This short 1933 handbook on an archaeological wonder in Crete provides an architectural history and illustrated guide to the site.This short handbook on the Palace of Minos at Knossos in Crete was published in 1933 by archaeologist John Pendlebury (190441), who had worked for several seasons at Knossos. It provides an architectural history of the Palace of Minos, and a guide to the site, with photographs and maps.This short handbook on the Palace of Minos at Knossos in Crete was published in 1933 by archaeologist John Pendlebury (190441), who had worked for several seasons at Knossos. It provides an architectural history of the Palace of Minos, and a guide to the site, with photographs and maps.Sir Arthur Evans's excavation at the Cretan site of Knossos from 1900 onwards uncovered a previously unknown civilization. His enthusiastic (though controversial) reconstructions of the site and its fresco decorations made it an attractive destination for travellers and tourists, and Evans thought a simple guidebook for visitors would be desirable alongside his own multi-volume work, The Palace of Minos (also reissued in this series). This was published in 1933 by John Pendlebury (190441), a brilliant young archaeologist later killed by German troops during the invasion of Crete in 1941. With a foreword by Evans, the handbook is in two parts: an architectural history of the Palace of Minos, and a guide to the site, with a note of the time needed to explore each building, maps showing the best trail to be followed, plans, and detailed descriptions. The book continues to be of value to both archaeologists and tourists.Foreword; Preface; An architectural history of the palace; Note; The palace; The dependencies of the palace; Plates; Plans.