of Leeds examined the ancient Cypriot collection belonging to Leeds Museums and Galleries, tracing object itineraries and connecting them to local and global histories. She has published articles in journals and edited volumes on individual local collections of Cypriot antiquities in the UK, working with museums and archives to investigate their histories, and continues to work with colleagues to identify and explore such collections and their routes from Cyprus to the museum.
Lindy Crewe has recently been appointed Director of the Cyprus American Archaeological Research Institute in Nicosia. Since completing her job as Field Director of excavations at the Souskiou Laona cemetery (2001–2006), she has been directing excavations annually at the Middle Bronze Age site of Kissonerga Skalia near Paphos.