Warsaw: Institute of Archaeology, University of Warsaw, 2017. — 102 p. — ISBN: 978-83-61376-59-0; ISSN: 2544-6398.
Sympozjum Egejskie. Papers in Aegean Archaeology is a new, peer-reviewed series created and edited by Katarzyna Żebrowska, Agata Ulanowska, and Kazimierz Lewartowski as a platform presenting and introducing a broad scope of new research approaches and themes, as well as the newcomers to the discipline, i.e. these authors who are at the beginning of their research career in the field of Aegean Archaeology. We hope that this series will serve as a concise guide presenting the most recent research interests undertaken by early career scholars, as well as new trends in archaeology of the Bronze Age Aegean.
Introduction (Katarzyna Żebrowska, Agata Ulanowska, Kazimierz Lewartowski).
The multi-chamber tombs in Mavro Spilio: a Cypriot origin? (Sofia Antonello).
Animals in insular environment. The case of Bronze Age Crete through aspects of Minoan art (Christos Boutsidis).
Small finds analysis: typology and function. A case study from Phaistos (Marianna Figuera).
A note on some pictorial finds from the dromos of Tomb 1 of the Mycenaean cemetery of the Trapeza. Traces of funerary rites performed after the burial of the dead (Agata Licciardello).
The age of innocence. Parallel young lives in Crete and Cyprus (Giulia Muti).
Textile technology and Minoan glyptic. Representations of loom weights on Middle Minoan prismatic seals (Agata Ulanowska).
Western Anatolia and the Aegean during the Late Bronze Age. A view from the Gulf of Izmir (Rik Vaessen).
The human life hidden in a symbol of flower. Between Minoan world and Egypt (Monika Wesołowska).