Sklavokampos

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Sklavokampos (also Sklavokambos) is the archaeological site of an ancient Minoan settlement on Crete, in use in the Late Minoan period.

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[edit] Geography

Sklavokampos is just southwest of Tylissos.

[edit] Archaeology

The site was discovered while constructing a road to Anoyeia and was first excavated in the 1930s.

A multiple-story building was found at the site. Its main room yielded a clay ox head, a LMIB style jug and a stone rhyton. The building had at least 17 rooms. Finds from an upper story included 39 sealings, a cylinderical vessel, a stone hammer and a clay foot. Seal impressions from one the Sklavokampos sealings have been found in Zakros, Gournia and Hagia Triada.

No frescoes or gypsum finishings were found at the Sklavokampos building, which are commonly found in Minoan palaces.

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