AHEPA flyer final 111712 Flyer Text: Kommos was an inhabited site for 2000 years and it includes a Minoan emporium and seaport town with a later Hellenistic Greek temple sanctuary. This archaeological site adjacent to the beach and sea was …

Kommos Archaeological Park: Conservation, Education & Sustainable Job Creation in Greece Read more

  The disappointment of the Gaddafi government’s stewardship at Cyrene An important Hellenic-Roman heritage site in eastern Libya, as recounted in a  recent Kathemerini article by M. Abbas, reminded us of the planning that the Kommos Conservancy continues to invest …

Capitalizing on Existing Assets: Infrastructure and Planning Read more

Humor and the need to make the Kommos excavation relevant and meaningful to a wide ranging audience. The subject matter is fascinating, the context is amazing and the interpretation will need to be accessible!

The Kommos kiln, described in a previous Blog entry is but one architectural feature of the site that deserves interpretation. The site also yielded many artifacts besides the architectural legacy of the former inhabitants. Chief amongst the artifact categories is …

Interpretive theme 2: artifacts – pottery Read more