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Treasury of Atreus

The Treasury of Atreus or Tomb of Agamemnon[1] is a large tholos or beehive tomb constructed between 1400 and 1200 BCE in Mycenae, Greece.

Treasury of Atreus
Τάφος του Αγαμέμνονα
The dromos of the Treasury of Atreus
Location of the Treasury of Atreus in the Peloponnese
LocationMycenae, Greece
Coordinates37°43′37″N 22°45′14″E / 37.72682°N 22.75387°E / 37.72682; 22.75387
History
MaterialPoros stone, conglomerate, marble.
Foundedc. 1350 BCE
PeriodsLate Bronze Age
CulturesMycenaean Greece
Site notes
Excavation dates1801–1955
ArchaeologistsHeinrich Schliemann, Panagiotis Stamatakis, Alan Wace
Public accessYes
Designated1999
Part ofArchaeological Sites of Mycenae and Tiryns
Reference no.941

It is the largest and most elaborate tholos tomb known to have been constructed in the Aegean Bronze Age, and one of the last to have been built in the Argolid. The main tomb consisted of a circular burial chamber, or thalamos, topped with a corbelled dome. This dome was the largest in the world until the Roman period, and remains the world's largest corbelled dome. Originally, the façade was decorated with marble columns and sculptures, which used marble from the Mani Peninsula in the southern Peloponnese. Its artwork has been suggested to have been inspired by that of Minoan Crete and of Ancient Egypt.

Little is known of the persons who might have been buried in the tomb: the identification with the mythical Atreus and Agamemnon likely dates to the 18th century. The immense labour involved in the construction of the tomb, as well as the similarities between the architecture of the tholos and the structures of the citadel of Mycenae, has led to suggestions that it may have been intended for a ruler of Mycenae, and represent Mycenae's increasingly dominant status in the later part of the Bronze Age.

The tomb was first excavated in the 19th century, when parts of the marble sculptures of its façade were removed by the British aristocrat Thomas Bruce, 7th Earl of Elgin and the Ottoman governor Veli Pasha. It was partly excavated by Heinrich Schliemann, and more fully by Panagiotis Stamatakis, in the 1870s. Throughout the 20th century, the British School at Athens made a series of excavations in and around the tomb, led by Alan Wace, which primarily aimed to settle the difficult question of the date of its construction.

Name

Mythology

 
Atreus (left) serves Thyestes his sons' flesh, portrayed on a medieval manuscript c. 1410.

In Greek mythology, Atreus was the son of Hippodamia and Pelops, the king of Pisa in the western Peloponnese. In the version of the myth recounted by Hyginus, Atreus and his brother Thyestes killed their half-brother Chrysippus by casting him into a well out of jealousy, urged on by their mother.[2] As a punishment for their crime, they were banished to Mycenae, where Hippodamia is variously said to have died by suicide[3] or further exiled herself to Midea.[4]

Atreus and Thyestes quarrelled for the throne of Mycenae: first, Thyestes gained it after Atreus' wife, Aerope, gave a golden lamb from Atreus' flock to Thyestes and then tricked him into agreeing that whoever held the lamb should become king. Atreus in turn managed to regain the throne after Hermes persuaded Thyestes to hand the kingship to Atreus if the sun were to rise in the west and set in the east, and then Helios altered the usual course of the sun so that it did exactly that.[2] Finally, Atreus banished Thyestes after tricking him into eating the flesh of his own sons.[5]

On the advice of an oracle, Thyestes had a son by his daughter, Pelopia, as it was foretold that this son would kill Atreus. When the infant, Aegisthus, was born, his mother abandoned him, but he was found by a shepherd and given to Atreus to raise; when Aegisthus entered adulthood, Thyestes revealed the truth of his parentage. Aegisthus killed Atreus and ruled Mycenae jointly with Thyestes.[6]

The heroes Agamemnon and Menelaus were the twin sons of Atreus, sometimes known as the Atreides in Greek literature. After their father's murder, they took refuge with Tyndareus, king of Sparta: later, with Menelaus' assistance, Agamemnon overthrew Aegisthus and Thyestes and became king of Mycenae.[7] However, Aegisthus would, along with Agamemnon's wife Clytemnestra, kill Agamemnon on his return from the Trojan War, before being himself killed by Agamemnon's son, Orestes.[8]

Modern name

The precise origin of the name is uncertain, but it probably dates to the 18th century. The tomb was visible in Antiquity, but not associated with Atreus or Agamemnon when Pausanias visited in the 2nd century CE, since he describes the graves of both rulers as being within the walls of Mycenae.[9] After Pausanias, there are no documented accounts of travellers visiting Mycenae until 1700,[10] when the Venetian engineer and surveyor Francesco Vandeyk identified both the Lion Gate and the tomb now known as the 'Treasury of Atreus', which he conjectured was the tomb of a king.[11] Claude-Louis Fourmont, who visited Mycenae in 1729–1730,[11] used the name 'Tomb of Atreus' for the monument: by the time Edward Daniel Clarke visited at the beginning of the 19th century,[12] he could report a tradition that the tomb was known as 'Treasury of Atreus' and identified with the tomb of Agamemnon mentioned in Pausanias.[13]

The nearby tombs known as the Tomb of Clytemnestra and Tomb of Aegisthus are so named by association with the Treasury of Atreus.[14][15]

Construction

 
Piet de Jong's architectural plan of the Treasury of Atreus, drawn for Alan Wace's excavations of 1921–1923.

The Treasury of Atreus is the largest and most elaborate of the known Mycenaean tholos tombs.[16] It follows the typical typical tripartite division of these tombs into a narrow rectangular passageway (dromos), joined by a deep doorway (stomion) to a burial chamber (thalamos) surmounted by a corbelled dome. The dome was covered with earth to heighten it; some of this mound remains, but erosion has reduced its height and moved its apex towards the west.[17]

The dromos of the tomb is oriented east-west and is 36m long by 6m wide.[18] For the first 19 metres from the stomion,[19] the sides are dressed with conglomerate stone walls:[20] while the dromoi of earlier tombs had been lined with rubble or poros ashlar, the Treasury of Atreus is the first tomb at Mycenae to be fully lined with conglomerate.[21] The source of this conglomerate is likely to have been local to Mycenae.[22] Wace estimates the total volume of masonry in the dromos at over 600 m3, or a weight of over 1200 tons.[18] The height of the walls increases from 0.5m at the eastern end to 10m at the façade; their thickness correspondingly increases from around 2m at the eastern entrance to around 3m at the western entrance nearest to the façade, reflecting the additional pressure of the earth behind the walls as well as from the façade they support. The ashlar walls are bonded by yellow 'Plesia' clay,[22] a mortar commonly used in Mycenaean architecture.[23]

The major periods of the Helladic Chronology used in this article.
Period Approximate Date
Middle Helladic III c.1700–c.1600 BCE[24]
Late Helladic I c.1600–c.1450 BCE[24]
Late Helladic II c.1450–c.1400 BCE[24]
Late Helladic IIIA c.1400–c.1300 BCE[24]
Late Helladic IIIB c.1300–c.1180 BCE[24]
Late Helladic IIIC c.1180–c.1050 BCE[24]
 
Pieces of red marble (rosso antico or lapis Taenarius) from the façade of the Treasury of Atreus, in the National Archaeological Museum, Athens.

The façade of the stomion is 10.5m high, with a doorway 5.4m high, 2.7m wide and 5.4m deep.[17] On top of this doorway are two lintel blocks, the innermost of which is 8m in length, 5m in width and 1.2m thick: with a weight of around 120 tons, it is the heaviest single piece of masonry known from Greek architecture[25] and may have required up to 1,000 people to transport it to the tomb.[26] Above the doorway is a 'relieving triangle', an innovation first used at Mycenae on the earlier Tomb of Aegisthus to reduce the stress placed upon the lintel.[21] This triangle is believed to have originally been decorated with sculpture.[27] It has been suggested that the scale of the relieving triangle was intended to symbolise the power to harness resources.[28]

 
Drawing of the interior of the thalamos, published by Simone Pomardi [it] in 1820 after visiting the tomb in 1801–1806, prior to modern excavation.

Due to the fragmentary and scattered nature of the remains,[a] there are various reconstructions of the decoration of the façade.[29] The door was flanked by semi-engaged columns in green marble, with zig-zag motifs on the shaft.[29] Two smaller half-columns were placed on either side of the relieving triangle, while red marble was used to create a frieze with rosettes above the architrave of the door, and spiral decoration in bands of red marble that closed the triangular aperture.[29] In the 1960s, Richard Hope Simpson, along with Reynold Higgins and S.E. Ellis, demonstrated that the red marble, known as rosso antico, came from quarries on the Mani peninsula, and suggested that it was 'highly probable' that the green marble traced to the same source.[30][b] This red marble was later known as lapis Taenarius after Cape Taenarum.[32] Two reliefs in gypsum (the only such use of the material in the tomb),[31] carved with the image of bulls, may have decorated either the façade or the side chamber.[29] The empty 'relieving triangle' above the lintel of the façade served to direct the weight of the dome away from the centre of the lintel, reducing the stress placed upon it.[33] Christos Tsountas suggested that the façade may have included an alabaster cornice, since fragments of a similar structure were found in the Tomb of Clytemnestra, which he believed to be contemporary with 'Atreus':[34] however, recent re-evaluation of the Tomb of Clytemnestra has suggested that it may have been built up to two centuries later,[35] making this suggestion hypothetical at best.

