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Mycenaean chamber tomb

A Mycenaean chamber tomb is the type of chamber tomb that was built in Mycenaean Greece. Mycenaean chamber tombs originated in Messenia at the end of the Middle Helladic period (c. 1600 BCE),[1] and were built and used throughout the Late Bronze Age across the Aegean area.

View into chamber tomb 10 at Aidonia, Corinthia, looking down the dromos at the stomion

Mycenaean chamber tombs were cut into the bedrock (as opposed to the contemporary tholos tombs, which are constructed from masonry), usually on sloping terrain, and formed of a chamber (thalamos), joined to a rectangular passageway (dromos) by a threshold (stomion). The size, elaboration and monumentality of Mycenaean chamber tombs varies considerably, as do the grave goods found within them, suggesting that they were used for the burials of people across a wide range of social strata.[2]

After the end of the Bronze Age, chamber tombs ceased to be constructed in most parts of the Greek world, though some continued in use for votive offerings and hero cult during the Early Iron Age.[3]

Chronological development edit

The major periods of the Helladic Chronology used in this article.
Period Approximate Date
Middle Helladic III c. 1700 – c. 1600 BCE[4]
Late Helladic I c. 1600 – c. 1450 BCE[4]
Late Helladic II c. 1450 – c. 1400 BCE[4]
Late Helladic IIIA c. 1400 – c. 1300 BCE[4]
Late Helladic IIIB c. 1300 – c. 1180 BCE[4]
Late Helladic IIIC c. 1180 – c. 1050 BCE[4]

The earliest chamber tombs are found in the MH III period in Messenia,[1] followed closely by LH I examples throughout central and southern Greece, particularly in the Argolid.[5] They remain relatively uncommon, except at Mycenae, until LH III,[6] when they were constructed widely across the Aegean region associated with Mycenaean culture.[7]

Chamber tombs continued to be constructed throughout the Mycenaean period, though regional differences are observed as to their popularity and likely social function. At Mycenae, they appear to have displaced all other forms of elite burial, except tholoi, and have been closely linked with the development and consolidation of the palatial state in LH III.[8] Around three hundred chamber tombs are known from the area of Mycenae.[9] It has been suggested that the chamber tombs at Mycenae represent lower-ranked members of the palatial elite, while tholoi were reserved for the most elite, perhaps the wanax and other high-ranking figures known from Linear B.[10] In Boeotia, however, only one tholos tomb is known (the so-called Treasury of Minyas at Orchomenos, dating to c. 1350 BCE), while chamber tombs seem to have been the predominant form of burial for all elite groups,[11] including the monumental chamber tomb at Megalo Kastelli, which has been linked with the rulers of Thebes.[12]

In Achaia, chamber tombs seem to be associated with emergent local elites in the LH II period,[13] but displace even simple grave types, such as pit and cist graves, by LH III.[14] In this period in Achaia, there seems to have been little association, unlike in the Argolid, between social hierarchy and the use of chamber tombs: relatively simple tombs, such as those at Aidonia, with relatively simple grave goods are found alongside monumental examples, such as Tomb 4 at Voundeni – a large LH IIIA chamber tomb with a dromos of 19.8 m (65 ft) and a thalamos 28 m2 (300 sq ft) in area,[15] whose extensive and valuable grave goods have led to the scholarly consensus that the single original burial in the tomb represents a local ruler.[16] Rather than carrying a universal meaning, it is likely that the social and symbolic significance of chamber tombs, as well as the nature of the communities using them, varied across the Mycenaean world according to local practices and concerns.[17]

 
Chamber tomb 16 at Dendra, showing the view of the dromos from outside the tomb

Except in Thessaly and Crete,[18] the construction of chamber tombs ceased after the Late Bronze Age Collapse (c. 1180 BCE), though some examples continued to be re-used for votive offerings, hero cult and occasionally burials[19] during the Early Iron Age.[3] Nearly a third of the chamber tombs excavated by Carl Blegen at Prosymna in the Argolid showed evidence of votive offerings from the Geometric or Archaic periods,[20] and the practice is observed elsewhere in the Greek world between 1050 and 600 BCE, particularly in Messenia, Attica and Boeotia.[21]

Construction edit

 
Schematic diagram of a typical chamber tomb, showing division into dromos, stomion and thalamos

