Neolithic period The earliest known settlement at Knossos dates to about 7000 BC, during the early Neolithic period. This makes Knossos one of the earliest permanent settlements on Crete and one of the earliest long-lived settlements in the Aegean. The first community occupied the summit of Kephala hill, the later site of the palace. Archaeological evidence indicates a small but stable settlement based on farming, animal husbandry and domestic craft production. The palace was partially destroyed around 1450 BC, during a wider period of disruption affecting many Minoan sites. After this event, Knossos continued to function, but with stronger Mycenaean Greek influence.
Mycenaean and Postpalatial period After about 1450 BC, Knossos became an important Mycenaean administrative centre. The
Linear B tablets discovered at the site record an early form of Greek and provide evidence for administrative control over land, labour, livestock, textiles, offerings and other resources. These tablets are among the most important documents for the study of Late Bronze Age Crete and Mycenaean administration. Although the palace was no longer functioning, the memory and prestige of Knossos remained important. The settlement continued to develop as a Greek city. Burial evidence from the Early Iron Age is particularly important because it preserves traces of social organisation, external contact and elite display that are less visible in the settlement remains.
Archaic, Classical and Hellenistic periods In the Archaic and Classical periods, Knossos was a major Cretan city-state. It was associated in Greek tradition with King Minos and the laws of Crete. Literary sources and archaeological evidence show that Knossos remained politically important, although its power fluctuated in relation to other Cretan cities, especially
Gortyn. Knossos issued coinage and participated in the political and military rivalries of Crete. Its mythological status also gave it cultural significance beyond the island. The Labyrinth motif on Knossian coinage demonstrates the continuing connection between the city and the mythic memory of Minos, Theseus and the Minotaur. During the Hellenistic period, Knossos continued to compete with other Cretan cities. Cretan politics in this period were marked by alliances, rivalries and repeated local conflicts. Knossos remained one of the principal cities of the island, although Gortyn increasingly became the dominant political centre in Roman Crete.
Roman and early Byzantine periods In the Roman period, after Crete came under Roman control, Knossos remained inhabited and developed new public and private buildings. The Roman Villa of Dionysos, known for its mosaics, is one of the notable remains from this phase. Occupation continued into the early Byzantine period, although the site gradually declined in importance as nearby Heraklion became the dominant urban centre of the region. The ancient name survived in later settlement history and in the modern place name. == Mythology ==