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Grave Circle A, Mycenae

16th-century BC royal cemetery in southern Greece

Grave Circle A, Mycenae

Summary

16th-century BC royal cemetery in southern Greece

FieldValue
nameGrave Circle A
native_nameΤαφικός περίβολος A'
native_languageGreek
imageGrave-Circle-A-Mycenae.jpg
image_size300px
captionGrave Circle A (left) and the main entrance of the citadel (right)
locmapinGreece
map_reliefyes
map_width300
coordinates
locationMycenae
areaArgolis, Greece
formed16th century BC
built_forResting place of the Mycenaean ruling families

Grave Circle A is a 16th-century BC royal cemetery situated to the south of the Lion Gate, the main entrance of the Bronze Age citadel of Mycenae in southern Greece. This burial complex was initially constructed outside the walls of Mycenae and ultimately enclosed in the acropolis when the fortification was extended during the 13th century BC.

The site circle has a diameter of 27.5 m and contains six shaft graves. The largest of the shaft graves measures about 6.5 m in length and about 4.1 m in width. A total of nineteen bodies of men, women, and children buried here, with two to five bodies per shaft. It has been suggested that a mound was constructed over each grave, and funeral stelae were erected. Among the funerary gifts found were a series of gold death masks, full sets of weapons, ornate staffs, gold jewelry, as well as gold and silver cups. The funerary gifts found here are more precious than that of those at Grave Circle B. It has been estimated that Circle A contained about 15 kilos of gold in total (not all of high purity); a considerable quantity, but a good deal less than in just the inner coffin of Tutankhamun.

The site was excavated by the archaeologist Heinrich Schliemann and Panagiotis Stamatakis in 1876–77, following the descriptions of Homer and Pausanias. One of the five gold death masks he unearthed became known as "The Death Mask of Agamemnon", ruler of Mycenae, of Greek mythology. However, it has been proven that the burials are dated approximately three centuries earlier before Agamemnon is supposed to have lived.

The valuable funerary gifts in the graves suggest that powerful rulers were buried in this site. Although Agamemnon was supposed to have lived centuries later, these graves might have belonged to the former ruling dynasty of Mycenae – in Greek mythology, the Perseids. In later Greek mythology, Mycenae had a period where two kings ruled, and archeologists have suggested that these dual graves may correspond to both kings.

Background

Model of Mycenae. Grave Circle A is located to the right after the main entrance.

During the end of the 3rd millennium BC (), the indigenous inhabitants of mainland Greece underwent a cultural transformation attributed to climate change, local events and developments (i.e. destruction of the "House of the Tiles"), as well as to continuous contacts with various areas such as western Asia Minor, the Cyclades, Albania, and Dalmatia. These Bronze Age people were equipped with horses, surrounded themselves with luxury goods, and constructed elaborate shaft graves. The acropolis of Mycenae, one of the leading centers of Mycenaean culture, located in Argolis, northeast Peloponnese, was built on a defensive hill at an elevation of 128 m and covers an area of 30,000 m2.

History

Mycenaean shaft graves are essentially an Argive variant of the Middle Helladic funerary tradition with features derived from the Early Bronze Age developed locally in mainland Greece. Grave Circle A, formed circa 1600 BC as a new elite burial place, was probably first restricted to men and seems to be a continuation of the earlier Grave Circle B and correlates with the general social trend of higher burial investment taking place throughout entire Greece that time. The Grave Circle A site was part of a more significant funeral place from the Middle Helladic period. During the Late Helladic I (1600 BC), There is no evidence of a circular wall around the site during the period of the burials. The last interment took place circa 1500 BC.

Immediately after the last interment, the local rulers abandoned the shaft graves in favor of a new and more imposing form of tomb already developing in Messenia, in the southern Peloponnese, the tholos. Around 1250 BC, when the fortifications of Mycenae were extended, the Grave Circle was included inside the new wall. A double-ring peribolos wall was also built around the area. It appears that the site became a temenos (sacred precinct), while a circular construction, possibly an altar was found above one grave. The burial site had been replanned as a monument, an attempt by the 13th century BC Mycenaean rulers to appropriate the possible heroic past of the older ruling dynasty. Under this context, the land was constructed to create a level precinct for ceremonies and re-erected the stelae. A new entrance, the Lion Gate, was constructed near the site.