Chamber tombs are cut from bedrock and usually divide into a tripartite structure of dromos ('passageway'), stomion ('threshold') and thalamos ('chamber'). Some examples include pits, side chambers or niches into which primary or secondary burials may have been deposited. The division between dromos, stomion and thalamos has been interpreted as the creation of a 'boundary zone between the living and the dead'.[22]

Scholars debate the relationship in design between chamber tombs and tholoi, which appeared in Greece approximately simultaneously at the end of MH III, and were both first used in Messenia.[1] According to one school of thought, chamber tombs became popular in imitation of tholoi, following the same fundamental form but avoiding the significant expenditure of resources and labour in constructing a tomb from ashlar masonry.[23] Another interpretation sees chamber tombs as a successor to Middle Helladic tumulus burial, developing in parallel with tholoi rather than as an imitation of them.[23]

The specific design of chamber tombs could vary according to local geographic and social considerations. At Thorikos, for instance, so-called "built" chamber tombs of limestone masonry, with short passages approaching one side of the thalamos, were constructed, likely in response to the hard limestone ground, which would have made cutting a long dromos impractical.[23] At Thebes, the so-called "Painted Chamber" tomb has two parallel dromoi, approaching two large chambers, connected by a doorway.[23]

From LH II–IIIA1 onwards, certain monumental chamber tombs had the façade of the stomion, and sometimes the walls of the thalamos, decorated with painted plaster. This phenomenon is particularly known in the Argolid, particularly at Mycenae and Prosymna, but examples are known from elsewhere, including Prosilio 2 and from Thebes.[24] Over the course of the Late Helladic, a trend is observed for the length of the dromos to increase, both in absolute measurement and relative to the size of the thalamos.[25] Tomb 505 at Mycenae, for example, has a dromos over 35 m (115 ft) in length.[26] This may be associated with an increasing desire to show wealth and power through a large, impressive tomb, or may reflect the growing importance of the dromos in funerary ritual.[27] At the end of the period, however, in LH IIIC, the opposite trend is observed: dromoi become shorter and less attention appears to be paid to the carving and decoration of the façade of the stomion, perhaps indicating the declining importance of any rituals that took place there.[28]

So-called "built" chamber tombs, such as those at Thorikos and other examples at sites including Marathon, Portes and Mitrou, are similarly cut from rock but include masonry on the interior. These appear earlier than true chamber tombs, often lack a dromos, and may have developed separately.[29]

Funerary practices edit

 
A funerary scene of lamentation over a child's body, painted on a larnax from Tanagra, LH III

Chamber tombs were generally used for multiple burial and re-used over multiple generations.[23] Work at Ayia Sotira in the Nemea valley has highlighted the efforts made by those using the tombs to carry on re-using them, even when the tomb had partially collapsed and doing so was difficult.[30] The tombs are often assumed to have been used for members of the same family, though solid evidence is lacking as to the precise kinship between people buried in the same tomb.[23]

There is tentative evidence for funerary processions towards Mycenaean chamber tombs;[31] it has therefore often been assumed that the body would be transported to the tomb on a wheeled vehicle,[32] though the location of some cemeteries around Mycenae indicates that at least the final part of this procession must sometimes have taken part on foot.[33]

Almost all Mycenaean burials in chamber tombs, particularly before LH IIIC,[34] are inhumations rather than cremations,[23] though post-Mycenaean cremation burials are sometimes found in the upper levels of the dromoi of Mycenaean tombs.[19] In most parts of the Aegean world, bodies were laid on the floor of the thalamos, sometimes in pits dug into it or a side chamber. At Tanagra in Boeotia, however, it was common to inter the body within a larnax, a practice only otherwise attested on Minoan Crete.[23] It was common for previous burials to be rearranged, relocated and perhaps sometimes removed when a tomb was re-opened for a later interment.[35][36] The burials of children were often made in small niches in the wall of the dromos.[37]

It was common for grave goods to be deposited in chamber tombs: these usually included ceramics, but could vary considerably based on the social status of the deceased.[38] While most of the grave goods in the Aidonia tombs were relatively modest,[38] for example, Tomb 2 at Prosilio in Boeotia included weaponry, gold and faience jewellery, and a signet ring.[39] Fragments of kylikes are routinely found in the dromoi and sometimes thalamoi of tombs, suggesting that libations or drinking may have played a role in the funerary ritual,[40] while it is also common to find animal bones and the remains of food production, either for consumption at the tomb or perhaps as an offering to the dead.[41]