The thalamos is made up of 33 courses of ashlar masonry (cut and worked limestone), 14.5m in diameter and 13.2m high.[17] It was initially constructed by the excavation of a cylindrical cavity from the hillside, which was then built up with masonry into a corbelled dome.[36] Traces of nails hammered into the interior have been recovered, which have been interpreted as evidence for decorations, perhaps golden rosettes, once hung from the inside dome.[28] A 2.5-meter-high doorway on the northern side of the inner chamber leads into a 6-meter square side chamber:[17] along with the Treasury of Minyas at Orchomenos in Boeotia, which appears to be built to the same plan, the Treasury of Atreus is the only known Mycenaean tholos with a side chamber.[37] Most scholars consider this to have been the location of any burials that were made inside the tomb, though no direct evidence of such burials has survived;[28] Alan Wace, however, believed that it was used as an ossuary to which the remains of previous burials were relocated while further internments were made in the main thalamos.[38] The tomb was the tallest and widest stone dome in the world for over a thousand years, until the Roman period, which saw the construction of the “Temple of Mercury” (actually part of a bath complex) at Baiae in the late 1st century BCE or early 1st century CE and of the Pantheon in Rome in the 2nd century CE.[39] Both of these are "true" domes, as opposed to corbelled domes, making the Treasury of Atreus the world's largest corbelled dome.

 
Entrance to the side chamber within the thalamos.

The earthen tumulus above the tomb was originally supported by a retaining wall of poros stone, which is preserved to a height of 1.5m and a thickness of around 1m.[17] It is believed that this poros stone was quarried in the hills north-west of Mycenae, in the direction of Nemea.[22] A terrace, approximately 27m in both length and breadth, was constructed in front of the tomb.[40]

 
 
Comparison of the relieving triangle of the Treasury of Atreus (left) and the relief of the Lion Gate (right)

James Wright has described the construction of tholos tombs as a 'monumental expression of power',[41] and highlighted the connections between the architecture of the tomb and that of the broadly-contemporary[c] fortifications and palace on the acropolis. In particular, Wright draws attention to the resemblance between the relieving triangle and the sculpted relief of the Lion Gate, and the heavy use of conglomerate on the tomb, which is used within the citadel to accentuate key architectural features, particularly column and anta bases, thresholds and door jambs.[42] It has also been suggested that the tapering sides and inward slant of the doorway may have been inspired by Ancient Egyptian architecture, while the running-spiral motif on the upper half-columns may trace back to Minoan art.[43]

Little is known about the organisation of the tomb's construction or the workers who built it. Elizabeth French has suggested that the same workforce who constructed the LH III megaron (the so-called 'Palace III') on the acropolis may subsequently have been used to construct the Treasury of Atreus,[16] and that they may have been worked as part of a corvée system.[16] It has been calculated that the construction of the tomb required at least 20,000 worker-days of labour,[44][d] and estimated that it may have occupied up to 1600 people[46] and been a years- or decades-long project.[47]

Nothing is known of who might have been buried inside the tomb, though it is generally considered to have been an elite or royal figure,[48] perhaps a ruler of the site or somebody close to its rulers.[49]

Date

 
Arthur Evans, c. 1920s. Evans argued – ultimately unsuccessfully – for an early date of the Treasury of Atreus between c. 1600–1500 BCE, to allow for its coincidence with the zenith of the Neopalatial Period of Minoan civilization.

The date of the tomb has historically been controversial,[47] though most scholars would now date it to c. 1400–1250 BCE.[47] In the early 20th century, it was the focus of a debate between Arthur Evans and Alan Wace, which became known as the 'Helladic Heresy'. After the beginnings of his excavations of Knossos from 1900, Evans began increasingly to argue for a distinction between the 'Minoan' civilisation of Crete and the 'Mycenaean' civilisation of the mainland. Although he had used the terms 'Minoan' and 'Mycenaean' interchangeably for his findings on Crete during the first two years of excavation,[50] Evans came to follow the German archaeologist Arthur Milchhöfer in arguing that the origins of Mycenaean civilisation lay on Crete:[51] specifically, through the 'domination' of the mainland of Greece by 'Minoan dynasts'.[50] In 1918, however, Wace published an article entitled 'The Pre-Mycenaean Pottery of the Mainland'[52] along with Carl Blegen, whose own excavations at Korakou in Corinthia in 1915–1916 had convinced him that substantial differences existed between 'Minoan' and 'Helladic' culture in the Late Bronze Age.[53][50] In their article, Wace and Blegen argued for the essential continuity of mainland-Greek, or 'Helladic', culture from the early to late Bronze Age, and that 'Mycenaean' civilisation (which then referred specifically to the period now designated as the Late Helladic).[54] Mycenaean culture, they argued, was 'not merely transplanted from Crete, but [was] the fruit of the cultivated Cretan graft set on the wild stock of the mainland'.[55] Moreover, while they accepted the influence of Crete on mainland Greece during the Middle Helladic period, they argued that the culture of the mainland remained 'Mycenaean as opposed to Cretan',[56] and that it was 'inconceivable' that Late Helladic culture represented a different 'race' to that of the Early Helladic.[56]

Wace and Blegen's argument stood in direct opposition to Evans' narrative, by which the Shaft Graves of Mycenae, first used in the transition between the Middle Helladic and Late Helladic periods,[57] represented the tombs of the 'Minoan' rulers of Mycenae, and therefore a sharp break with the cultural forms that preceded them. He further argued that the tholoi, particularly the Treasury of Atreus, were not only contemporary with the Shaft Graves but themselves copies of similar-looking structures found on Crete.[58] In the report of his first excavations at Mycenae in 1920, of which he informed Evans by letter, Wace suggested a later date for the Treasury of Atreus of c.1400–1200 BCE, rather than the c.1600–1500 BCE needed to conform with Evans' theory.[59] This chronological disagreement, and the associated implication that the monumentality and elaboration of Mycenae's funerary forms had increased over the Late Helladic period — which was seen to contradict the idea of the site having been dominated by Cretan rulers[60] — was dubbed the 'Helladic Heresy' by John Percival Droop.[61]

Following further excavations in the 1920s, including that of the Tomb of Aegisthus, which he dated securely to LH IIA and argued as earlier than 'Atreus', Wace dated the tomb to LH III,[62] later giving a terminus ante quem of 1350 BCE.[63] This was primarily based on the findings of his 1939 excavation, which showed that the dromos had been dug through the so-called 'Bothros deposit', which included LH IIIA1 material, providing a terminus post quem for its construction.[64] Most modern treatments consider the construction of the Treasury of Atreus and the fortification of the citadel of Mycenae, including the construction of the Lion Gate, to be broadly contemporary and to belong to the LH III period.[47] However, there is some disagreement about the relative chronology: George Mylonas argued that the fortifications began in LH IIIA2 and that the Treasury of Atreus was constructed in LH IIIB1, contemporary with the final phase of fortification,[65] while William Cavanagh and Christopher Mee,[66] along with Elizabeth French, considered that 'Atreus' belongs to the early part of LH IIIA1.

By LH III, Mycenae and nearby Tiryns were the only sites in the Argolid where tholos tombs were constructed:[67] previously, such tombs had been constructed at Dendra, Kazarma, Berbati, Prosymna and Kokla.[68] Scholars generally consider that the Treasury of Atreus was the penultimate tholos constructed at Mycenae, ahead of the Tomb of Clytemnestra.[35][e]

A single sherd beneath the threshold of the tomb dates to LH IIIB middle: this is considered to have come to be there during a later refurbishment of the tomb.[71]

Location

 
The tholoi, chamber tombs and grave circles around Mycenae. The Treasury of Atreus is numbered as 4.

