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MYCENAE

ΜΥΚΉNEΣ / Μυκήνες

Orientation

The Tour Begins

Archaeological Site

Image Lion Gate and Wall

Map: Mycenae

Image Grave Circle A (c. 1550 B.C.)

Image Royal Palace and Throne Room (Megaron)

Image The Top of the Acropolis: Mycenae the Fortress-City

The Cistern and Other Sights at the East End

Museum

Entrance Hall

Religious Symbols

Funeral Objects

Mycenaean Writing and Everyday Objects

Treasury of Atreus (a.k.a. Tomb of Agamemnon)

Tholos Tomb (13th century B.C.)

The Rest of Mycenae

Mycenae—a fortress city atop a hill—was the hub of a mighty civilization that dominated the Greek world between 1600 and 1200 B.C., a thousand years before Athens’ Golden Age. The Mycenaeans were as distant and mysterious to the Golden Age Greeks as Plato and Socrates are to us today. Ancient Greek tourists visited the dramatic ruins of Mycenae and concluded that the Mycenaeans must have been the heroes who’d won the Trojan War, as related in Homer’s epic poems, the Iliad and the Odyssey. They thought of the Mycenaeans as their ancestors, the first “Greeks.”

Following the same ancient sandal-steps as the ancient Greeks, today’s visitors continue to enjoy Mycenae’s majestic setting of mountains, valleys, and the distant sea. Exploring this still-impressive hilltop, you’ll discover the famous Lion Gate, a manageable museum, an enormous domed burial chamber...and distant echoes of the Trojan War.

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When it comes to unraveling the mystery of the Mycenaeans, modern historians—armed with only the slimmest written record—are still trying to sort out fact from legend. They don’t know exactly who the Mycenaeans were, where they came from, or what happened to them. Here are the sketchy (and oft-disputed) details:

Around 1600 B.C., a Bronze Age civilization originating in Asia Minor developed an empire of autonomous city-states that covered the southern half of mainland Greece and a few islands. Their capital was the city of Mycenae, which also gave its name to the people and the era. From contact with the sophisticated Minoan people on the isle of Crete, the militaristic Mycenaeans borrowed elements of religion and the arts.

Sometime about the year 1200 B.C., the aggressive Mycenaeans likely launched an attack on Troy, a rich city on the northwest coast of Asia Minor (present-day Turkey). After a long siege, Troy fell, and the Mycenaeans became the undisputed rulers of the Aegean. Then, just as suddenly, the Mycenaeans mysteriously disappeared, and their empire crumbled. Whether the Mycenaeans fell victim to a sudden invasion by the Dorians (a Greek tribe), an attack of the mysterious tribes later dubbed the “Sea People,” a drought, or internal rebellion—no one knows. Whatever the reason, by 1100 B.C., Mycenae was abandoned and burned, and Greece plunged into four centuries known as the Dark Ages.

Nearly three millennia later, in 1876, German archaeologist Heinrich Schliemann excavated this site and put it back on the archaeologists’ (and tourists’) map. Today a visit to Mycenae is a trip back into prehistory to see some of the oldest remains of a complex civilization in all of Europe—a thousand years older than Athens’ Acropolis.

Orientation

(See “Mycenae” map, here.)

Cost: €8 ticket includes the archaeological site, the museum, and the Treasury of Atreus up the road.

Hours: As at other archaeological sites around Greece, Mycenae’s hours can change without notice. Site—roughly May-Sept Mon-Sat 8:00-19:00, Sun 8:30-16:00; closes an hour or two earlier in fall; Dec-April Mon-Sat 7:30-15:00 or 8:30-16:00, may close Sun; museum—same hours as site except Mon, when it opens at 12:00 and may close 30 minutes before the rest of the site. Both can close at 15:00 on slow days. Tel. 27510-76585 (at Mycenae) or 27520-27502 (in Nafplio), www.culture.gr.

Getting There: Mycenae is 18 miles north of Nafplio (on the way to the major E-65 expressway)—it’s easiest to drive there. From the modern town of Mycenae/Μυκήνες (near the larger town of Fichti/Φιχτι), the ruins are about two miles north, dramatically obvious atop a hill. If you’re connecting Mycenae and Epidavros from Nafplio on a day trip by car (allow 45-60 minutes), you can avoid driving all the way back into Nafplio by watching carefully for signs to either site, which direct you to a roundabout outside central Nafplio.