After a burial in the thalamos, the stomion would be sealed, often with a dry-stone wall: it is possible that the un-sealing of this barrier for further burials or offerings carried significant ritual significance.[42][37] Tombs were generally filled with earth shortly after use,[43] and not generally marked above ground: only a few examples of tomb markers are known,[44] though it has been hypothesised that some may have been marked by wooden stelai.[45] It is not uncommon to find evidence of the construction of tombs being abandoned when the builders ran into an existing tomb that was not visible from the surface.

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Wright 2008, p. 146.
  2. ^ Cavanagh 1987, p. 166.
  3. ^ a b Antonaccio 1994.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Shelmerdine 2008, p. 4.
  5. ^ Cavanagh & Mee 1998, pp. 49–51.
  6. ^ Wright 2008, p. 148.
  7. ^ Mee & Cavanagh 1984, pp. 56–61.
  8. ^ Wright 2008, p. 149.
  9. ^ Castleden 2005, p. 102.
  10. ^ Mee & Cavanagh 1984, p. 56.
  11. ^ Mee & Cavanagh 1984, p. 54.
  12. ^ Hope Simpson & Dickinson 1979, p. 246.
  13. ^ Arena 2015, p. 26.
  14. ^ Arena 2015, p. 17.
  15. ^ Arena 2015, p. 16.
  16. ^ Arena 2015, p. 13.
  17. ^ Galanakis 2021, p. 609.
  18. ^ Antonaccio 1994, p. 394.
  19. ^ a b Deger-Jalkotzy 2013, p. 225.
  20. ^ Blegen 1937, pp. 377–390.
  21. ^ Antonaccio 1994, p. 396.
  22. ^ Gallou 2003, p. 191.
  23. ^ a b c d e f g h Rutter 2012.
  24. ^ Vlachopoulos 2020, p. 421.
  25. ^ Papadimitriou 2015, p. 71.
  26. ^ Wace 1932, pp. 12–15.
  27. ^ Papadimitriou 2015, p. 72.
  28. ^ Cavanagh 1987, p. 165.
  29. ^ Papadimitriou 2015, p. 86.
  30. ^ Smith et al. 2017, p. 124.
  31. ^ Boyd 2016, p. 65.
  32. ^ Boyd 2014, p. 70.
  33. ^ Efkleidou 2019, p. 500.
  34. ^ Deger-Jalkotzy 2013, p. 221.
  35. ^ Smith et al. 2017, pp. 130–131.
  36. ^ Gallou 2005, p. 116.
  37. ^ a b Cavanagh 1987, p. 167.
  38. ^ a b Galanakis 2018.
  39. ^ Bennet 2017.
  40. ^ Smith et al. 2017, p. 172.
  41. ^ Smith et al. 2017, p. 143.
  42. ^ Gallou 2003, p. 201.
  43. ^ Smith et al. 2017, p. 170.
  44. ^ Gallou 2005, p. 123.
  45. ^ Boyd 2006.