The site of Mycenae is situated in Argolis, in the north-eastern Peloponnese, on the eastern edge of the Argive Plain. The Treasury of Atreus is located to the west side of the modern road leading to the citadel, approximately 500m south-southwest of the Lion Gate.[72]

The earliest of Mycenae's tholoi were constructed around the Kalkani necropolis, which had previously been used for the earliest chamber tombs.[72] The Lion and Aegisthus tholoi, by contrast, were built much closer to the acropolis, a trend followed by the later Tomb of Clytemnestra. This creates a division of most of Mycenae’s nine tholos tombs into two groups, separated by the Panagia ridge.[73][20] The greater size and elaboration of the tombs nearer the citadel has led to the suggestion that they are 'more royal' than those on the other side of the Panagia ridge,[74] though the chronological concentration of most of the tholoi in LH IIA, the fact that the smaller Cyclopean and Epano Phournos tholoi predate the grander Lion and Aegisthus tombs, and the fact that ostentatious burials continued in monumental chamber tombs all problematise a straightforward connection between tholos tombs and royalty at Mycenae, at least before LH IIB.[75]

 
View of the acropolis of Mycenae from the Treasury of Atreus, with the peak of Profitis Ilias behind. David Mason has argued that the coincidence of the shape of the acropolis with Profitis Ilias was an important consideration behind the placement of the Treasury of Atreus.[76]

The Treasury of Atreus is set alone at the southern edge of a bowl on the Panagia ridge’s eastern slope.[77] Prior to its construction, the site was occupied by a building, which was demolished to build the tholos.[22] Michael Boyd has suggested that the tomb's position was intended to 'co-opt the traditions of the past without directly competing with the present',[72] since most contemporary burials were made in chamber tombs further from the acropolis.[72] David Mason has drawn attention to the tomb's position alongside a likely Mycenaean route to the acropolis,[77] which perhaps gave it a protective function,[78] and to the views created both of the citadel from the tomb and of the tomb from the citadel, which he argues would have emphasised the connection between the dead interred in the tomb and the living who held power over Mycenae.[79] James Wright has also suggested that the location may have been selected for the greatest possible impact upon those arriving at Mycenae from the south.[42]

The alignment of the dromos is believed to have reflected topographic considerations — it is aligned perpendicular to the slope of the hill, which would have best facilitated its construction.[80]

Post-Mycenaean history

The remains of a seventh-century BCE krater decorated with the image of a horse, found beside the retaining wall of the tumulus, has been taken as evidence of cult activity at the tomb.[81] Unlike the earlier Tomb of Aegisthus and the later Tomb of Clytemnestra,[82] there is little direct evidence of the tomb's use in the post-Mycenaean period, though a bronze pin found in the side chamber and a handful of other bronze objects from the tomb have been suggested as possibly belonging to the Geometric period.[83] In other tombs of Mycenae, post-Mycenaean finds which are not associated with burials have been interpreted as signs of hero cult.[84] Remains of this period in tholos tombs have been seen as a means for the short-lived Argive colony at Mycenae, established in the 3rd century BCE but abandoned within a century,[85] to assert its connection with Mycenae's mythological heroes and so its status and prestige in relation to Argos.[85][86]

Excavation

 
The dromos of the treasury, probably between Veli Pasha's excavations of 1810 and Stamatakis' clearance in 1876–1879.

In the 19th century, a local tradition believed that the tomb had been once explored by the agha of the nearby village of Karvati, who took from it a bronze lamp.[87] The first securely-documented entrance to the tomb was undertaken by the British aristocrat Thomas Bruce, 7th Earl of Elgin. In 1801, Elgin had tasked his draughtsman, Giovanni Battista Lusieri, and Philip Hunt, a chaplain to the British embassy in Greece, to investigate various archaeological sites in Greece with a view to finding antiquities that might be taken back to Britain.[88] Hunt visited Mycenae in August, and reported the Treasury of Atreus as 'a most stupendous conical subterranean building, quite entire, called by some antiquaries the Tomb of Agamemnon, by others the Royal Treasury of Mycenae'.[89] Hunt also noted that the tomb was not intact, but open to the elements, and that 'floods of rain' and ingress of debris had made access difficult.[90]

 
Reconstruction of one of the pillars from the façade, in the National Archaeological Museum of Athens.

Elgin visited on 8 May 1802, crawling, as his wife Mary attested in a letter to her mother, through the tomb's relieving triangle.[91] He asked the voivode of Nafplio to clear the tomb, which was completed by Elgin's return to Mycenae on the 12th:[92] the voivode presented him with fragments of pottery vases, ornamental stonework and a marble vase found within.[93] Elgin also had parts of the columns flanking the doorway removed and shipped to England,[92] along with the fragmentary gypsum reliefs of bulls,[94] and architectural drawings made of the tomb by Sebastiano Ittar.[95]

In June 1810, Veli Pasha, the Ottoman Pasha of the Morea, excavated the monument.[f] He cleared most of the entrance to the tomb[97] and entered the chamber with ladders; according to Heinrich Schliemann's later publication of his own excavations at Mycenae, he discovered 'bones covered with gold', as well as gemstones and other gold and silver objects.[98] Veli Pasha sold some artefacts to the British MPs and antiquarians John Nicholas Fazakerley and Henry Gally Knight, and removed four large fragments of the semi-engaged columns beside the doorway. One of the fragments — last seen in 1815 — became part of a mosque in Argos; Veli Pasha gave the others as a gift to Howe Browne, 2nd Marquess of Sligo, who visited him shortly after the excavations and gave him two fourteen-pounder cannons in exchange.[99][g] Sligo described the columnar fragments as 'trifles', but had them shipped to his estate at Westport House in County Mayo, Ireland, where they were discovered in a basement by his grandson, George Browne, in 1904. George Browne offered them for 'public benefit' to the British Museum, to be combined with the fragments taken by Elgin and given in 1816 to the museum,[100] in exchange for replicas of the reconstructed columns; they entered the museum in 1905.[101]

Heinrich Schliemann may have explored the tomb during his brief, illegal excavations of Mycenae in 1874.[h] In 1876, he excavated in the side chamber, finding a small pit of unknown purpose;[104] Alan Wace later suggested that it was the base for a column which was never put in.[105] Between 1876 and 1879, Panagiotis Stamatakis cleared the debris from the dromos and entrance of the tomb,[102] recovering fragments of sculpture believed to have come from the relieving triangle.[27]

 
Alan Wace in 1922, during excavations at Asine

In 1920 and 1921, archaeologists of the British School at Athens under Alan Wace made small-scale excavations in the tomb for the purposes of establishing its date,[18] including a trench in the dromos.[106] During the campaigns of 1920–1923, which had originally intended to excavate the seven thus-far unexcavated tholoi (that is, all except 'Atreus' and 'Clytemnestra'), Wace had the first architectural plans of the tomb drawn up by Piet de Jong.[60]

Another effort was made in 1939, where Wace dug trenches on the outside of the dromos in line with the façade and beyond the eastern end of the dromos. Wace found that the façade and dromos were bonded together, showing that they were constructed together, and that the dromos had not previously been any larger than its present dimensions.[107] The 1939 excavation also showed that the dromos had been dug through the so-called 'Bothros deposit', which included LH IIIA1 material, providing a terminus post quem for its construction.[64]

In 1955, Wace dug trial trenches in the area around the tomb,[108] containing large quantities of Mycenaean potsherds, which have been interpreted (in line with similar contemporary deposits at the Tomb of Clytemnestra) as offerings made to the tomb's occupants.[109][108]

Gallery

See also

Footnotes

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ See Excavation below.
  2. ^ Elizabeth French has argued that both stones are 'probably from the Argolid', but without presenting evidence for this claim.[31]
  3. ^ See Date below.
  4. ^ Fitzsimons gives a higher estimate of 32789 worker-days.[45]
  5. ^ Olivier Pelon argued that the Tomb of Atreus was the latest of the tholoi,[69] though this chronology predates the reassessment of the Tomb of Clytemnestra to LH IIIB1.[70]
  6. ^ Christos Tsountas, in 1897, wrote that Veli Pasha had 'rifled' the tomb in 1808: it is not known whether he is referring to the same incident.[96]
  7. ^ It is sometimes claimed that Sligo directed or co-directed the removals himself;[93] this is likely to be erroneous, as Sligo arrived in Argolis only after the excavation and his letters make no mention of it.[99]
  8. ^ Wace states that Schliemann 'made some tests' in the Treasury of Atreus, but gives the date as 1873 and as before his excavations of 1876.[102] Schliemann's only visit to the site before those excavations, apart from a brief excursus to it in 1868, was between 23 February and 4 March 1874.[103]