Buses run from Nafplio directly to ancient Mycenae (Mon-Sat 3/day—likely at 10:00, 12:00, and 14:00; no buses on Sun; possibly fewer buses Oct-April, 45 minutes, €3), but the timing for the return trip makes taking a bus a pain. You’ll have either just 30 minutes to see the site (not enough) or 2.5 hours (a little too much for some people). For advice about connecting Mycenae and Epidavros in one bus-based day trip from Nafplio, see here. If you do take the bus, confirm that your bus goes to the archaeological site; other buses take you only as far as Fichti, two miles away.

You can also take a taxi to Mycenae from Nafplio (about €50-70 round-trip, best to arrange your return in advance; if you need to arrange a return taxi from Mycenae on the spot, call mobile 694-643-1726).

Arrival in Mycenae: From the entrance, the acropolis is to the east. Drivers can use the free parking lot near the entrance to the ruins and museum; if it’s full, it’s OK to park along the road leading to the lot.

Services: WCs are near the museum shop—as you face the ruins from the ticket booth, walk around the left side of the hill (toward the museum). A stand in the parking lot sells basic snacks, and there’s a vending machine near the ticket booth.

Planning Your Time: As with most ancient sites with a museum, you can decide whether to see the museum first (to help reconstruct the ruins) or the site first (to get the lay of the land). If you want to explore the cistern, bring a flashlight. To complement the information in this self-guided tour, read the chapter on Athens’ National Archaeological Museum, where many Mycenaean artifacts are now displayed (see here).

Length of This Tour: Allow an hour for the site, a half-hour for the museum, and a half-hour for the Treasury of Atreus. It makes for a handy half-day side-trip from Nafplio, and can be combined conveniently with the Theater of Epidavros for a full day of ancient site-hopping (best by car).

Pronunciation: Mycenae is pronounced my-SEE-nee by English-speakers; Greeks call the town Mykenes/Μυκήνες (mee-KEE-nehs), also spelled Mikenes. The ancient people are known as the Mycenaeans (my-seh-NEE-uhns).

Starring: The hilltop fortress at the center of the most ancient, powerful, and enigmatic of ancient Greek civilizations.

The Tour Begins

(See “Mycenae” map, here.)

The three main sightseeing areas at Mycenae are a few minutes’ walk from one another. The archaeological ruins consist of the walled city of Mycenae atop the hill called the acropolis. Here you’ll find the famous Lion Gate entrance, Grave Circle A, which yielded precious artifacts, and the ruins of the palace. Below the site is the museum, housing artifacts that were found here. Finally, as impressive as anything here, is the Treasury of Atreus—a huge domed tomb, located about 300 yards away from the main site (along the main road). A handful of other ruins and tombs are scattered around the area, but stick to these three to start your visit.

Note that some of the ruins (confusingly) have two different names—for example, the Treasury of Atreus is also known as the Tomb of Agamemnon.

• Buy your ticket for the archaeological site and enter, climbing the ramp up the acropolis.

Archaeological Site

(See “Mycenae” map, here.)

• You’ll enter the fortified complex through the...

Image Lion Gate and Wall

The grand Lion Gate (c. 1300 B.C.) guards the entrance to this fortress city on a hill. Above the doorway, two lionesses flank a column, symbolically protecting it the way the Mycenaean kings once protected the city. The lions’ missing heads may have once turned outward, greeting the visitor. The heads were either made of stone or possibly of gold, and may have been attached with metal fasteners, as indicated by two red-brown rust stains on the right lion’s neck.

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The lions form a triangle above the massive lintel (the crossbeam above the door). Mycenaean architects used the weak corbelled arch, less sturdy than the rounded Roman arch developed later. A simple horizontal stone spans the door, while heavy stones above it inch in to bridge the gap. The triangle (featuring the twin lions) helps relieve the weight of the stones. Apart from its rather fragile technology, Mycenaean architecture is really massive. The lintel weighs 18 tons—as much as a WWII B-17 bomber.