Bibliography edit

  • Antonaccio, Carla (1994). "Contesting the Past: Hero Cult, Tomb Cult, and Epic in Early Greece". American Journal of Archaeology. 98 (3): 389–410. doi:10.2307/506436. JSTOR 506436. S2CID 192969382.
  • Arena, Emiliano (2015). "Mycenaean Peripheries during the Palatial Age: The Case of Achaia". Hesperia. 84 (1): 1–46. doi:10.2972/hesperia.84.1.0001. S2CID 164407730.
  • Bennet, John (2017). "Prosilio – 2017". Archaeology in Greece Online. from the original on 2022-11-30. Retrieved 30 November 2022.
  • Blegen, Carl (1937). "Post-Mycenaean Deposits in Chamber-Tombs". Αρχαιολογικὴ 'Εφηµερίς: 377–390.
  • Boyd, Michael (2016). "Fields of Action in Mycenaean Funerary Practices". In Dakouri-Hild, Anastasia; Boyd, Michael (eds.). Staging Death: Funerary Performance, Architecture and Landscape in the Aegean. De Gruyter. pp. 57–87. ISBN 9783110475784.
  • Boyd, Michael (2014). "The Development of the Bronze Age Funerary Landscape of Nichoria". In Nakassis, Dimitri; Gulizio, Joann; James, Sarah A. (eds.). KE-RA-ME-JA: Studies Presented to Cynthia W. Shelmerdine. Philadelphia: INSTAP Academic Press. pp. 191–208. ISBN 9781931534765.
  • Boyd, Michael (2006). "Review: The Mycenaean Cult of the Dead. British Archaeological Reports International Series 1372". Bryn Mawr Classical Review. Retrieved 30 November 2022.
  • Castleden, Rodney (2005). The Mycenaeans. London and New York: Routledge. ISBN 0415363365 – via Google Books.
  • Cavanagh, William; Mee, Christopher (1998). A Private Place: Death in Prehistoric Greece. SIMA 125. Jonsered: Paul Aströms Forlag.
  • Cavanagh, William (1987). "Cluster analysis of Mycenaean chamber tombs". In Laffineur, Robert (ed.). Thanatos: Les coutumes funéraires en Egée à l' âge du Bronze. Actes du colloque de Liège (21–23 avril 1986), Aegaeum 1. Liège. pp. 161–169.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Deger-Jalkotzy, Sigrid (2013). "Cremation burials in the Mycenaean cemetery of Elateia-Alonaki in Central Greece". In Lochner, Michaela; Ruppenstein, Florian (eds.). Cremation burials in the region between the Middle Danube and the Aegean, 1300–750 BC. Vienna. pp. 221–229.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Efkleidou, Kalliopi (2019). "Walking your Way to Death. Exploring the Relation Between the Location of Mycenaean Chamber Tombs and Roads in the Argolid". Open Archaeology. 5: 484–504. doi:10.1515/opar-2019-0030. S2CID 210074181.
  • Galanakis, Yannis (2021). "Ma(r)king Places: The Monumental Mortuary Landscapes of Early Mycenaean Greece". In Eder, Birgitta; Zavadil, Michaela (eds.). (Social) place and space in early Mycenaean Greece: international discussions in Mycenaean archaeology, October 5–8, 2016, Athens. Vienna. pp. 595–616.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Galanakis, Yannis (2018). "Review: Ayia Sotira. A Mycenaean Chamber Tomb Cemetery in the Nemea Valley, Greece Prehistory Monographs 56 ". Bryn Mawr Classical Review. Retrieved 30 November 2022.
  • Gallou, Chrysanthi (2005). The Mycenaean Cult of the Dead. British Archaeological Reports International Series 1372 . Oxford: Archaeopress.
  • Gallou, Chrysanthi (2003). The cult of the dead in central Greece during the Mycenaean period (PDF) (Ph.D.). Retrieved 30 November 2022.
  • Hope Simpson, Richard; Dickinson, Oliver (1979). A Gazetteer of Aegean Civilisation in the Bronze Age 1: The Mainland and Islands (SIMA 52). Göteborg.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Mee, Christopher; Cavanagh, William (1984). "Mycenaean tombs as evidence for social and political organisation". Oxford Journal of Archaeology. 3 (3): 45–64. doi:10.1111/j.1468-0092.1984.tb00121.x.
  • Papadimitriou, Nikolas (2015). "The formation and use of dromoi in early Mycenaean tombs". Annual of the British School at Athens. 110: 71–120. doi:10.1017/S0068245415000052. S2CID 193590796.
  • Rutter, Jeremy (2012). "Lesson 21: Narrative: Mycenaean Public and Funerary Architecture: Fortifications, Drainage Projects, Roads and Chamber Tombs". Aegean Prehistoric Archaeology. Dartmouth College. Retrieved 30 November 2022.
  • Shelmerdine, Cynthia (2008). "Introduction: Background, Methods and Sources". In Shelmerdine, Cynthia (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to the Aegean Bronze Age. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 1–18.
  • Smith, Angus; Dabney, Mary; Pappi, Evangelia; Triantaphyllou, Sevasti; Wright, James (2017). Ayia Sotira. A Mycenaean Chamber Tomb Cemetery in the Nemea Valley, Greece, Prehistory Monographs 56. Philadelphia: INSTAP Academic Press.
  • Wright, James C. (2008). "Chamber Tombs, Family and State in Mycenaean Greece". In Gallou, Chrysanthi; Georgiadis, M.; Muskett, G.M. (eds.). DIOSKOUROI: Studies presented to W.G. Cavanagh and C.B. Mee on the anniversary of their 30-year joint contribution to Aegean Archaeology. Oxford: Archaeopress. pp. 144–153.
  • Vlachopoulos, Andreas (2020). "Wall Paintings". In Kotsonas, Antonis; Lemnos, Irene S. (eds.). A Companion to the Archaeology of Early Greece and the Mediterranean: Volume 2. Oxford: Archaeopress. pp. 407–433.
  • Wace, Alan J. (1932). Chamber Tombs at Mycenae. Oxford.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

