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Archaeology meets mythology in Mycenean Pylos (King Nestor)
Science Codex ^
| Sep 10, 2009
| Unknown
Posted on 09/11/2009 6:02:06 AM PDT by decimon
Close-up of palace walls. Credit: University of Missouri-St.Louis
Pylos drain. Credit: University of Missouri-St Louis
Clearing thick brush from a mound at his archaeological dig site in Pylos, Greece, Michael Cosmopoulos found a real-life palace dating back to the mythical Trojan War.
The palace is from the Mycenaean period (1600-1100 B.C.), famous for such mythical sagas as the Trojan War. It is thought to sit within one of the capital cities of King Nestor, a personality featured in the legends of the war.
"We are thrilled, excited and fascinated at the prospect of continuing its excavation," said Cosmopoulos, the Hellenic Government-Karakas Family Foundation Endowed Professor in Greek Studies at the University of Missouri-St. Louis. "We have been searching for it since the dig started in 2006."
Other finds at the site include thousands of vases, frescoes, walls, figurines, drainage systems, offering tables and amulets.
"This is a unique site -- a place where archaeology meets ancient texts," Cosmopoulos said. "This discovery may change our perspective of how the first states were born. It appears that this was the seat of the chiefdom that was annexed by the earliest known state in Greece -- that of Mycenaean Pylos."
(Excerpt) Read more at sciencecodex.com ...
TOPICS: History
KEYWORDS: anatolia; cuneiform; epigraphyandlanguage; godsgravesglyphs; greece; greeks; griffinwarrior; history; iklaina; lineara; linearb; luwian; luwians; michaelcosmopoulos; mycenaean; mycenaeans; nestor; pylos; tholos; trojanwar
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To: stefanbatory
21
posted on
09/12/2009 5:06:22 AM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/__Since Jan 3, 2004__Profile updated Monday, January 12, 2009)
To: SunkenCiv
I marked this post to follow up on all those interesting-looking links today, but I get “404 not on the server” on the dozen or so I tried. How can I get to these entries?
To: stefanbatory
This whole thread is reminiscent of the Pun-ic war.
23
posted on
09/12/2009 3:38:21 PM PDT
by
marsh2
To: TheOldLady
Well, for one thing, that moron 'Civ needs to stop screwin' up the links list he worked up. Here's one that's improved insofar as it actually should work now. ;')
- So Who Is Buried in Midas's Tomb?
- Recent Finds Prove That Homer's Stories Were More Than Myth
- Dig Unearths Mycenaean 'Homeric Capital'
- 'Cyclops' -- Like Remains Found On Crete
- Geologists investigate Trojan battlefield
- Scientists Say Warfare Began After People Formed Villages
- The Search For Atlantis 'Ends At Ayia Napa' (Cyprus)
- Debate Erupts Anew: Did Thera's Explosion Doom Minoan Crete?
- The Truth About An Epic Tale Of Love, War And Greed (Troy)
- Victor Davis Hanson: The Ancient Greeks -- Were they like us at all?
- Pitt Says Men May Start Wearing Skirts After 'Troy'
- Let's hope 'Troy' doesn't put men in skirts
- Director compares 'Troy' to Iraq war
- Boycott Brad Pitt In the movie "Troy"!
- Trojan Bore (REVIEW: Troy devoid of any notion of honor, destiny, gods, or reason to see it)
- Ties between Hollywood and Teachers? (Vanity)
- Troy the Movie
- 50 Ancient Tombs Uncovered (1400BC, Crete)
- Minoan ship to ply Greek seas for first time in 3,500 years
- New Ice-Core Evidence Challenges the 1620s age for the Santorini (Minoan) Eruption
- Was There a Trojan War?
- Ireland Is Lost Island of Atlantis, Says Scientist
- Laocoön and His Son
- The Linear B Tablets and Mycenaean Social, Political, and Economic Organization
- Arzawa
- Let's not read too much into the fate of 'Alexander'(Hilarious Movie Review!)
- NYT: Big Films, but a Year of Smaller Audiences
- In Search of the Real Troy
- Russian Culture Official Suggests Legendary Gold Collection From Troy Unlikely be Returned Germany
- Kernave: Lithuania's 'Troy' to celebrate UNESCO heritage site listing
- Mycenaean Port Of Athens Found
- Mycenaean Port of Athens Found?
- Unearthing the Treasures of the Mediterranean
- Protopalatial Sanctuary at Anemospilia (Archanes), More on the Peaceful Minoans
- Unlocking the Power of Myth
- Bulgarian Archaeologists Uncover Treasure Of Thousands Of Golden Ornaments
- Archeologists make historic discovery (Tomb of Odysseus)
- Roman Theatre Goddesses Unearthed In Crete (Athena & Hera)
- Helen of Troy: Goddess, Princess, Whore
- Helen Of Troy Existed?
- Greek treasures unearthed (Minoans, Linear A, Linear B)
- Palace Of Homer's Hero Rises Out Of Myths
- Virgil's Demi-God City 'Found'
- Explorer Ballard heads exploration of undersea volcano
- Archaeologists Seek Hints On 4,000-Year-Old (Thracian) Civilization In Tekirdaâº
- Bulgaria Unearths Acropolis-Rivalling Ancient Sanctuary
- Crete: isle of the dead?
