Specifications
336 pages, 187 illustrations and maps, hardback
Summary
Inspired by tales of Trojan War heroes in Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey, nineteenth-century explorers sought the legendary king Nestor’s homeland at “sandy Pylos” on the coast of the southwestern Peloponnese in Greece. Archaeologists later searched inland on the Englianos Ridge, where they unearthed a palace and inscribed tablets that confirmed ancient Pylos’s location. The Palace of Nestor, as it is now known, was built shortly aſter 1300 BCE as the seat of a monarch whose realm spanned 800 square miles in modern-day Messenia.
During the early phases of the Late Bronze Age in Greece (ca. 1630–1360 BCE), the region of Messenia was an epicenter of Mycenaean civ-ili zation. The elite clans that headed prosperous communities acquired luxuries imported from Minoan Crete and from as far away as Egypt and the Near East. They erected beehive-shaped tombs to commemorate ancestors and were buried with their weapons and wealth. The era of these warrior-princes foreshadowed the rise of a powerful kingdom centered at Pylos, which governed the region’s economic, political, and religious activities.
Homeric archaeology gave way long ago
to cutting-edge research in the field. Accompa-nied by over 300 illustrations and essays by an international team of archaeologists, this cata-logue includes extraordinary recent discoveries, notably from the grave of a man known as the Griffin Warrior, who was found surrounded by incompa rable works of art and craſt. As excava-tions throughout Messenia continue, the latest techniques for interpreting the remains of Late Bronze Age society reveal the history behind the myths.
Other Languages
greek 9789602044704
Table of Contents
top of page
Άλλα βιβλία
bottom of page