mycenaean, chamber, tomb, type, chamber, tomb, that, built, mycenaean, greece, originated, messenia, middle, helladic, period, 1600, were, built, used, throughout, late, bronze, across, aegean, area, view, into, chamber, tomb, aidonia, corinthia, looking, down. A Mycenaean chamber tomb is the type of chamber tomb that was built in Mycenaean Greece Mycenaean chamber tombs originated in Messenia at the end of the Middle Helladic period c 1600 BCE 1 and were built and used throughout the Late Bronze Age across the Aegean area View into chamber tomb 10 at Aidonia Corinthia looking down the dromos at the stomion Mycenaean chamber tombs were cut into the bedrock as opposed to the contemporary tholos tombs which are constructed from masonry usually on sloping terrain and formed of a chamber thalamos joined to a rectangular passageway dromos by a threshold stomion The size elaboration and monumentality of Mycenaean chamber tombs varies considerably as do the grave goods found within them suggesting that they were used for the burials of people across a wide range of social strata 2 After the end of the Bronze Age chamber tombs ceased to be constructed in most parts of the Greek world though some continued in use for votive offerings and hero cult during the Early Iron Age 3 Contents 1 Chronological development 2 Construction 3 Funerary practices 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 References 7 BibliographyChronological development editThe major periods of the Helladic Chronology used in this article Period Approximate Date Middle Helladic III c 1700 c 1600 BCE 4 Late Helladic I c 1600 c 1450 BCE 4 Late Helladic II c 1450 c 1400 BCE 4 Late Helladic IIIA c 1400 c 1300 BCE 4 Late Helladic IIIB c 1300 c 1180 BCE 4 Late Helladic IIIC c 1180 c 1050 BCE 4 The earliest chamber tombs are found in the MH III period in Messenia 1 followed closely by LH I examples throughout central and southern Greece particularly in the Argolid 5 They remain relatively uncommon except at Mycenae until LH III 6 when they were constructed widely across the Aegean region associated with Mycenaean culture 7 Chamber tombs continued to be constructed throughout the Mycenaean period though regional differences are observed as to their popularity and likely social function At Mycenae they appear to have displaced all other forms of elite burial except tholoi and have been closely linked with the development and consolidation of the palatial state in LH III 8 Around three hundred chamber tombs are known from the area of Mycenae 9 It has been suggested that the chamber tombs at Mycenae represent lower ranked members of the palatial elite while tholoi were reserved for the most elite perhaps the wanax and other high ranking figures known from Linear B 10 In Boeotia however only one tholos tomb is known the so called Treasury of Minyas at Orchomenos dating to c 1350 BCE while chamber tombs seem to have been the predominant form of burial for all elite groups 11 including the monumental chamber tomb at Megalo Kastelli which has been linked with the rulers of Thebes 12 In Achaia chamber tombs seem to be associated with emergent local elites in the LH II period 13 but displace even simple grave types such as pit and cist graves by LH III 14 In this period in Achaia there seems to have been little association unlike in the Argolid between social hierarchy and the use of chamber tombs relatively simple tombs such as those at Aidonia with relatively simple grave goods are found alongside monumental examples such as Tomb 4 at Voundeni a large LH IIIA chamber tomb with a dromos of 19 8 m 65 ft and a thalamos 28 m2 300 sq ft in area 15 whose extensive and valuable grave goods have led to the scholarly consensus that the single original burial in the tomb represents a local ruler 16 Rather than carrying a universal meaning it is likely that the social and symbolic significance of chamber tombs as well as the nature of the communities using them varied across the Mycenaean world according to local practices and concerns 17 nbsp Chamber tomb 16 at Dendra showing the view of the dromos from outside the tomb Except in Thessaly and Crete 18 the construction of chamber tombs ceased after the Late Bronze Age Collapse