Finds

Grave Circle A, with a diameter of 27.5 m, is situated on the acropolis of Mycenae southeast of the Lion Gate. The Grave Circle contains six shaft graves, the smallest of which is measured at 3.0 m by 3.5 m and the largest measured at 4.50 m by 6.40 m (the depth of each shaft grave ranges from 1.0 m to 4.0 m). Over each grave, a mound was constructed, and stelae were erected. These stelae had been probably erected in memory of the Mycenaean rulers buried there; three of them depict chariot scenes.

A total of nineteen bodies – eight men, nine women, and two children and the figural depictions of the objects show fighting and hunting scenes. The gender of those entombed here were distinguished based on the grave goods that they were buried with them. Men were found with weapons while women received jewelry.

Many objects were designed to signify the social ranking of the deceased, for instance, decorated daggers, which were art objects and cannot be considered real weapons. Ornate staffs, as well as a scepter from Grave IV, clearly indicate a very significant status of the deceased. Items such as bulls' heads with a double-axe display clear Minoan influences. At the time that the Grave Circle was built, the Mycenaeans had not yet conquered Minoan Crete. Although it seems that they recognized the Minoans as the providers of the finest design and craftsmanship, most of the objects buried in Grave Circle A were decorated in the Minoan style. On the other hand, specific motifs such as fighting and hunting scenes are clearly of Mycenaean style. The combination of luxury goods found at this site represented many different societies of the time. This was an example of an "international style," which means countries would use the basic technology of one society and modify it to fit the standard imagery of their society.

Excavations

Main article: Mycenae#Excavations

The site of Mycenae was the first in Greece to be subjected to a modern archaeological excavation. The German archaeologist Heinrich Schliemann excavated it in 1876 along with Panagiotis Stamatakis, a Greek archaeologist appointed to supervise the excavations. What Schliemann discovered in his excavation satisfied both his opinion of Homer's historical accuracy and his craving for valuable treasures. Among the objects he unearthed in Grave Circle A was a series of gold death masks, including one he proclaimed "The Death Mask of Agamemnon." Schliemann cleared five shafts and recognized them as the graves mentioned by Pausanias. He stopped after the fifth grave was excavated entirely, believing that he had finished exploring the Grave Circle. However, a year later, Stamatakis found a sixth shaft grave.

It has since been demonstrated that the burials in Grave Circle A date from 16th century BC, before the traditional time of the Trojan War (13th-12th century BC), in which Agamemnon is supposed to have participated.

References

Citations

Sources

References

  1. (1999–2000). "The Bronze Age on the Greek Mainland: Mycenaean Greece – Mycenae". Foundation of the Hellenic World.
  2. Grave Circle A and [[Grave Circle B, Mycenae. Komita. 1982
  3. {{harvnb. Pedley. 2012
  4. {{harvnb. Hood. 1978
  5. {{harvnb. Morris. Powell. 2010
  6. {{harvnb. Castleden. 2005
  7. {{harvnb. Neer. 2012.
  8. {{harvnb. Pullen. 2008. Forsén. 1992
  9. {{harvnb. Hielte. 2004
  10. {{harvnb. Littauer. Crouwel. 1996
  11. {{harvnb. Anthony. 2007
  12. {{harvnb. Dickinson. 1999
  13. {{harvnb. Heitz. 2008
  14. Burns. 2010
  15. {{harvnb. Gates. 2003
  16. {{harvnb. Geldard. 2000
  17. {{harvnb. Castleden. 2005
  18. {{harvnb. Bennet. 1997
  19. {{harvnb. Antonaccio. 1995
  20. {{harvnb. Fields. Spedaliere. 2004
  21. {{harvnb. Stocker. Davis. 2017
  22. {{harvnb. Evans. 1930.
  23. {{harvnb. Komita. 1982
  24. Graziadio. 1991
  25. {{harvnb. Neer. 2012
  26. {{harvnb. Graziadio. 1991
  27. {{harvnb. Heitz. 2008
  28. {{harvnb. Heitz. 2008
  29. {{harvnb. Gates. 2003
  30. {{harvnb. Neer. 2012
  31. {{harvnb. Sansone. 2004
  32. Pausanias]] who described the once-prosperous site and mentioned that according to a local tradition during the 2nd century AD. The grave of [[Agamemnon]] included his followers, his charioteer [[Eurymedon (charioteer). Eurymedon]] and the two children of [[Cassandra]], all of whom were buried within the citadel.{{harvnb. Mylonas. 1957
  33. {{harvnb. Mylonas. 1957
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