Review and new evidence on the molluscan purple pigment used in the early late bronze age aegeanwall paintings

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Abstract

The production and use of the pigment extracted from the murex molluscs is discussed here in association with the purple textile dyeing industry in the Prehistoric Aegean. “True” purple has been identified in a number of archaeological finds dating from the early Late Bronze Age, found in old and recent excavations at three different but contemporary sites: Akrotiri and Raos on Thera, and Trianda on Rhodes. The chemical composition of the shellfish purple pigment either found in lump form or applied on wall paintings is discussed in relation to the archaeological context of several examined finds and with reference to Pliny’s purpurissum. The results of a comprehensive methodology combining new data obtained with molecular spectroscopies (microRaman and FTIR) and already reported data obtained with high performance liquid chromatography coupled with a diode array detector (HPLC-DAD) applied to samples of the murex purple finds are discussed in comparison to published data relating to few other instances of analytically proven murex purple pigment found in the Aegean over the timespan of its documented exploitation.

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Sotiropoulou, S., Karapanagiotis, I., Andrikopoulos, K. S., Marketou, T., Birtacha, K., & Marthari, M. (2021). Review and new evidence on the molluscan purple pigment used in the early late bronze age aegeanwall paintings. Heritage, 4(1), 171–187. https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage4010010

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