c 1180 BCE though some examples continued to be re used for votive offerings hero cult and occasionally burials 19 during the Early Iron Age 3 Nearly a third of the chamber tombs excavated by Carl Blegen at Prosymna in the Argolid showed evidence of votive offerings from the Geometric or Archaic periods 20 and the practice is observed elsewhere in the Greek world between 1050 and 600 BCE particularly in Messenia Attica and Boeotia 21 Construction edit nbsp Schematic diagram of a typical chamber tomb showing division into dromos stomion and thalamos Chamber tombs are cut from bedrock and usually divide into a tripartite structure of dromos passageway stomion threshold and thalamos chamber Some examples include pits side chambers or niches into which primary or secondary burials may have been deposited The division between dromos stomion and thalamos has been interpreted as the creation of a boundary zone between the living and the dead 22 Scholars debate the relationship in design between chamber tombs and tholoi which appeared in Greece approximately simultaneously at the end of MH III and were both first used in Messenia 1 According to one school of thought chamber tombs became popular in imitation of tholoi following the same fundamental form but avoiding the significant expenditure of resources and labour in constructing a tomb from ashlar masonry 23 Another interpretation sees chamber tombs as a successor to Middle Helladic tumulus burial developing in parallel with tholoi rather than as an imitation of them 23 The specific design of chamber tombs could vary according to local geographic and social considerations At Thorikos for instance so called built chamber tombs of limestone masonry with short passages approaching one side of the thalamos were constructed likely in response to the hard limestone ground which would have made cutting a long dromos impractical 23 At Thebes the so called Painted Chamber tomb has two parallel dromoi approaching two large chambers connected by a doorway 23 From LH II IIIA1 onwards certain monumental chamber tombs had the facade of the stomion and sometimes the walls of the thalamos decorated with painted plaster This phenomenon is particularly known in the Argolid particularly at Mycenae and Prosymna but examples are known from elsewhere including Prosilio 2 and from Thebes 24 Over the course of the Late Helladic a trend is observed for the length of the dromos to increase both in absolute measurement and relative to the size of the thalamos 25 Tomb 505 at Mycenae for example has a dromos over 35 m 115 ft in length 26 This may be associated with an increasing desire to show wealth and power through a large impressive tomb or may reflect the growing importance of the dromos in funerary ritual 27 At the end of the period however in LH IIIC the opposite trend is observed dromoi become shorter and less attention appears to be paid to the carving and decoration of the facade of the stomion perhaps indicating the declining importance of any rituals that took place there 28 So called built chamber tombs such as those at Thorikos and other examples at sites including Marathon Portes and Mitrou are similarly cut from rock but include masonry on the interior These appear earlier than true chamber tombs often lack a dromos and may have developed separately 29 Funerary practices edit nbsp A funerary scene of lamentation over a child s body painted on a larnax from Tanagra LH III Chamber tombs were generally used for multiple burial and re used over multiple generations 23 Work at Ayia Sotira in the Nemea valley has highlighted the efforts made by those using the tombs to carry on re using them even when the tomb had partially collapsed and doing so was difficult 30 The tombs are often assumed to have been used for members of the same family though solid evidence is lacking as to the precise kinship between people buried in the same tomb 23 There is tentative evidence for funerary processions towards Mycenaean chamber tombs 31 it has therefore often been assumed that the body would be transported to the tomb on a wheeled vehicle 32 though the location of some cemeteries around Mycenae indicates that at least the final part of this procession