References

  1. ^ Wace 1923.
  2. ^ a b March 2009, p. 434.
  3. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae 243
  4. ^ Pausanias, Description of Greece 6.20.7
  5. ^ Clay 2009, p. 221.
  6. ^ March 2009, pp. 435–436.
  7. ^ March 2009, p. 436.
  8. ^ March 2009, pp. 439–440.
  9. ^ Pausanias, Description of Greece 2.16.6
  10. ^ Moore, Rowlands & Karadimas 2014, p. 2.
  11. ^ a b Moore, Rowlands & Karadimas 2014, p. 4.
  12. ^ Clarke 1814, p. 688.
  13. ^ Clarke 1814, p. 689.
  14. ^ Wace 1923, p. 296.
  15. ^ Tsountas 1897, p. 57.
  16. ^ a b c French 2012, p. 673.
  17. ^ a b c d e Mason 2007, p. 38.
  18. ^ a b c Wace 1923, p. 338.
  19. ^ Wace 1940, p. 237.
  20. ^ a b Mason 2007.
  21. ^ a b Galanakis 2007, p. 244.
  22. ^ a b c d Brysbaert, Vikatou & Stöger 2020, p. 46.
  23. ^ Wace 1940, p. 238.
  24. ^ a b c d e f Shelmerdine 2008, p. 4.
  25. ^ Santillo Frizell 1998, p. 173.
  26. ^ Mason 2007, p. 49.
  27. ^ a b Wace 1923, p. 344.
  28. ^ a b c Hitchcock 2012, p. 205.
  29. ^ a b c d Higgins, Ellis & Hope Simpson 1968, p. 331.
  30. ^ Higgins, Ellis & Hope Simpson 1968, p. 336.
  31. ^ a b French 2013, p. 70.
  32. ^ Wilson 2013, p. 449.
  33. ^ Zekiou 2019, p. 177.
  34. ^ Tsountas 1897, p. 119.
  35. ^ a b Mason 2013, p. 97.
  36. ^ Lazar et al. 2004, p. 241.
  37. ^ Moore 2015, p. 42.
  38. ^ Wace 1923, pp. 351–352.
  39. ^ Watkin 2005, p. 23.
  40. ^ Mason 2007, p. 36.
  41. ^ Wright 1987, p. 176.
  42. ^ a b Wright 2006, p. 59.
  43. ^ Watkin 2005, p. 33.
  44. ^ Cavanagh & Mee 1999, p. 99.
  45. ^ Fitzsimons 2020, p. 22.
  46. ^ Fitzsimons 2020, p. 21.
  47. ^ a b c d Boyd 2015, p. 443.
  48. ^ Mason 2007, p. 35.
  49. ^ Pelon 1976, pp. 370–371.
  50. ^ a b c Galanakis 2007, p. 242.
  51. ^ Karadimas & Momigliano 2004, p. 249.
  52. ^ Wace & Blegen 1918.
  53. ^ Myres 1923, p. 72.
  54. ^ Wace & Blegen 1918, p. 176.
  55. ^ Wace & Blegen 1918, p. 188.
  56. ^ a b Wace & Blegen 1918, p. 189.
  57. ^ Dickinson et al. 2012, p. 162.
  58. ^ Evans 1929, pp. 67–70.
  59. ^ Galanakis 2007, p. 241.
  60. ^ a b Galanakis 2007, p. 255.
  61. ^ Droop 1926.
  62. ^ Wace 1923, p. 340.
  63. ^ Wace 1940, p. 246.
  64. ^ a b Hope Simpson & Dickinson 1979, p. 34.
  65. ^ Mylonas 1983, p. 77.
  66. ^ Cavanagh & Mee 1999, p. 94.
  67. ^ Mee 2012, p. 286.
  68. ^ Dirlik 2012.
  69. ^ Pelon 1976, pp. 482–483; Pelon 1990, p. 109.
  70. ^ Mason 2013, p. 117.
  71. ^ French 2013, p. 69.
  72. ^ a b c d Boyd 2015, p. 444.
  73. ^ Hope Simpson & Dickinson 1979, p. 36.
  74. ^ Hope Simpson & Dickinson 1979, p. 39.
  75. ^ Nash 2017, pp. 37–41.
  76. ^ Mason 2007, p. 48.
  77. ^ a b Mason 2007, p. 40.
  78. ^ Mason 2007, pp. 40–41.
  79. ^ Mason 2007, p. 45–48.
  80. ^ Mickelson & Mickelson 2014, p. 5.
  81. ^ French 2013, p. 143.
  82. ^ Antonaccio 1995, pp. 34–40.
  83. ^ Antonaccio 1995, p. 39.
  84. ^ Antonaccio 1994, p. 396.
  85. ^ a b Alcock 1997, p. 24.
  86. ^ Jameson 1990, p. 222.
  87. ^ Smith 1916, p. 216.
  88. ^ Gere 2006, p. 51.
  89. ^ Quoted in Pryce and Smith 1928, p. 15
  90. ^ Letter from Hunt to Elgin, 3 September 1801, quoted in Smith 1916, p.200
  91. ^ Gere 2006, pp. 50–53.
  92. ^ a b Smith 1916, p. 214.
  93. ^ a b Gere 2006, p. 53.
  94. ^ Moore 2015, pp. 42–43.
  95. ^ Smith 1916, p. 218.
  96. ^ Tsountas 1897, p. 131.
  97. ^ Moore, Rowlands & Karadimas 2014, p. 78.
  98. ^ Schliemann 1878, p. 49.
  99. ^ a b Loughlin 2021, p. 47.
  100. ^ British Museum 2021.
  101. ^ Loughlin 2021, p. 48.
  102. ^ a b Wace 1923, p. 283.
  103. ^ Moorehead 2016, p. 145.
  104. ^ Schliemann 1878, p. 46.
  105. ^ Wace 1923, p. 351.
  106. ^ Wace 1923, p. 339.
  107. ^ Wace 1940, pp. 237–238.
  108. ^ a b Mason 2007, p. 50.
  109. ^ Wace 1956, p. 117.

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External links

  • Treasury of Atreus at Structurae
  • Treasury of Atreus 360° Interactive virtual tour
  • A different light inside Treasury of Atreus

