“…The presented ceramic material comes from the central cult site of the settlement (so-called West Quarter), which underwent signi cant transformation processes from the 6th to the middle of the 5th century BCE. As already shown elsewhere it developed from an open-air cult site for communal gatherings and commensal feasting practices (600/575 − 525 BCE) to a regional cult site with a central meeting house adopting Greek-style architecture (the so-called 'Aphrodite Temple', 1st phase: 525 − 500 BCE) (Kistler et al, 2018;Kistler, 2020;Öhlinger et al, 2021). Around 500 BCE the cult place underwent an expansion and monumentalisation with the construction of a Greek-style temple with an altar ('Aphrodite Temple', 2nd phase: 500/475 − 460/50 BCE), a banquet house (so-called Late Archaic House; Kistler, 2020) with clear signs of external expert knowledge as well as several smaller rectangular buildings interpreted as guest-and meeting-houses for commensal gatherings during festive events.…”