The exterior walls that girdle the base of the hill (c. 1300 B.C.) were about 40 feet high, 20 feet thick, and 3,000 feet long, enclosing 39,000 cubic yards. They were built with an estimated 14,000 boulders weighing 5 to 10 tons each. Marveling at the enormous scale, classical-era Greeks figured the legendary Perseus (who slew the Medusa) must have built the city with the help of the giant one-eyed Cyclopes, and dubbed the style “cyclopean.” In reality, the Mycenaeans probably lifted these big stones into place the same way the Egyptians built the pyramids—by building ramps and rolling the stones up on logs drawn by oxen or horses.

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Pass through the gate. Carved into the stone are post-holes that held the wooden door. Just as you emerge, look left to see a square niche in the wall—this is where statues of the gods who guarded the gates were displayed.

• Head up the ramp. About 30 yards ahead, you’ll begin to see (below and on the right) a circular wall that encloses rectangular graves. Walk a bit higher up the path and look down for the best view.

Image Grave Circle A (c. 1550 B.C.)

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Judging from what was dug up in this round cluster of graves, Mycenaean royalty were buried here. The rectangular holes are called shaft graves, which were cut into the rock up to 20 feet deep. There are six graves, each of which contained several bodies (19 total—9 women, 8 men, and 2 children). The bodies were found embalmed and lying on their backs along with their most precious belongings, with their heads facing east—toward the rising sun—indicating a belief in an afterlife. Gravestones atop the graves (including one displayed in the museum) were decorated with a spiral, possibly a symbol of continuous existence.

In 1876 these graves were unearthed by the famed German archaeologist Heinrich Schliemann. Schliemann had recently discovered the long-lost city of Troy, finally giving some historical credibility to Homer’s tales. He next turned his attention to Mycenae, the legendary home of Agamemnon. In Grave Circle A, he found a treasure trove of gold swords, spears, engraved cups, and ritual objects buried with the dead—30 pounds in all, confirming Homer’s description of Mycenae as a city “rich in gold.”

The prize discovery was a gold mask showing the face of a bearded man. Masks like this were tied onto the faces of the deceased. This one was obviously for an important warrior chieftain. Schliemann was convinced the mask proved that Homer’s tales of the Trojan War were true, and he dubbed it the “Mask of Agamemnon.” This mask and other artifacts are now in the National Archaeological Museum in Athens.

Could it really be the Mask of Agamemnon? No. Not only is it unlikely that Agamemnon ever really existed, but the mask is from the 16th century B.C.—at least 300 years before the legendary king supposedly burned Troy.

The Mycenaeans practiced several different types of burial: interred in a pit (for the poorest), cremated then encased in a ceramic jar called a cist grave (for wealthier folks), laid in a shaft grave (for royalty), or placed in an elaborate domed chamber called a tholos (like the Treasury of Atreus, which we’ll visit at the end of this tour).

• Continue to climb up the paths, zigzagging past the ruins of former houses and shops, to the top of the acropolis. On the right are the rectangular foundations of the former...

Image Royal Palace and Throne Room (Megaron)

Kings ruled the Mycenaeans from this palace, which consisted of a line of several rectangular rooms (about all that remains today are the outlines of the rooms).

Imagine entering the palace and walking through a series of rooms. You’d start in an open-air courtyard—that’s the biggest rectangle to the far right (west, toward the parking lot). Next you’d enter the palace itself, passing between two columns (see the remaining bases) onto a covered porch. Next, at the far end of the porch, was a small anteroom. Finally, you’d spill into the main hall—the throne room—at the east end. This great hall, or megaron, contains the outlines of a round hearth, which is where a fire burned. Here you could make burnt offerings to the gods. The four remaining bases around the hearth once held four inverted columns that supported the roof, which had a sunroof-type hole to let out the smoke. Against the wall to the right (the south wall) sat the king on his throne—the very center of power of the Mycenaean empire. The walls and floors were brightly painted with a pattern of linked spirals.

The same type of palace was found in every Mycenaean city, and later became the standard layout of the Greek temple—courtyard, colonnaded porch, small room (pronaos), and main hall with its sacred cella area toward the back, where sacrificial offerings were made.

• While we’re on the top of the acropolis, check out the view and imagine the city/fortress at its peak.