- Santorini Eruption Much larger Than Originally Believed
- Schliemann's search for the 'first city'
- Drill hole begins Homeric quest
- Unique Mycenaean suit of armor due for conservation
- Lessons Of 'The 300'
- Classical Treasures, Bathed in a New Light [ Met Museum, NYC, Roman and Greek classics ]
- Mycenaean and Hittite Diplomatic Correspondence: Fact and Fiction [ PDF file ]
- 2,700-Year-Old Fabric Found in Greece
- Troy Story [The Straight Dope]
- Prehistoric Greek Water Works Found [ Mycenaean citadel of Midea ]
- Sick Rams Used As Ancient Bioweapons
- Did a Tsunami Wipe Out a Cradle of Western Civilization?
- Tsunami that devastated the ancient world could return
- Phaistos Disc declared as fake by scholar
- Defences at Troy reveal larger town [ news finally reaches UK ]
- 'The Odyssey' and 'The Iliad' are giving up new secrets about the ancient world
- Mycenaean warrior used 'imported sword'
- Grog of the Greeks [ barley beer, honey mead, retsina wine ]
- Trojan arrows and unique seals from Perperikon stand out in archaeological summer '08
- Making merry at Knossos
- Decoding antiquity: Eight scripts that still can't be read
- Decipherments of the Phaistos Disk: NOT!
- Phaistos Disk: Greek or Luwian?
- Modernist minotaurs
- Powerful quake hits near Greek island
24
posted on
09/14/2009 7:53:36 AM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/__Since Jan 3, 2004__Profile updated Monday, January 12, 2009)
To: SunkenCiv
To: decimon; SunkenCiv
Other finds at the site include thousands of vases, frescoes, walls, figurines, drainage systems, offering tables and amulets. And an autographed photo of Brad Pitt ...
26
posted on
09/14/2009 1:19:29 PM PDT
by
colorado tanker
(Barack Obama is an old Kenyan word for Jimmy Carter)
To: colorado tanker
drat...I was hoping for Carey Elwes...the only Robin Hood to speak with an Englis accent..
27
posted on
09/14/2009 1:46:18 PM PDT
by
stefanbatory
(Weed out the RINOs! Sign the pledge. conservativepledge.org)
To: stefanbatory
I thought Errol Flynn was English?? :-))
28
posted on
09/14/2009 1:59:23 PM PDT
by
colorado tanker
(Barack Obama is an old Kenyan word for Jimmy Carter)
To: decimon
Okay, just found the file again, and best of all, checked the link and it's working. :') Nice article, nice little pics.
Homer's Bones:
Can an archaeological dig in Greece
reveal the line between truth and fiction
in the Iliad and the Odyssey?
by John Fleischman
July 1, 2002
...There were tons of pottery fragments and other ancient detritus stored there. And there were animal bones, lots of them... Their remains had been excavated on April 4, 1939, in what may have been the luckiest first day in archaeological history. That day, Carl Blegen, Stocker's predecessor at the University of Cincinnati, was digging an exploratory trench through an olive grove when one of his workmen lifted a clay tablet from the soil. Lightly brushing away the dirt, Blegen saw at once that the tablet was incised in Linear B, an undeciphered script known from Bronze Age Crete and never before seen on the Greek mainland. That spring, before war closed in on Greece, Blegen raced to unearth hundreds more tablets, providing the critical mass for deciphering the script. The tablets revealed that the people of this hilltop palace wrote in an early form of Greek. Although they never named their king, Blegen became convinced that his name was Nestor.
Blegen needed to find that archive, as Evans was sitting on the first (and only other) archive of Linear B. Evans was convinced that none of the three scripts found at Knossos concealed the Greek language. Linear B was indeed cracked by Michael Ventris, who did indeed find Greek concealed there. Linear A has never been translated to the satisfaction of any scholar save the few who have claimed to have done it. :') (they mostly don't agree with one another) The glyphic script was never found in much quantity, and Linear A is believed by some to not have enough surviving examples to ever crack it, short of turning up a bilingual text.
29
posted on
09/23/2009 7:00:12 PM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/__Since Jan 3, 2004__Profile updated Monday, January 12, 2009)
30
posted on
12/25/2015 8:30:27 AM PST
by
SunkenCiv
(Here's to the day the forensics people scrape what's left of Putin off the ceiling of his limo.)
There's a new article about Iklaina that purports to reveal new discoveries. It's apparent that there's no one new thing in the whole article, but it makes a nice pretext for an updated ping message and such.
and from the FRchives:
31
posted on
01/18/2018 5:03:16 PM PST
by
SunkenCiv
(www.tapatalk.com/groups/godsgravesglyphs/, forum.darwincentral.org, www.gopbriefingroom.com)
Note: this topic is from . Thanks decimon.
Long after the Trojan War, in the classical era, the Athenians used archers to drive the Spartan garrison on Sphacteria (an island off Pylos) to the brink, and they surrendered. This hoplite shield was war booty.
Spartan shield from Pylos. Bronze shield punched through in large letters: "The Athenians from the Lakedaemonians from Pylos".
American School of Classical Studies at Athens
32
posted on
09/18/2019 10:53:28 PM PDT
by
SunkenCiv
(Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
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