Mykines Village: The Modern Base for Visiting Mycenae

Mykines Village: The Modern Base for Visiting Mycenae

Mykines is the small modern village that sits at the foot of the archaeological site of Mycenae, in the Argolid region of the Peloponnese. It carries the name of the ancient city on the hill above and serves as the everyday base for reaching the citadel, the museum and the tholos tombs. A single main … Read more

The Bronze Age Collapse and the Fall of Mycenae

The Bronze Age Collapse and the Fall of Mycenae

The Bronze Age collapse was the wave of destruction that ended the Mycenaean world. It struck the eastern Mediterranean toward the close of the second millennium before the common era. Within three or four generations the great palaces of Mycenae, Pylos, Tiryns and Thebes were burned or abandoned. The Linear B script and the palace … Read more

Mycenaean Religion: Gods and Cult at Mycenae

Mycenaean Religion: Gods and Cult at Mycenae

Mycenaean religion was the system of gods, cult and ritual practised across Bronze Age Greece at powerful centres such as Mycenae. The clay tablets found in the palaces name deities familiar from later Greek worship, and a group of shrines inside the citadel served as a focus for ritual life. Worshippers brought offerings of food, … Read more

Mycenaean Art: Frescoes, Gold and Pottery of Mycenae

Mycenaean Art: Frescoes, Gold and Pottery of Mycenae

Mycenaean art is the art of Bronze Age mainland Greece, seen at its richest at Mycenae, the leading centre that gives the whole civilization its name. It gathers goldwork, wall frescoes, painted pottery, carved gems, ivory and worked bronze into one confident style. The shaft graves of Mycenae yielded gold funerary masks, inlaid daggers, cups … Read more

The Warrior Vase: Mycenae’s Famous Krater

The Warrior Vase: Mycenae's Famous Krater

The Warrior Vase is one of the best-known works of Mycenaean art, a painted pottery krater found at the citadel of Mycenae. Heinrich Schliemann discovered it near the great fortress, and it dates to the late Bronze Age. The vessel is a large mixing bowl for wine. Painters covered it with a file of helmeted … Read more

The Mask of Agamemnon: Mycenae’s Golden Face

The Mask of Agamemnon: Mycenae's Golden Face

The Mask of Agamemnon is a funerary mask of beaten gold and the most famous single object ever recovered from Mycenae. It shows a bearded man’s face with closed eyes, a straight nose and finely worked ears, all hammered from one sheet of gold. Heinrich Schliemann lifted it from a shaft grave in the citadel … Read more

Iphigenia: The Sacrificed Princess of Mycenae

Iphigenia: The Sacrificed Princess of Mycenae

Iphigenia stands among the most sorrowful figures of Greek myth, the princess of Mycenae whose fate opens a long chain of grief within the royal house. She is the daughter of King Agamemnon and Queen Clytemnestra, born into the ruling line of a citadel that commanded the Greek world of legend. Her story turns on … Read more