Image The Top of the Acropolis: Mycenae the Fortress-City

Mycenae was a combination citadel, palace, residence, and administrative capital of the extended empire of Mycenaean cities. But first and foremost, it was a fortress, occupying a superb natural defensive position guarding a major crossroads in Greece. The hill is flanked by steep ravines. To the south there are spacious views across the fertile plains of Argos to the Argolic Gulf, giving the inhabitants ample time to prepare for any attack by sea. The cone-shaped hill in the distance ringed with walls near the top was the fortress of Argos. The Argonauts (who, in legend, sailed with Jason to get the Golden Fleece) were allies of the Mycenaeans. Mycenae controlled trade on the road from Corinth to Nafplio, and sea trade from Nafplio to points beyond.

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In case of siege, Mycenae could rely on natural springs located on the mountainside to the east (away from the entrance—near the eucalyptus tree, a little above acropolis level, with a patch of exposed reddish hillside behind it). The water was channeled through clay pipes underground to a cistern dug inside the acropolis.

Though Mycenae was fundamentally a fortress, up to 60,000 people lived here, either within the walls or in surrounding villages. They lived in box-shaped buildings (much like today’s museum building) on the steep, terraced hillside.

From this viewpoint, check out the long horizontal ridgeline to the south—not the farthest mountain range, but a little closer. It looks like a man lying on his back, with his Easter Island-like nose at the left end. Locals call him “Sleeping Agamemnon.”

• Work your way eastward (farther away from the entrance, and a bit downhill), descending to...

The Cistern and Other Sights at the East End

The ruins at this end were once mostly Image houses and storerooms. At the far eastern end, notice the doorway in the wall (now covered with a gate). This was Image an escape route out the back.

Find the gaping cave-like opening of the Image cistern, where 99 (slippery!) steps lead 50 feet down. Peering inside, you can see...absolutely nothing, unless you’ve packed a flashlight. (While the cistern has been open in the past for tourists to explore, you might be able to descend only a few steps before reaching a barrier.) The cistern stored water from springs within the hillside, in case of siege or drought.

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• Head back toward the entrance—but bear to the right, following the north (outer) wall. Look for a gate on the right.

This Image North Gate, smaller than the Lion Gate, has a similar rectangular crossbeam shape and heavy lintel. The wooden door is a reconstruction similar to the original, fit into the original holes cut in the lintel stone. Compare the two side pillars of the entrance. They’re both of the same type of local rock, but the one on the left was never finished during construction, while the right side is polished smooth, as most of the stones here would have been. Next to the North Gate is a niche in the wall (similar to the one at the Lion Gate) to display guardian gods.

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• Exit through the North Gate, and bear left/downhill along the serpentine path to the Image museum, the modern building on the hillside below.

Museum

(See “Mycenae” map, here.)

Whereas the ruins give a sense of the engineering sophistication of these people, the museum emphasizes their artistic, religious, literary, and cultural sides. You’ll see various funeral objects from the graves, plus everyday objects that show influences from the Egyptian, Minoan, and Hittite cultures.

• Follow the one-way, counterclockwise route through the collection, beginning in the...

Entrance Hall

The model of the Mycenae acropolis in the center of the room helps you visualize the city as it once was. Otherwise, the information posted here is pretty dull (on one side, a description of myths relating to this city; on the other, a dry history of the excavation).

• From the entrance hall, move into the next room, where you’ll find...

Religious Symbols

In the first case to the right, look for the teeny ceramic pitcher used as a baby “feeding bottle” (#11). Also on the right, about halfway down this room, look for the case labeled “The Temple.” Not much is known of Mycenaean religion, so it’s unclear what purpose the little E.T.-looking idols served. The three clay coiled snakes are another theme. In the Mycenaean view, snakes were not bad—living both under and above the ground, the reptiles connected the two worlds. The Mycenaeans borrowed the (snake-handling) Minoan goddesses to serve their own all-powerful ruler of the skies, Zeus. These elements were passed down to the pantheon of classical-era Greeks.

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Across the room (higher up, above the model of the palace ruins), notice the interconnected spiral pattern, which is a common motif in Mycenaean art. At the end of the room, fresco fragments from the palace give an idea of how colorful the place must have been in its day.

• Descend to the lower level to see...

Funeral Objects

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In the octagonal case, you’ll see reproductions of the famous Mask of Agamemnon and other golden items (such as crowns and medallions). These objects were discovered here in graves and at the Treasury of Atreus. (The originals are now in Athens’ National Archaeological Museum.) The dead in Grave Circle A may have been buried in coffins, now long gone. On the wall behind the mask is a highly decorated funeral stele (gravestone) from Grave Circle A.

