Minoan Thera Wallpainting Exhibition: Saffron (Crocus) Gatherers 17th C. BCE

"Xeste 3, Room 3a, first floor
East Wall
H: 2.44 / W: 2.66 m

The ‘Saffron-Gatherers’ and the ‘Mistress of Animals’ constitute a series of wall-paintings that decorated room 3a on the first floor of Xeste 3.

On the east wall, two women, one younger than the other, are depicted in a field of crocuses. The older figure is gathering the stamens of flowers with her right hand, while holding a basket in her left. The younger figure, with the shaved blue head, is gathering the stamens with both hands. The difference in age and the manner in which the two figures engage each other visually implies a teacher-student relationship.

Scholars believe that either the Crocus Sativus or the Crocus Catwrightianus, are depicted in the wall-painting. The Crocus Sativus grows even today on the Aegean islands and mainland Greece, flowering for a few days at the end of the summer. Cultivated since antiquity, saffron, which is derived from the stamen of the crocus, has been used as a dye, a pharmaceutical product and a perfume for centuries.

Uses of saffron in Akrotiri are likely to have included, but were not limited to, the dyeing of robes. Saffron-coloured robes are found throughout the wall-paintings, mostly adorning women. In Classical Greece, crocus dye was a symbol of supremacy and wealth. Saffron-coloured clothing is often mentioned in ancient mythology, tragedies, and poetry."

-taken from therafoundation link below

Minoan Thera Wallpainting Exhibition: Saffron (Crocus) Gatherers 17th C. BCE.












Xeste 3, room 3a, ‘Young Saffron Gatherer’: With larger wall-paintings found relatively intact, restoration specialists use a glue and acetone solution to gently adhere a medical grade gauze to the rear of the wall-painting, thus preventing disintegration during transportation.

Xeste 3, room 3a, head of a ‘Saffron Gatherer’: Removed carefully from its original location and placed on a collecting tray, the wall-painting is ready for transportation to the restoration lab.



Source:

https://web.archive.org/web/20100601083215/http://www.therafoundation.org/photographicexhibitionofakrotiri/23photographicexhibition

https://web.archive.org/web/20100601082645/http://www.therafoundation.org/photographicexhibitionofakrotiri/22photographicexhibition  

https://cabinetiris.hypotheses.org/29/crocus_gatherers

https://hellenictheologyandplatonicphilosophy.wordpress.com/%CE%AD%CE%BD%CE%B8%CE%B5%CE%BF-%CE%B6%CE%B7%CE%BD-%CE%B5%CE%BB%CE%BB%CE%AE%CE%BD%CF%89%CE%BD/%CE%B8%CE%AE%CF%81%CE%B1-%CE%BE%CE%B5%CF%83%CF%84%CE%AE-3/

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Saffron_gatherer,_Akrotiri.jpg

https://www.pinterest.com/pin/391742867579143194/

https://www.pinterest.ru/pin/616430267732595440/

https://twitter.com/Daniel_Red_Eire/status/915606327937916929

 

Quote:

https://web.archive.org/web/20120308051705/http://www.therafoundation.org/wallpaintingexhibition/saffron-gatheres/wallpainting

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