37°43′37″N 22°45′14″E / 37.72682°N 22.75387°E / 37.72682; 22.75387

treasury, atreus, tomb, agamemnon, large, tholos, beehive, tomb, constructed, between, 1400, 1200, mycenae, greece, Τάφος, του, Αγαμέμνοναthe, dromos, location, peloponneselocationmycenae, greececoordinates37, 72682, 75387, 72682, 75387historymaterialporos, st. The Treasury of Atreus or Tomb of Agamemnon 1 is a large tholos or beehive tomb constructed between 1400 and 1200 BCE in Mycenae Greece Treasury of AtreusTafos toy AgamemnonaThe dromos of the Treasury of AtreusLocation of the Treasury of Atreus in the PeloponneseLocationMycenae GreeceCoordinates37 43 37 N 22 45 14 E 37 72682 N 22 75387 E 37 72682 22 75387HistoryMaterialPoros stone conglomerate marble Foundedc 1350 BCEPeriodsLate Bronze AgeCulturesMycenaean GreeceSite notesExcavation dates1801 1955ArchaeologistsHeinrich Schliemann Panagiotis Stamatakis Alan WacePublic accessYesUNESCO World Heritage SiteDesignated1999Part ofArchaeological Sites of Mycenae and TirynsReference no 941It is the largest and most elaborate tholos tomb known to have been constructed in the Aegean Bronze Age and one of the last to have been built in the Argolid The main tomb consisted of a circular burial chamber or thalamos topped with a corbelled dome This dome was the largest in the world until the Roman period and remains the world s largest corbelled dome Originally the facade was decorated with marble columns and sculptures which used marble from the Mani Peninsula in the southern Peloponnese Its artwork has been suggested to have been inspired by that of Minoan Crete and of Ancient Egypt Little is known of the persons who might have been buried in the tomb the identification with the mythical Atreus and Agamemnon likely dates to the 18th century The immense labour involved in the construction of the tomb as well as the similarities between the architecture of the tholos and the structures of the citadel of Mycenae has led to suggestions that it may have been intended for a ruler of Mycenae and represent Mycenae s increasingly dominant status in the later part of the Bronze Age The tomb was first excavated in the 19th century when parts of the marble sculptures of its facade were removed by the British aristocrat Thomas Bruce 7th Earl of Elgin and the Ottoman governor Veli Pasha It was partly excavated by Heinrich Schliemann and more fully by Panagiotis Stamatakis in the 1870s Throughout the 20th century the British School at Athens made a series of excavations in and around the tomb led by Alan Wace which primarily aimed to settle the difficult question of the date of its construction Contents 1 Name 1 1 Mythology 1 2 Modern name 2 Construction 3 Date 4 Location 5 Post Mycenaean history 5 1 Excavation 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 Footnotes 8 1 Explanatory notes 8 2 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksName EditMythology Edit Main article Atreus Atreus left serves Thyestes his sons flesh portrayed on a medieval manuscript c 1410 In Greek mythology Atreus was the son of Hippodamia and Pelops the king of Pisa in the western Peloponnese In the version of the myth recounted by Hyginus Atreus and his brother Thyestes killed their half brother Chrysippus by casting him into a well out of jealousy urged on by their mother 2 As a punishment for their crime they were banished to Mycenae where Hippodamia is variously said to have died by suicide 3 or further exiled herself to Midea 4 Atreus and Thyestes quarrelled for the throne of Mycenae first Thyestes gained it after Atreus wife Aerope gave a golden lamb from Atreus flock to Thyestes and then tricked him into agreeing that whoever held the lamb should become king Atreus in turn managed to regain the throne after Hermes persuaded Thyestes to hand the kingship to Atreus if the sun were to rise in the west and set in the east and then Helios altered the usual course of the sun so that it did exactly that 2 Finally Atreus banished Thyestes after tricking him into eating the flesh of his own sons 5 On the advice of an oracle Thyestes had a son by his daughter Pelopia as it was foretold that this son would kill Atreus When the infant Aegisthus was born his mother abandoned him but he was found by a shepherd and given to Atreus to raise when Aegisthus entered adulthood Thyestes revealed the truth of his parentage Aegisthus killed Atreus and ruled Mycenae jointly with Thyestes 6 The heroes Agamemnon and Menelaus were the twin sons of Atreus sometimes known as the Atreides in Greek literature After their father s murder they took refuge with Tyndareus king of Sparta later with Menelaus assistance Agamemnon overthrew Aegisthus and Thyestes and became king of Mycenae 7 However Aegisthus would along with Agamemnon s wife Clytemnestra kill Agamemnon on his return from the Trojan War before being himself killed by Agamemnon s son Orestes 8 Modern name Edit The precise origin of the name is uncertain but it probably dates to the 18th century The tomb was visible in Antiquity but not associated with Atreus or Agamemnon when Pausanias visited in the 2nd century CE since he describes the graves of both rulers as being within the walls of Mycenae 9 After Pausanias there are no documented accounts of travellers visiting Mycenae until 1700 10 when the Venetian engineer and surveyor Francesco Vandeyk identified both the Lion Gate and the tomb now known as the Treasury of Atreus which he conjectured was the tomb of a king 11 Claude Louis Fourmont who visited Mycenae in 1729 1730 11 used the name Tomb of Atreus for the monument by the time Edward Daniel Clarke visited at the beginning of the 19th century 12 he could report a tradition that the tomb was known as Treasury of Atreus and identified with the tomb of Agamemnon mentioned in Pausanias 13 The nearby tombs known as the Tomb of Clytemnestra and Tomb of Aegisthus are so named by association with the Treasury of Atreus 14 15 Construction EditMain article Beehive tomb Piet de Jong s architectural plan of the Treasury of Atreus drawn for Alan Wace s excavations of 1921 1923 The Treasury of Atreus is the largest and most elaborate of the known Mycenaean tholos tombs 16 It follows the typical typical tripartite division of these tombs into a narrow rectangular passageway dromos joined by a deep doorway stomion to a burial chamber thalamos surmounted by a corbelled dome The dome was covered with earth to heighten it some of this mound remains but erosion has reduced its height and moved its apex towards the west 17 The dromos of the tomb is oriented east west and is 36m long by 6m wide 18 For the first 19 metres from the stomion 19 the sides are dressed with conglomerate stone walls 20 while the dromoi of earlier tombs had been lined with rubble or poros ashlar the Treasury of Atreus is the first tomb at Mycenae to be fully lined with conglomerate 21 The source of this conglomerate is likely to have been local to Mycenae 22 Wace estimates the total volume of masonry in the dromos at over 600 m3 or a weight of over 1200 tons 18 The height of the walls increases from 0 5m at the eastern end to 10m at the facade their thickness correspondingly increases from around 2m at the eastern entrance to around 3m at the western entrance nearest to the facade reflecting the additional pressure of the earth behind the walls as well as from the facade they support The ashlar walls are bonded by yellow Plesia clay 22 a mortar commonly used in Mycenaean architecture 23 The major periods of the Helladic Chronology used in this article Period Approximate DateMiddle Helladic III c 1700 c 1600 BCE 24 Late Helladic I c 1600 c 1450 BCE 24 Late Helladic II c 1450 c 1400 BCE 24 Late Helladic IIIA c 1400 c 1300 BCE 24 Late Helladic IIIB c 1300 c 1180 BCE 24 Late Helladic IIIC c 1180 c 1050 BCE 24 Pieces of red marble rosso antico or lapis Taenarius from the facade of the Treasury of Atreus in the National Archaeological Museum Athens The facade of the stomion is 10 5m high with a doorway 5 4m high 2 7m wide and 5 4m deep 17 On top of this doorway are two lintel blocks the innermost of which is 8m in length 5m in width and 1 2m thick with a weight of around 120 tons it is the heaviest single piece of masonry known from Greek architecture 25 and may have required up to 1 000 people to transport it to the tomb 26 Above the doorway is a relieving triangle an innovation first used at Mycenae on the earlier Tomb of Aegisthus to reduce the stress placed upon the lintel 21 This triangle is believed to have originally been decorated with sculpture 27 It has been suggested that the scale of the relieving triangle was intended to symbolise the power to harness resources 28 Drawing of the interior of the thalamos published by Simone Pomardi it in 1820 after visiting the tomb in 1801 1806 prior to modern excavation Due to the fragmentary and scattered nature of the remains a there are various reconstructions of the decoration of the facade 29 The door was flanked by semi engaged columns in green marble with zig zag motifs on the shaft 29 Two smaller half columns were placed on either side of the relieving triangle while red marble was used to create a frieze with rosettes above the architrave of the door and spiral decoration in bands of red marble that closed the triangular aperture 29 In the 1960s Richard Hope Simpson along with Reynold Higgins and S E Ellis demonstrated that the red marble known as rosso antico came from quarries on the Mani peninsula and suggested that it was highly probable that the green marble traced to the same source 30 b This red marble was later known as lapis Taenarius after Cape Taenarum 32 Two reliefs in gypsum the only such use of the material in the tomb 31 carved with the image of bulls may have decorated either the facade or the side chamber 29 The empty relieving triangle above the lintel of the facade served to direct the weight of the dome away from the centre of the lintel reducing the stress placed upon it 33 Christos Tsountas suggested that the facade may have included an alabaster cornice since fragments of a similar