must sometimes have taken part on foot 33 Almost all Mycenaean burials in chamber tombs particularly before LH IIIC 34 are inhumations rather than cremations 23 though post Mycenaean cremation burials are sometimes found in the upper levels of the dromoi of Mycenaean tombs 19 In most parts of the Aegean world bodies were laid on the floor of the thalamos sometimes in pits dug into it or a side chamber At Tanagra in Boeotia however it was common to inter the body within a larnax a practice only otherwise attested on Minoan Crete 23 It was common for previous burials to be rearranged relocated and perhaps sometimes removed when a tomb was re opened for a later interment 35 36 The burials of children were often made in small niches in the wall of the dromos 37 It was common for grave goods to be deposited in chamber tombs these usually included ceramics but could vary considerably based on the social status of the deceased 38 While most of the grave goods in the Aidonia tombs were relatively modest 38 for example Tomb 2 at Prosilio in Boeotia included weaponry gold and faience jewellery and a signet ring 39 Fragments of kylikes are routinely found in the dromoi and sometimes thalamoi of tombs suggesting that libations or drinking may have played a role in the funerary ritual 40 while it is also common to find animal bones and the remains of food production either for consumption at the tomb or perhaps as an offering to the dead 41 After a burial in the thalamos the stomion would be sealed often with a dry stone wall it is possible that the un sealing of this barrier for further burials or offerings carried significant ritual significance 42 37 Tombs were generally filled with earth shortly after use 43 and not generally marked above ground only a few examples of tomb markers are known 44 though it has been hypothesised that some may have been marked by wooden stelai 45 It is not uncommon to find evidence of the construction of tombs being abandoned when the builders ran into an existing tomb that was not visible from the surface Gallery edit nbsp A chamber tomb at Aidonia in the Corinthia nbsp The stomion of chamber tomb A at Palaia Epidavros in the Argolid viewed from the dromos nbsp The thalamos of chamber tomb 14 at Kato Almyri Corinthia nbsp Ceramic finds from chamber tombs 10 and 11 at Aidonia nbsp A boar s tusk helmet found in chamber tomb 515 at Mycenae nbsp Chamber tombs at Aidonia with corrugated iron sheets to protect the dromoi from erosionSee also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mycenaean chamber tombs Mycenaean shaft tombs TholoiReferences edit a b c Wright 2008 p 146 Cavanagh 1987 p 166 a b Antonaccio 1994 a b c d e f Shelmerdine 2008 p 4 Cavanagh amp Mee 1998 pp 49 51 Wright 2008 p 148 Mee amp Cavanagh 1984 pp 56 61 Wright 2008 p 149 Castleden 2005 p 102 Mee amp Cavanagh 1984 p 56 Mee amp Cavanagh 1984 p 54 Hope Simpson amp Dickinson 1979 p 246 Arena 2015 p 26 Arena 2015 p 17 Arena 2015 p 16 Arena 2015 p 13 Galanakis 2021 p 609 Antonaccio 1994 p 394 a b Deger Jalkotzy 2013 p 225 Blegen 1937 pp 377 390 Antonaccio 1994 p 396 Gallou 2003 p 191 a b c d e f g h Rutter 2012 Vlachopoulos 2020 p 421 Papadimitriou 2015 p 71 Wace 1932 pp 12 15 Papadimitriou 2015 p 72 Cavanagh 1987 p 165 Papadimitriou 2015 p 86 Smith et al 2017 p 124 Boyd 2016 p 65 Boyd 2014 p 70 Efkleidou 2019 p 500 Deger Jalkotzy 2013 p 221 Smith et al 2017 pp 130 131 Gallou 2005 p 116 a b Cavanagh 1987 p 167 a b Galanakis 2018 Bennet 2017 Smith et al 2017 p 172 Smith et al 2017 p 143 Gallou 2003 p 201 Smith et al 2017 p 170 Gallou 2005 p 123 Boyd 2006 Bibliography editAntonaccio Carla 1994 Contesting the Past Hero Cult Tomb Cult and Epic in Early Greece American Journal of Archaeology 98 3 389 410 doi 10 2307 506436 JSTOR 506436 S2CID 192969382 Arena Emiliano 2015 Mycenaean Peripheries during the Palatial Age The Case of Achaia Hesperia 84 1 1 46 doi 10 2972 hesperia 84 1 0001 S2CID 164407730 Bennet John 2017 Prosilio 2017 Archaeology in Greece Online Archived from the original on 2022 11 30 Retrieved 30 November 2022 Blegen Carl 1937 Post Mycenaean Deposits in Chamber Tombs Arxaiologikὴ Efhµeris 377 390 Boyd Michael 2016 Fields of Action in Mycenaean Funerary Practices In