First resident of ancient Crete? Humans arrive between islands now between 6,500 and 6,000 BC, which is now called Crete Island, and residents of the early Neolithic period are thought to arrive from Asia Minor. These early inhabitants were primitive, but adapted to several stages of production, such as ownership of livestock (? Minoan, Dilos). Modern archaeological discoveries can often be traced back to handmade ceramic ceramics decorated with cut geometric patterns and simulated boats made of straw, wood or leather. Period (Coutso Pakis) ..
Knossos is also the center of the city of Knossos, the ancient city of Crete, the capital of legendary Minos, and the center of Minos, the earliest Aegean civilization (see Minos Civilization). The remains of Knossos is about 8 km (8 miles) from the northern coast of Crete during the intersection of the two streams. In 1900, Sir Arthur Evans began excavating in Knossos and introduced the palace which is the complex culture center of the Bronze Age from 1600 to 1400 BC and its surrounding buildings. The Aegean Sea was ruled in the meantime.
Back in the Neolithic Age, the name Knossos comes from the reference to the major cities of Crete in ancient Greece. The Knossos palace eventually became the center of ceremonial and cultural ceremonies and politics of Minoan. At the end of the late Bronze Age, the palace was abandoned at an unknown time, c. BC 1380-1100 The reason is not clear, but it is generally one of many disasters encountered in the palace. Starting with the establishment of the first Neolithic settlement c in the Knossos ruins, there is a long history of human colonial settlements. 7000 BC. The ruins of the Neolithic era were rich in Crete. They exist in caves, lock bunkers, homes, villages. Knossos has a layer of a thick Neolithic age, indicating that the palace is a set of villages before the court era. The oldest one is placed on the foundation