structure were found in the Tomb of Clytemnestra which he believed to be contemporary with Atreus 34 however recent re evaluation of the Tomb of Clytemnestra has suggested that it may have been built up to two centuries later 35 making this suggestion hypothetical at best The thalamos is made up of 33 courses of ashlar masonry cut and worked limestone 14 5m in diameter and 13 2m high 17 It was initially constructed by the excavation of a cylindrical cavity from the hillside which was then built up with masonry into a corbelled dome 36 Traces of nails hammered into the interior have been recovered which have been interpreted as evidence for decorations perhaps golden rosettes once hung from the inside dome 28 A 2 5 meter high doorway on the northern side of the inner chamber leads into a 6 meter square side chamber 17 along with the Treasury of Minyas at Orchomenos in Boeotia which appears to be built to the same plan the Treasury of Atreus is the only known Mycenaean tholos with a side chamber 37 Most scholars consider this to have been the location of any burials that were made inside the tomb though no direct evidence of such burials has survived 28 Alan Wace however believed that it was used as an ossuary to which the remains of previous burials were relocated while further internments were made in the main thalamos 38 The tomb was the tallest and widest stone dome in the world for over a thousand years until the Roman period which saw the construction of the Temple of Mercury actually part of a bath complex at Baiae in the late 1st century BCE or early 1st century CE and of the Pantheon in Rome in the 2nd century CE 39 Both of these are true domes as opposed to corbelled domes making the Treasury of Atreus the world s largest corbelled dome Entrance to the side chamber within the thalamos The earthen tumulus above the tomb was originally supported by a retaining wall of poros stone which is preserved to a height of 1 5m and a thickness of around 1m 17 It is believed that this poros stone was quarried in the hills north west of Mycenae in the direction of Nemea 22 A terrace approximately 27m in both length and breadth was constructed in front of the tomb 40 Comparison of the relieving triangle of the Treasury of Atreus left and the relief of the Lion Gate right James Wright has described the construction of tholos tombs as a monumental expression of power 41 and highlighted the connections between the architecture of the tomb and that of the broadly contemporary c fortifications and palace on the acropolis In particular Wright draws attention to the resemblance between the relieving triangle and the sculpted relief of the Lion Gate and the heavy use of conglomerate on the tomb which is used within the citadel to accentuate key architectural features particularly column and anta bases thresholds and door jambs 42 It has also been suggested that the tapering sides and inward slant of the doorway may have been inspired by Ancient Egyptian architecture while the running spiral motif on the upper half columns may trace back to Minoan art 43 Little is known about the organisation of the tomb s construction or the workers who built it Elizabeth French has suggested that the same workforce who constructed the LH III megaron the so called Palace III on the acropolis may subsequently have been used to construct the Treasury of Atreus 16 and that they may have been worked as part of a corvee system 16 It has been calculated that the construction of the tomb required at least 20 000 worker days of labour 44 d and estimated that it may have occupied up to 1600 people 46 and been a years or decades long project 47 Nothing is known of who might have been buried inside the tomb though it is generally considered to have been an elite or royal figure 48 perhaps a ruler of the site or somebody close to its rulers 49 Date Edit Arthur Evans c 1920s Evans argued ultimately unsuccessfully for an early date of the Treasury of Atreus between c 1600 1500 BCE to allow for its coincidence with the zenith of the Neopalatial Period of Minoan civilization The date of the tomb has historically been controversial 47 though most scholars would now date it to c 1400 1250 BCE 47 In the early 20th century it was the focus of a debate between Arthur Evans and Alan Wace which became known as the Helladic Heresy After the beginnings of his excavations of Knossos from 1900 Evans began increasingly to argue for a distinction between the Minoan civilisation of Crete and the Mycenaean civilisation of the mainland Although he had used the terms Minoan and Mycenaean interchangeably for his findings on Crete during the first two years of excavation 50 Evans came to follow the German archaeologist Arthur Milchhofer in arguing that the origins of Mycenaean civilisation lay on Crete 51 specifically through the domination of the mainland of Greece by Minoan dynasts 50 In 1918 however Wace published an article entitled The Pre Mycenaean Pottery of the Mainland 52 along with Carl Blegen whose own excavations at Korakou in Corinthia in 1915 1916 had convinced him that substantial differences existed between Minoan and Helladic culture in the Late Bronze Age 53 50 In their article Wace and Blegen argued for the essential continuity of mainland Greek or Helladic culture from the early to late Bronze Age and that Mycenaean civilisation which then referred specifically to the period now designated as the Late Helladic 54 Mycenaean culture they argued was not merely transplanted from Crete but was the fruit of the cultivated Cretan graft set on the wild stock of the mainland 55 Moreover while they accepted the influence of Crete on mainland Greece during the Middle Helladic period they argued that the culture of the mainland remained Mycenaean as opposed to Cretan 56 and that it was inconceivable that Late Helladic culture represented a different race to that of the Early Helladic 56 Wace and Blegen s argument stood in direct opposition to Evans narrative by which the Shaft Graves of Mycenae first used in the transition between the Middle Helladic and Late Helladic periods 57 represented the tombs of the Minoan rulers of Mycenae and therefore a sharp break with the cultural forms that preceded them He further argued that the tholoi particularly the Treasury of Atreus were not only contemporary with the Shaft Graves but themselves copies of similar looking structures found on Crete 58 In the report of his first excavations at Mycenae in 1920 of which he informed Evans by letter Wace suggested a later date for the Treasury of Atreus of c 1400 1200 BCE rather than the c 1600 1500 BCE needed to conform with Evans theory 59 This chronological disagreement and the associated implication that the monumentality and elaboration of Mycenae s funerary forms had increased over the Late Helladic period which was seen to contradict the idea of the site having been dominated by Cretan rulers 60 was dubbed the Helladic Heresy by John Percival Droop 61 Following further excavations in the 1920s including that of the Tomb of Aegisthus which he dated securely to LH IIA and argued as earlier than Atreus Wace dated the tomb to LH III 62 later giving a terminus ante quem of 1350 BCE 63 This was primarily based on the findings of his 1939 excavation which showed that the dromos had been dug through the so called Bothros deposit which included LH IIIA1 material providing a terminus post quem for its construction 64 Most modern treatments consider the construction of the Treasury of Atreus and the fortification of the citadel of Mycenae including the construction of the Lion Gate to be broadly contemporary and to belong to the LH III period 47 However there is some disagreement about the relative chronology George Mylonas argued that the fortifications began in LH IIIA2 and that the Treasury of Atreus was constructed in LH IIIB1 contemporary with the final phase of fortification 65 while William Cavanagh and Christopher Mee 66 along with Elizabeth French considered that Atreus belongs to the early part of LH IIIA1 By LH III Mycenae and nearby Tiryns were the only sites in the Argolid where tholos tombs were constructed 67 previously such tombs had been constructed at Dendra Kazarma Berbati Prosymna and Kokla 68 Scholars generally consider that the Treasury of Atreus was the penultimate tholos constructed at Mycenae ahead of the Tomb of Clytemnestra 35 e A single sherd beneath the threshold of the tomb dates to LH IIIB middle this is considered to have come to be there during a later refurbishment of the tomb 71 Location Edit The tholoi chamber tombs and grave circles around Mycenae The Treasury of Atreus is numbered as 4 Main article Mycenae The site of Mycenae is situated in Argolis in the north eastern Peloponnese on the eastern edge of the Argive Plain The Treasury of Atreus is located to the west side of the modern road leading to the citadel approximately 500m south southwest of the Lion Gate 72 The earliest of Mycenae s tholoi were constructed around the Kalkani necropolis which had previously been used for the earliest chamber tombs 72 The Lion and Aegisthus tholoi by contrast were built much closer to the acropolis a trend followed by the later Tomb of Clytemnestra This creates a division of most of Mycenae s nine tholos tombs into two groups separated by the Panagia ridge 73 20 The greater size and elaboration of the tombs nearer the citadel has led to the suggestion that they are more royal than those on the other side of the Panagia ridge 74 though the chronological concentration of most of the tholoi in LH IIA the fact that the smaller Cyclopean and Epano Phournos tholoi predate the grander Lion and Aegisthus tombs and the fact that ostentatious burials continued in monumental chamber tombs all problematise a straightforward connection between tholos tombs and royalty at Mycenae at least before LH IIB 75 View of the acropolis of Mycenae from the Treasury of Atreus with the peak of Profitis Ilias behind David Mason has argued that the coincidence of the shape of the acropolis with Profitis Ilias was an