Dakouri Hild Anastasia Boyd Michael eds Staging Death Funerary Performance Architecture and Landscape in the Aegean De Gruyter pp 57 87 ISBN 9783110475784 Boyd Michael 2014 The Development of the Bronze Age Funerary Landscape of Nichoria In Nakassis Dimitri Gulizio Joann James Sarah A eds KE RA ME JA Studies Presented to Cynthia W Shelmerdine Philadelphia INSTAP Academic Press pp 191 208 ISBN 9781931534765 Boyd Michael 2006 Review The Mycenaean Cult of the Dead British Archaeological Reports International Series 1372 Bryn Mawr Classical Review Retrieved 30 November 2022 Castleden Rodney 2005 The Mycenaeans London and New York Routledge ISBN 0415363365 via Google Books Cavanagh William Mee Christopher 1998 A Private Place Death in Prehistoric Greece SIMA 125 Jonsered Paul Astroms Forlag Cavanagh William 1987 Cluster analysis of Mycenaean chamber tombs In Laffineur Robert ed Thanatos Les coutumes funeraires en Egee a l age du Bronze Actes du colloque de Liege 21 23 avril 1986 Aegaeum1 Liege pp 161 169 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Deger Jalkotzy Sigrid 2013 Cremation burials in the Mycenaean cemetery of Elateia Alonaki in Central Greece In Lochner Michaela Ruppenstein Florian eds Cremation burials in the region between the Middle Danube and the Aegean 1300 750 BC Vienna pp 221 229 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Efkleidou Kalliopi 2019 Walking your Way to Death Exploring the Relation Between the Location of Mycenaean Chamber Tombs and Roads in the Argolid Open Archaeology 5 484 504 doi 10 1515 opar 2019 0030 S2CID 210074181 Galanakis Yannis 2021 Ma r king Places The Monumental Mortuary Landscapes of Early Mycenaean Greece In Eder Birgitta Zavadil Michaela eds Social place and space in early Mycenaean Greece international discussions in Mycenaean archaeology October 5 8 2016 Athens Vienna pp 595 616 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Galanakis Yannis 2018 Review Ayia Sotira A Mycenaean Chamber Tomb Cemetery in the Nemea Valley Greece Prehistory Monographs 56 Bryn Mawr Classical Review Retrieved 30 November 2022 Gallou Chrysanthi 2005 The Mycenaean Cult of the Dead British Archaeological Reports International Series 1372 Oxford Archaeopress Gallou Chrysanthi 2003 The cult of the dead in central Greece during the Mycenaean period PDF Ph D Retrieved 30 November 2022 Hope Simpson Richard Dickinson Oliver 1979 A Gazetteer of Aegean Civilisation in the Bronze Age 1 The Mainland and Islands SIMA 52 Goteborg a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Mee Christopher Cavanagh William 1984 Mycenaean tombs as evidence for social and political organisation Oxford Journal of Archaeology 3 3 45 64 doi 10 1111 j 1468 0092 1984 tb00121 x Papadimitriou Nikolas 2015 The formation and use of dromoi in early Mycenaean tombs Annual of the British School at Athens 110 71 120 doi 10 1017 S0068245415000052 S2CID 193590796 Rutter Jeremy 2012 Lesson 21 Narrative Mycenaean Public and Funerary Architecture Fortifications Drainage Projects Roads and Chamber Tombs Aegean Prehistoric Archaeology Dartmouth College Retrieved 30 November 2022 Shelmerdine Cynthia 2008 Introduction Background Methods and Sources In Shelmerdine Cynthia ed The Cambridge Companion to the Aegean Bronze Age Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 1 18 Smith Angus Dabney Mary Pappi Evangelia Triantaphyllou Sevasti Wright James 2017 Ayia Sotira A Mycenaean Chamber Tomb Cemetery in the Nemea Valley Greece Prehistory Monographs 56 Philadelphia INSTAP Academic Press Wright James C 2008 Chamber Tombs Family and State in Mycenaean Greece In Gallou Chrysanthi Georgiadis M Muskett G M eds DIOSKOUROI Studies presented to W G Cavanagh and C B Mee on the anniversary of their 30 year joint contribution to Aegean Archaeology Oxford Archaeopress pp 144 153 Vlachopoulos Andreas 2020 Wall Paintings In Kotsonas Antonis Lemnos Irene S eds A Companion to the Archaeology of Early Greece and the Mediterranean Volume 2 Oxford Archaeopress pp 407 433 Wace Alan J 1932 Chamber Tombs at Mycenae Oxford a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mycenaean chamber tomb amp oldid 1213376577, wikipedia, wiki, book, 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