Larnaca District Archaeological Museum

[4] The remains of an inhabitant from the Neolithic settlement at Choirokoitia is displayed like it was found, with the body "buried in a contracted [ foetal] position and [with] a heavy millstone [that] was placed on the chest and head"—which was a common burial practice at the time.

Wall mounted text tells about excavations including those at Maroni-Vournes (involving British Museum[7] and University of Cincinnati[8]), Kalavasos-Tenta and Kition.

Items imported to Cyprus during the Late Bronze Age include "a faience sceptre with the cartouche of Pharaoh Horemheb";[10] and an opium pipe.

;[12] "Limestone head of a male wearing a" diadem "decorated with rosettes"—dated 550-525 BC,[13] funerary stele in the shape of a lotus flower, scarabs.

Items on display include imported items of Black-figure pottery and imported Attic Red-figure pottery: a "bell-shaped crater with a representation of a symposium scene"—found at Kition; an "oinochoe with female musicians"—found at Larnaca-Mnemata;[14] a "cup with incised cypro-syllabic signs on its base";[14] "ceramics of the Cypro-Classical Period";[14] locally made vases of the period" including "a hydria, amphoriskoros with vertical handles noted for their particularly symmetrical shape";[14] ceramics of the Hellenistic Period, including several lagynoi,[14] kantharos,[14] "Two shallow dishes from a Hellenistic tomb at Alykes" that had "contained fishbones—tomb offerings to the deceased",[14] "Black Glazed amphoriskos from Aradippou",[14] "Red and Black Glazed perfume containers";[14] ceramics of the Roman Period: vases—Roman Red Slip ware,[15] a pointed amphora, an oinochoe—from 4th -5th century AD,[15] "sculptural groups" and terracotta figurines: limestone sculptures from Cypro-Classical Period (4th century BC—from Arsos: [of] "a female head with a conical head-cover and a wreath of rosettes", a "young maiden with a head band, strongly reminiscent of Attic sculptures",[15] a "theatre mask from Kition",[16] a "terracotta figure of the Tanagra type",[17] a "statue of Priapos"—dated to 2nd or 3rd centuries AD;[17] a "fragment of a clay mold used for relief work";[17] a "statuette of a musician";[17] oil lamps—closed lamps and open ones, including lamps "that imitates a shell—very characteristic of Cyprus from the Geometric to Classical Period"[17] (That type was "re-introduced in the Medieval Period in a glazed form");[17] vases in alabaster; perfume containers—alabastron and various others "with lids of excellent workmanship";[17] an oil filler "for filling up the lamps with oil";[18] perfume containers of blown glass—from Roman Period, from Aradippou;[18] lamps dated 1st century BC-1st century AD;[18] The copper and iron finds from the Early Bronze Age to Late Bronze Age include weapons, tools and vessels.

[18] Other finds include sling bullets, bull's protome, "iron weapons, arrow heads, spears, chains, scrapers, copper mirrors and other ornaments".

Cypriot Red Polished Ware II-III, 2200-1700 BC. Kiel , Germany
Room II
Room II