important consideration behind the placement of the Treasury of Atreus 76 The Treasury of Atreus is set alone at the southern edge of a bowl on the Panagia ridge s eastern slope 77 Prior to its construction the site was occupied by a building which was demolished to build the tholos 22 Michael Boyd has suggested that the tomb s position was intended to co opt the traditions of the past without directly competing with the present 72 since most contemporary burials were made in chamber tombs further from the acropolis 72 David Mason has drawn attention to the tomb s position alongside a likely Mycenaean route to the acropolis 77 which perhaps gave it a protective function 78 and to the views created both of the citadel from the tomb and of the tomb from the citadel which he argues would have emphasised the connection between the dead interred in the tomb and the living who held power over Mycenae 79 James Wright has also suggested that the location may have been selected for the greatest possible impact upon those arriving at Mycenae from the south 42 The alignment of the dromos is believed to have reflected topographic considerations it is aligned perpendicular to the slope of the hill which would have best facilitated its construction 80 Post Mycenaean history EditThe remains of a seventh century BCE krater decorated with the image of a horse found beside the retaining wall of the tumulus has been taken as evidence of cult activity at the tomb 81 Unlike the earlier Tomb of Aegisthus and the later Tomb of Clytemnestra 82 there is little direct evidence of the tomb s use in the post Mycenaean period though a bronze pin found in the side chamber and a handful of other bronze objects from the tomb have been suggested as possibly belonging to the Geometric period 83 In other tombs of Mycenae post Mycenaean finds which are not associated with burials have been interpreted as signs of hero cult 84 Remains of this period in tholos tombs have been seen as a means for the short lived Argive colony at Mycenae established in the 3rd century BCE but abandoned within a century 85 to assert its connection with Mycenae s mythological heroes and so its status and prestige in relation to Argos 85 86 Excavation Edit The dromos of the treasury probably between Veli Pasha s excavations of 1810 and Stamatakis clearance in 1876 1879 In the 19th century a local tradition believed that the tomb had been once explored by the agha of the nearby village of Karvati who took from it a bronze lamp 87 The first securely documented entrance to the tomb was undertaken by the British aristocrat Thomas Bruce 7th Earl of Elgin In 1801 Elgin had tasked his draughtsman Giovanni Battista Lusieri and Philip Hunt a chaplain to the British embassy in Greece to investigate various archaeological sites in Greece with a view to finding antiquities that might be taken back to Britain 88 Hunt visited Mycenae in August and reported the Treasury of Atreus as a most stupendous conical subterranean building quite entire called by some antiquaries the Tomb of Agamemnon by others the Royal Treasury of Mycenae 89 Hunt also noted that the tomb was not intact but open to the elements and that floods of rain and ingress of debris had made access difficult 90 Reconstruction of one of the pillars from the facade in the National Archaeological Museum of Athens Elgin visited on 8 May 1802 crawling as his wife Mary attested in a letter to her mother through the tomb s relieving triangle 91 He asked the voivode of Nafplio to clear the tomb which was completed by Elgin s return to Mycenae on the 12th 92 the voivode presented him with fragments of pottery vases ornamental stonework and a marble vase found within 93 Elgin also had parts of the columns flanking the doorway removed and shipped to England 92 along with the fragmentary gypsum reliefs of bulls 94 and architectural drawings made of the tomb by Sebastiano Ittar 95 In June 1810 Veli Pasha the Ottoman Pasha of the Morea excavated the monument f He cleared most of the entrance to the tomb 97 and entered the chamber with ladders according to Heinrich Schliemann s later publication of his own excavations at Mycenae he discovered bones covered with gold as well as gemstones and other gold and silver objects 98 Veli Pasha sold some artefacts to the British MPs and antiquarians John Nicholas Fazakerley and Henry Gally Knight and removed four large fragments of the semi engaged columns beside the doorway One of the fragments last seen in 1815 became part of a mosque in Argos Veli Pasha gave the others as a gift to Howe Browne 2nd Marquess of Sligo who visited him shortly after the excavations and gave him two fourteen pounder cannons in exchange 99 g Sligo described the columnar fragments as trifles but had them shipped to his estate at Westport House in County Mayo Ireland where they were discovered in a basement by his grandson George Browne in 1904 George Browne offered them for public benefit to the British Museum to be combined with the fragments taken by Elgin and given in 1816 to the museum 100 in exchange for replicas of the reconstructed columns they entered the museum in 1905 101 Heinrich Schliemann may have explored the tomb during his brief illegal excavations of Mycenae in 1874 h In 1876 he excavated in the side chamber finding a small pit of unknown purpose 104 Alan Wace later suggested that it was the base for a column which was never put in 105 Between 1876 and 1879 Panagiotis Stamatakis cleared the debris from the dromos and entrance of the tomb 102 recovering fragments of sculpture believed to have come from the relieving triangle 27 Alan Wace in 1922 during excavations at AsineIn 1920 and 1921 archaeologists of the British School at Athens under Alan Wace made small scale excavations in the tomb for the purposes of establishing its date 18 including a trench in the dromos 106 During the campaigns of 1920 1923 which had originally intended to excavate the seven thus far unexcavated tholoi that is all except Atreus and Clytemnestra Wace had the first architectural plans of the tomb drawn up by Piet de Jong 60 Another effort was made in 1939 where Wace dug trenches on the outside of the dromos in line with the facade and beyond the eastern end of the dromos Wace found that the facade and dromos were bonded together showing that they were constructed together and that the dromos had not previously been any larger than its present dimensions 107 The 1939 excavation also showed that the dromos had been dug through the so called Bothros deposit which included LH IIIA1 material providing a terminus post quem for its construction 64 In 1955 Wace dug trial trenches in the area around the tomb 108 containing large quantities of Mycenaean potsherds which have been interpreted in line with similar contemporary deposits at the Tomb of Clytemnestra as offerings made to the tomb s occupants 109 108 Gallery Edit Dome of the treasury Detailed view of the entrance Reconstruction of a capital in the National Archeological Museum Athens Section of the tomb InteriorSee also EditList of megalithic sites List of world s largest domesFootnotes EditExplanatory notes Edit See Excavation below Elizabeth French has argued that both stones are probably from the Argolid but without presenting evidence for this claim 31 See Date below Fitzsimons gives a higher estimate of 32789 worker days 45 Olivier Pelon argued that the Tomb of Atreus was the latest of the tholoi 69 though this chronology predates the reassessment of the Tomb of Clytemnestra to LH IIIB1 70 Christos Tsountas in 1897 wrote that Veli Pasha had rifled the tomb in 1808 it is not known whether he is referring to the same incident 96 It is sometimes claimed that Sligo directed or co directed the removals himself 93 this is likely to be erroneous as Sligo arrived in Argolis only after the excavation and his letters make no mention of it 99 Wace states that Schliemann made some tests in the Treasury of Atreus but gives the date as 1873 and as before his excavations of 1876 102 Schliemann s only visit to the site before those excavations apart from a brief excursus to it in 1868 was between 23 February and 4 March 1874 103 References Edit Wace 1923 a b March 2009 p 434 Hyginus Fabulae 243 Pausanias Description of Greece 6 20 7 Clay 2009 p 221 March 2009 pp 435 436 March 2009 p 436 March 2009 pp 439 440 Pausanias Description of Greece 2 16 6 Moore Rowlands amp Karadimas 2014 p 2 a b Moore Rowlands amp Karadimas 2014 p 4 Clarke 1814 p 688 Clarke 1814 p 689 Wace 1923 p 296 Tsountas 1897 p 57 a b c French 2012 p 673 a b c d e Mason 2007 p 38 a b c Wace 1923 p 338 Wace 1940 p 237 a b Mason 2007 a b Galanakis 2007 p 244 a b c d Brysbaert Vikatou amp Stoger 2020 p 46 Wace 1940 p 238 a b c d e f Shelmerdine 2008 p 4 Santillo Frizell 1998 p 173 Mason 2007 p 49 a b Wace 1923 p 344 a b c Hitchcock 2012 p 205 a b c d Higgins Ellis amp Hope Simpson 1968 p 331 Higgins Ellis amp Hope Simpson 1968 p 336 a b French 2013 p 70 Wilson 2013 p 449 Zekiou 2019 p 177 Tsountas 1897 p 119 a b Mason 2013 p 97 Lazar et al 2004 p 241 Moore 2015 p 42 Wace 1923 pp 351 352 Watkin 2005 p 23 Mason 2007 p 36 Wright 1987 p 176 a b Wright 2006 p 59 Watkin 2005 p 33 Cavanagh amp Mee 1999 p 99 Fitzsimons 2020 p 22 Fitzsimons 2020 p 21 a b c d Boyd 2015 p 443 Mason 2007 p 35 Pelon 1976 pp 370 371 a b c Galanakis 2007 p 242 Karadimas amp Momigliano 2004 p 249 Wace amp Blegen 1918 Myres 1923 p 72 Wace amp Blegen 1918 p 176 Wace amp Blegen 1918 p 188 a b Wace amp Blegen 1918 p 189 Dickinson et al 2012 p 162 Evans 1929 pp 67 70 Galanakis 2007 p 241 a b Galanakis 2007 p 255 Droop 1926 Wace 1923 p 340 Wace 1940 p 246 a b Hope Simpson amp Dickinson 1979 p 34 Mylonas 1983 p 77 Cavanagh amp Mee 1999 p 94 Mee 2012 p 286 Dirlik 2012 Pelon 1976 pp 482 483 Pelon 1990 p 109 Mason 2013 p 117 French 2013 p 69 a b c d Boyd 2015 p 444 Hope Simpson amp Dickinson 1979 p 36 Hope Simpson amp Dickinson 1979 p 39 Nash 2017 pp 37 41 Mason 2007 p 48 a b Mason 2007 p 40 Mason 2007 pp 40 41 Mason 2007 p 45 48 Mickelson amp Mickelson 2014 p 5 French 2013 p 143 Antonaccio 1995 