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·Introduction
0:00·Mycenae, namesake and showplace of the
0:04·civilization that dominated Greece in
0:06·the late Bronze Age, has been famous
0:08·since antiquity for the tombs of its
0:10·rulers. We know little about these
0:13·people beyond what archaeology can tell
0:15·us. In the home epics, Agamemnon, Lord
0:20·of Mycenae, is leader of the Greeks of
0:22·Troy, famous for the wealth of his
0:24·lands.
0:26·This may represent a faint memory of
0:28·Mycenae's actual prominence in the late
0:30·Bronze Age when the city's rulers seem
0:33·to have dominated a more or less loose
0:35·confederation that covered most of the
0:38·pelpines and eventually conquered Mauan.
0:44·The Mycenaeans exploded into prominence
0:47·around 1500 BC when some combination of
0:51·trade and dealings with Crete and Egypt
0:54·allowed a previously unremarkable
0:56·warrior aristocracy to become enormously
0:59·wealthy. This wealth was on display in
1:02·the tombs built in and around the
1:04·Acropolis of Mycenae which we are now
1:07·entering.
·Grave Circle A
1:10·Just inside the Lion Gate is grave
1:12·circle A. The shaft tombs here dated to
1:16·the 16th century BC at the beginning of
1:19·Mycenae's days of glory. Originally, they
1:22·lay outside the citadel. They were only
1:24·brought inside in the 13th century BC
1:27·during the final extension of the walls.
1:30·Over the intervening centuries, however,
1:33·their location was never forgotten. Once
1:35·they were enclosed inside the new walls,
1:38·a ring of horizontal limestone slabs
1:40·still partially in situ was built around
1:43·them.
1:45·When Heinrich Schliemann uncovered graves
1:48·in 1876,
1:50·he was convinced he had discovered the
1:51·remains of Agamemnon and his companions
1:54·murdered by Clytemnestra and Aegisthus after
1:57·the Trojan War. He was wrong. The graves
2:00·are centuries earlier than any plausible
2:02·date for the Trojan War. But the finds
2:04·in the tombs were spectacular. There
2:07·were six tombs with between one and five
2:09·bodies in each, a total of 15 burials.
2:13·The bones of the individuals buried here
2:15·were well preserved, in one case by a
2:18·quirk of soil conditions, even the flesh
2:20·and hair. The grave goods were
2:22·spectacular, weapons, jewelry, a silver
2:25·ron, and golderary masks.
·Grave Circle B
2:30·After the last shaft in Grave Circle A
2:32·was dug, the royal family of Mycenae
2:35·moved on to even more spectacular Tholos
2:37·tombs all outside the citadel. Before we
2:40·explore these, a brief word about grave
2:43·Circle B, which was partially
2:45·obliterated by one of those tholos tombs.
2:48·Unlike Grave Circle A, which was
2:50·carefully preserved, Grave Circle B was
2:53·ignored by the rulers of Mycenae's
2:55·golden age. Presumably those buried here
2:58·belonged to a different dynasty. The
3:00·graves here are older than those in
3:02·Circle A. In fact, they predate the Mian
3:05·apogee by about a half century, having
3:07·been dug in the 17th century BC. The
3:10·goods in most the 25 graves discovered
3:12·here were relatively modest, though
3:15·gold, ivory, and rock crystal attested
3:18·to trade and warfare that would soon
3:20·make the Masonans very rich.
·Tomb of Clytemnestra
3:24·Just beside Grave Circle A is the
3:26·so-called tomb of Clytemnestra. The
3:29·conventional name comes from a later
3:31·tradition recorded by Palscanius that
3:34·Clytemnestra and Aegisthus, the murderers of
3:37·Agamemnon, were not thought worthy of
3:39·being buried within the walls. In
3:41·reality, of course, we have no idea who
3:44·was buried here. This is the latest of
3:46·the nine tholos tombs at Mycenae, all of
3:49·which date to the last two centuries of
3:52·the Mycenaean era. Like the others, it
3:55·consisted of a dromos, a long approach
3:57·passageway, which we're currently in,
4:00·and the tholos, the tomb proper, built
4:02·into the side of a hill. The tholos
4:05·always had a beehive shape. In later
4:08·examples, like this one, the masonry was
4:10·carefully dressed. Note the corballed
4:13·arch over the door made to prevent the
4:15·full weight of the structure from
4:17·pressing down on the lintel.
·Tomb of Aegisthus
4:21·Next to the tomb of Clytemnestra is the
4:24·so-called tomb of Aegisthus, named after
4:27·the queen's lover and co-conspirator.
4:30·This is one of the oldest tombs at
4:33·Mycenae, built of much rougher masonry.
4:42·Because of its crude construction, the
4:44·vault of the tholos collapsed in
4:46·antiquity.
·Treasury of Atreus
4:50·The undisputed masterpiece of Mycenaean
4:52·feryary architecture, unfortunately
4:54·currently swarming with tour groups, is
4:57·the structure known as the treasury of
4:59·Atreus.
5:02·The dromos was preceded by an artificial
5:04·terrace of undressed stone. The walls of
5:07·the dromos were made of carefully squared
5:09·blocks backed by impermeable waterproof
5:12·clay. The spectacular entrance of
5:15·a tholos, which we'll see momentarily,
5:18·there we are, was flanked by green
5:21·limestone columns with a red marble
5:23·panel carved with swirls in the
5:25·relieving triangle.
5:28·Originally, a double wooden door sealed
5:30·the entrance. The lintel consists of two
5:33·blocks. The inner one, 25 ft long and 16
5:36·wide, was carved to match the curve of
5:39·the tholos. It weighs an estimated 120
5:42·tons.
5:44·It's a bit too loud to speak inside, so
5:46·I'll give my spiel about the interior
5:48·here. There are 33 concentric courses of
5:51·masonry in the tholos walls, all
5:53·carefully shaped and trimmed to create
5:55·an unbroken surface. There are rows of
5:58·nail holes in the stones from the third
6:00·course onward. Originally, these held
6:02·bronze rosettes. A side chamber opens
6:05·from the fol with a depression at the
6:06·center. The king who commissioned this
6:08·tomb was almost certainly buried here.
6:11·The burial was robbed many centuries
6:13·ago, but the tomb remains a monument to
6:16·the mysterious Bronze Age rulers of
6:19·Mycenae.
6:21·Let's go inside.
6:57·creating a room that looks like it'd be
7:00·hard.

1 posted on 11/21/2025 4:15:07 PM PST by SunkenCiv
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To: SunkenCiv

The Greek Dark Ages was a period in Ancient Greece characterized by societal collapse of civilization, where the palaces and cities of the Mycenaeans were either destroyed, abandoned, or both.
At around the same time, the Hittite civilization in modern-day Turkey also suffered serious disruption and collapse, with cities from Troy to Gaza being destroyed.
Moreover, in Egypt, the New Kingdom fell into disarray, leading to the Third Intermediate Period of Egypt.
They all must have had demokrats too.


3 posted on 11/21/2025 4:29:49 PM PST by tumblindice (America's founding fathers: all armed conservatives)
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