Diagrams show where each object on display here was found in relation to the skeleton of the deceased. The cups that were found in graves may indicate that the dead were sent off with a goodbye toast by their loved ones.

• As you continue into the next room, notice (on your left) a big clay urn used as a coffin for burial, with a band of spiral designs across the middle. Many funeral objects (such as this urn) were engraved with a spiral pattern—possibly a symbol of the never-ending path of life.

Mycenaean Writing and Everyday Objects

In the case at the end of the room’s partition are fragments of clay tablets inscribed in the Mycenaean written language known to scholars as Linear B. Each character represented a syllable. These fragments concern distinct subjects, including “Religion,” “Lists of Names,” “Products,” and so on. Very few written documents survived from the Mycenaean era—no literature or history or stories—so we know very little of the Mycenaeans’ inner thoughts.

On the other side of the partition, a glass case displays sealstones, used to put a person’s mark in wax or clay on a sealed document or box, to ensure it reached the intended recipient unopened. The Mycenaeans led an active trading life, and every businessman would have had one of these. The red one on top, in the center (#14), has the Lion Gate on it.

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To the left a large map shows the vast Mycenaean trading world. The Mycenaeans were seafarers, bringing back gold from Egypt, lapis lazuli from Afghanistan, amber from Scandinavia, ivory from Syria, jewelry from Spain, and more. Near the door, the display on “Women of the Mycenaean World” makes it clear they had plenty of toiletry and jewelry items: combs, tweezers, mirrors, beads, pendants, and so on.

• Leaving the museum, climb the long stairway back up to the parking lot, then continue to the last area, one of the highlights of Mycenae: the tomb known as the Image Treasury of Atreus. It’s located about 300 yards south of the ruins, along the road back toward the modern town of Mycenae. You can walk there in less than 10 minutes. Or, if you have a car, stop at the Treasury on your way out of the site—there’s a small parking lot there (often clogged with tour buses). Follow the crowds gradually uphill from the parking lot, and show your entry ticket once more to get to the...

Treasury of Atreus (a.k.a. Tomb of Agamemnon)

(See “Mycenae” map, here.)

Tholos Tomb (13th century B.C.)

Mycenae’s royalty were buried in massive beehive-shaped underground chambers like this one, which replaced shaft graves (like the ones at Grave Circle A) beginning in the 15th century B.C.

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The entryway itself is on a grand “cyclopean” scale—110 feet long and 20 feet wide. Imagine entering in a funeral procession carrying the body of the king. The walls rise at a diagonal up to the entrance, giving the illusion of swallowing you up as you enter.

The lintel over the doorway is mind-bogglingly big—26 feet across by 16 feet by 3 feet—and weighs 120 tons. (For comparison, the biggest stones of the Egyptian pyramids were 30 tons.)

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Step inside and hear the 3,300-year-old echoes of this domed room. The round chamber is 47 feet in diameter and 42 feet tall, with an igloo-style dome made of 33 rings of corbelled (gradually projecting) stones, each weighing about 5 tons. The dome was decorated with bronze ornaments (you can see a few small nail holes where they were attached in the fifth row of stones up). The soot on the dome is from the campfires of fairly recent shepherds.

Kings were elaborately buried in the center of the room along with their swords, jewels, and personal possessions. There is also a side chamber (the door to the right) whose purpose can only be guessed at. After the funeral was over, the whole structure was covered with a mountain of dirt. But grave robbers got in anyway, and modern archaeologists have not found any bodies.

Notice that the “keystone” at the peak of the dome is missing (probably taken by grave robbers). So why didn’t the dome collapse? The weight of the dome is distributed by two triangular niches—one over the main lintel, and one over the side doorway. Notice how the peak of the dome has collapsed a bit and the lintel has a crack in it. That crack is to the side of the doorway, right where the triangular niche spills all the weight of the dome onto it.

• Our tour is nearing its end. But serious archaeologists could spend much more time exploring...

The Rest of Mycenae

Only 10 percent of Mycenae has been excavated. Scattered in the surrounding hillsides are cave openings, where the Mycenaeans buried people in yet another way, in “chamber tombs.” There are also some ruins of houses, several more tholos tombs (the Tomb of Clytemnestra and the Lion Tomb), and Grave Circle B.

As for me, I’ve Mycenae-n enough.