pp 34 40 Antonaccio 1995 p 39 Antonaccio 1994 p 396 a b Alcock 1997 p 24 Jameson 1990 p 222 Smith 1916 p 216 Gere 2006 p 51 Quoted in Pryce and Smith 1928 p 15 Letter from Hunt to Elgin 3 September 1801 quoted in Smith 1916 p 200 Gere 2006 pp 50 53 a b Smith 1916 p 214 a b Gere 2006 p 53 Moore 2015 pp 42 43 Smith 1916 p 218 Tsountas 1897 p 131 Moore Rowlands amp Karadimas 2014 p 78 Schliemann 1878 p 49 a b Loughlin 2021 p 47 British Museum 2021 Loughlin 2021 p 48 a b Wace 1923 p 283 Moorehead 2016 p 145 Schliemann 1878 p 46 Wace 1923 p 351 Wace 1923 p 339 Wace 1940 pp 237 238 a b Mason 2007 p 50 Wace 1956 p 117 Bibliography EditAlcock Susan 1997 The heroic past in a Hellenistic present In Cartledge Paul Garnsey Peter Gruen Erich eds Hellenistic Constructs Essays in Culture History and Historiography Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press pp 20 34 Antonaccio Carla 1995 An Archaeology of Ancestors Tomb Cult and Hero Cult in Early Greece London Rowman and Littlefield ISBN 9780847679423 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 Boyd Michael 2015 Explaining the mortuary sequence at Mycenae In Schallin Ann Louise Tournavitou Iphiyenia eds Mycenaeans Up To Date The archaeology of the north eastern Peloponnese current concepts and new directions Stockholm Swedish Institute at Athens pp 433 447 ISBN 9789179160630 British Museum 2021 Column Archived from the original on 31 March 2022 Retrieved 3 January 2023 Brysbaert Anne Vikatou Irene Stoger Hanna 2020 Highways and byways in Mycenaean Greece Human environment interactions in dialogue Arctos 55 33 94 ISSN 0570 734X Cavanagh William G Mee Christopher B 1999 Building the Treasury of Atreus In Betancourt P P Karageorghis V Laineur R Niemeier W D eds Meletemata Studies in Aegean archaeology presented to Malcolm H Wiener as he enters his 65th year Aegaeum 20 Liege and Austin University of Liege pp 93 102 Clarke Edward Daniel 1814 Travels in Various Countries of Europa Asia and Africa Part the Second Greece Egypt and the Holy Land Section the Second London T Cadell and W Davies Archived from the original on 3 January 2023 Retrieved 3 January 2023 Clay Diskin 2009 2007 Plato Philomythos In Woodard Roger D ed The Cambridge Companion to Greek Mythology Cambridge University Press pp 210 236 doi 10 1017 CCOL9780521845205 ISBN 9780521845205 Dickinson O T P K Papazoglou Manioudaki Lena Nafplioti Argyro Prag A J N W 2012 Mycenae Revisited Part 4 Assessing the New Data The Annual of the British School at Athens 107 161 188 doi 10 1017 S0068245412000056 JSTOR 41721882 S2CID 162150714 Dirlik Nil 2012 The Tholos Tombs of Mycenaean Greece M A Uppsala University Droop John Percival 1926 Mycenae 1921 1923 Legitimate and Illegitimate Criticism Annals of Archaeology and Anthropology 13 43 48 Evans Arthur 1929 The Shaft Graves and Bee Hive Tombs of Mycenae and their Inter Relations London a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Fitzsimons Rodney 2020 Crossing Thresholds and Building States Labor Investment Tomb Construction and Early State Formation in the Bronze Age Argolid In Hasaki Eleni Bentz Martin eds Reconstructing Scales of Production in the Ancient Greek World Producers Processes Products People Panel 3 4 Archaeology and Economy in the Ancient World 8 Heidelberg pp 17 38 doi 10 11588 propylaeum 639 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link French Elizabeth 2013 2002 Mycenae Agamemnon s Capital Stroud The History Press ISBN 9780752419510 French Elizabeth 2012 Mycenae In Cline Eric ed The Oxford Handbook of the Bronze Age Aegean Oxford University Press pp 671 680 ISBN 9780199873609 Galanakis Yannis 2007 The Construction of the Aegisthus Tholos Tomb at Mycenae and the Helladic Heresy The Annual of the British School at Athens 102 239 256 doi 10 1017 S0068245400021481 JSTOR 30245251 S2CID 162590402 Gere Cathy 2006 The Tomb of Agamemnon Mycenae and the Search for a Hero London Profile Books ISBN 9781861976178 Higgins Reynold Ellis S E Hope Simpson Richard 1968 The Facade of the Treasury of Atreus at Mycenae The Annual of the British School at Athens 63 331 336 doi 10 1017 S0068245400014453 JSTOR 30103198 S2CID 129972305 Hitchcock Louise A 2012 Mycenaean Architecture In Cline Eric ed The Oxford Handbook of the Bronze Age Aegean Oxford University Press pp 200 209 ISBN 9780199873609 Hope Simpson Richard Dickinson O T P K 1979 A Gazetteer of Aegean Civilisation in the Bronze Age Vol I The Mainland and Islands Goteborg doi 10 2307 629926 JSTOR 629926 S2CID 162728968 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Jameson Michael H 1990 Perseus the Hero of Mykenai In Hagg Robin Nordquist Gullog Christine eds Celebrations of Death and Divinity in the Bronze Age Argolid Stockholm pp 213 222 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Karadimas Nektarios Momigliano Nicoletta 2004 On the term Minoan before Evans work in Crete 1894 Studi Micenei ed Egeo Anatolici 44 2 79 94 Lazar N A Kadane J B Chen F Cavanagh W G Litton C D 2004 Corbelled Domes in Two and Three Dimensions The Treasury of Atreus International Statistical Review Revue Internationale de Statistique 72 2 239 255 JSTOR 1403856 Loughlin Thomas 2021 The Marquess and Mycenae Archaeology Ireland 35 1 44 48 JSTOR 27075191 March Jenny 2009 The Penguin Book of Classical Myths London Penguin ISBN 9780141020778 Mason David J 2013 The Date of the Tomb of Clytemnestra The Annual of the British School at Athens 108 1 97 119 doi 10 1017 S0068245413000014 JSTOR 43188527 S2CID 191384405 Mason David J 2007 The Location of the Treasury of Atreus Oxford Journal of Archaeology 26 1 35 52 doi 10 1111 j 1468 0092 2007 00272 x Mee Christopher 2012 Death and Burial In Cline Eric ed The Oxford Handbook of the Bronze Age Aegean Oxford University Press pp 277 290 ISBN 9780199873609 Mickelson M E Mickelson A M 2014 Do Mycenaean tholos tombs encode astronomical alignments Mediterranean Archaeology and Archaeometry 14 3 1 14 Moore Dudley Rowlands Edward Karadimas Nektarios 2014 In Search of Agamemnon Early Travellers to Mycenae Newcastle upon Tyne Cambridge Scholars Publishing ISBN 978 1 4438 5776 5 Moore Dudley 2015 In Search of the Classical World An Introduction to the Ancient Aegean Newcastle upon Tyne Cambridge Scholars Publishing ISBN 9781443881456 Moorehead Caroline 2016 Priam s Gold Schliemann and the Lost Treasures of Troy London Tauris Parke Paperbacks Mylonas George E 1983 Mycenae Rich in Gold Athens Ekdotike Athenon Myres J L 1923 Review The Excavations at Korakou The Classical Review 37 3 4 71 73 doi 10 1017 S0009840X00041706 JSTOR 699488 S2CID 246875413 Nash Theo 2017 Creta Capta Late Minoan II Knossos in Mycenaean History PDF M A Victoria University of Wellington Archived from the original PDF on 15 January 2023 Retrieved 15 January 2023 Pelon Olivier 1990 Les tombes a tholos d Argolide Architecture et rituel funeraire In Hagg Robin Nordquist G C eds Celebrations of Death and Divinity in the Bronze Age Argolid in French Stockholm Swedish Institute at Athens ISBN 9789179160210 Pelon Olivier 1976 Tholoi tumuli et cercles funeraires in French Paris French School at Athens ISBN 9782869583702 Pryce F N Smith A H 1928 A Catalogue of Sculpture in the Department of Greek and Roman Antiquities in the British Museum Volume 1 London Trustees of the British Museum Santillo Frizell Barbro 1998 Giants or Geniuses Monumental Building at Mycenae Current Swedish Archaeology 6 Archived from the original on 8 January 2023 Retrieved 8 January 2023 Schliemann Heinrich 1878 Mycenae A Narrative of Researches and Discoveries at Mycenae and Tiryns London John Murray 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 A H 1916 Lord Elgin and His Collection The Journal of Hellenic Studies 36 163 372 doi 10 2307 625773 JSTOR 625773 S2CID 163053341 Tsountas Christos 1897 The Mycenaean Age A Study of the Monuments and Culture of Pre Homeric Greece London a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Wace Alan Blegen Carl 1918 The Pre Mycenaean Pottery of the Mainland The Annual of the British School at Athens 22 175 189 doi 10 1017 S0068245400009916 JSTOR 30096516 S2CID 163842512 Wace Alan 1956 Mycenae 1939 1955 part I preliminary report on the excavations of 1955 Annual of the British School at Athens 51 103 122 doi 10 1017 S0068245400018803 JSTOR 30096806 S2CID 159836724 Wace Alan 1940 The Treasury of Atreus Antiquity 14 55 233 249 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00015234 ISSN 0003 598X S2CID 162739311 Wace Alan 1923 Excavations at Mycenae IX The Tholos Tombs The Annual of the British School at Athens 25 283 402 doi 10 1017 S0068245400010352 S2CID 183795426 Watkin David 2005 1986 A History of Western Architecture London Laurence King Publishing ISBN 9781856694599 Wilson N G 2013 Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece New York ISBN 978 1 136 78799 7 OCLC 862746243 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Wright James C 2006 The Social Production of Space and the Architectural Reproduction of Society in the Bronze Age Aegean during the 2nd Millennium B C E In Maran Joseph Juwig Carsten Schwengel Hermann Thaler Ulrich eds Constructing Power Architecture Ideology and Social Practice Hamburg Lit Verlag pp 49 69 ISBN 9783825893149 Wright James 1987 Death and Power at Mycenae Changing Symbols in Mortuary Practice In Laffineur Robert ed Les coutumes funeraires en Egee a l age du Bronze Actes du colloque de Liege 21 23 avril 1986 Aegaeum 1 Liege pp 171 184 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Zekiou Olga 2019 The Poetics of the Homeric Citadel Newcastle upon Tyne Cambridge Scholars Publishing ISBN 9781527527010 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Treasury of Atreus Treasury of Atreus at Structurae Treasury of Atreus 360 Interactive virtual tour A different light inside Treasury of Atreus 37 43 37 N 22 45 14 E 37 72682 N 22 75387 E 37 72682 22 75387 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Treasury of Atreus amp oldid 1164906773, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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