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Apr 3 21 tweets 8 min read Twitter logo Read on Twitter
1/ 1200/1190 BC - Aegean: the palatial centers of the mainland disappear one after the other in the rush of the cataclysmic events of the LBA Collapse, taking with them forever the splendor and glamor of a refined Mycenaean elite, which shone for at least two centuries.
2/ Some important cultural skills of the palatial period were also lost with them, such as writing, monumental architecture and palatial bureaucracy. The most former palatial centers are abandoned for centuries after the destructions or Post-Palatial activity is limited.
3/ However, there is one palatial site in mainland Greece that shows a rapid reconstruction and significant recovery after its destruction at the very beginning of the 12th century BC, becoming the most important economic center of the Post-Palatial Period.
4/ Throughout the palatial period, Tiryns was the central commercial port of Argolis, which was under the control of the ruling elite of Mycenae. Thus the city of Tiryns, as well as the nearby Midea, were under the shadow of the Atreids and their bureaucracy.
5/ Although it can be assumed that the Mycenaean elite of Tiryns had become autonomous from Mycenae during LH IIIB2 enjoying great wealth from foreign trade, the final disengagement came after the LBA Collapse destructions across the Argolic plain.
6/ During that dark period, the invaders attack the central palatial complex of the Upper Citadel and cause widespread destructions. The members of the Mycenaean elite seem not to have expected such a development and lived carefree in their false bliss.
7/ Maybe did the attack have social characteristics? The only thing that is certain is that after a few years, ambitious members of the local community built on the ruins of the eastern part of the palace, a new long, narrow, megaron-shaped building that included the throne room.
8/ Thus a distinct building is created in piles of rubble, used by the new ruling class of the city probably as a gathering place. The new elite attempts to appropriate the central symbols of palatial power to serve their own political aspirations.
9/ The non-reconstruction of the walls of the Upper Citadel and the transformation of the palace altar into a platform reveals the desire of the new lords of the city to project various rituals and practices in order to establish their ambitions and claims within the community.
10/ Recent archaeological surveys have demonstrated a particularly interesting element, which suggests a close connection between the Palatial and Post-Palatial Periods. In the final phase before the destruction, ➡️
➡️ the palatial elite of Tiryns embarked on an ambitious construction project: the diverting of local river, which often caused severe floodings, by building a dam and opening a new artificial riverbed to flow away from the affected Lower Town.
11/ With the construction of this land improvement project, the palatial elite of Tiryns sought to utilize the area north of the Citadel that was adjacent to the original course of the river, installing groups of palatial artists, who processed valuable types of wood and ivory.
12/ However, the large area occupied by the Post-Palatial Lower Town (over 250 acres) led the new lords to complete the reconstruction program of the area north of the Citadel, which offered them a virgin land without previous building remains.
13/ The building activity covered a period between 1200-1120 BC and was the only major construction project carried out during the Post-Palatial Period, intended to cover the housing needs of newly arrived populations, coming from either nearby or distant areas.
14/ Post-Palatial Tiryns was part of an extensive long-distance network despite the turmoil prevailing in the Eastern Mediterranean, being an important cross-cultural trading port of the time, where native and foreign cultural elements came into contact.
15/ The findings have demonstrated a strong Italic presence in LH IIIC Tiryns with the presence of Handmade Burnished Ware vessels associated with parallels from central and southern Italy, while a first-appearing type of situla refers to NE Italy.
16/ The trade brought wealth to the city and several members of its new elite were still able to acquire luxury items, as demonstrated by the discovery of the famous Treasure of Tiryns (gold jewellery, bronze vessels, iron dagger). ➡️
➡️ The ceremonial gatherings and public symposiums offered to the members of new elites the opportunity to display their wealth through which they consolidated their new leadership identity to the rest of the community.
17/ The heyday of LHIIIC Tiryns was a short-lived episode of three generations with the northern part of the Lower Town showing signs of abandonment as early as 1130BC and the Lower Citadel along with the rest of the Lower Town to remain relatively densely populated until 1050BC.
18/However, Post-Palatial Tiryns is a unique event for the Aegean because it expanded and flourished when destruction and disturbance led the other palatial centers to shrink and be abandoned,testifying to the connecting link between the palatial past and the new era which arose.

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More from @hermahai

Apr 4
1/ In ancient times, the women of Lemnos brought trouble to their island. According to Herodotus, the inhabitants of ancient Lemnos were called Tyrrhenians (relatives of the Etruscans), who had been forcibly expelled from Attica. ➡️ Image
➡️ To take revenge on the Athenians, they raided Vravrona during a local festival in honor of the goddess Artemis and seized a large number of women and virgins, whom they took to Lemnos as mistresses. Image
2/ However, the Athenian women brought up the children they bore according to Athenian traditions, behaving haughtily towards the women of Lemnos, which angered them and prompted them to act on their jealousy in a heinous act, killing the Athenian women and their children. Image
Read 8 tweets
Apr 4
1/ The arrival of the Anatolian Neolithic Farmers in the Aegean was a gradual process in which the Aceramic - Initial Neolithic communities of central-west (Ulucak, Çukuriçi Höyük etc.) and south-west Anatolia (Hacilar) played a significant role. Image
2/ In the initial movements of Neolithic populations from Western Anatolia to the Aegean, the sea routes that were used for centuries by the Aegean Mesolithic hunters - foragers - fishermen and especially the circulation network of Melian obsidian played a decisive role. Image
3/ This is how we have the Aceramic settlement in Knossos around 7000 BC and a little later the Initial Neolithic settlement at Franchthi Cave in the Argolid, where the newcomers arrived through the sea, interacting with local hunter-gatherers populations. Image
Read 4 tweets
Mar 25
1/ Mediterranean: our sea, our homeland-an enclosed deep sea basin, which due to its favorable coastal climate has been the cradle of leading world civilizations that have flourished since prehistoric times. But was the Mediterranean a place of bliss during the 2nd millennium BC?
2/ The physical and bioclimatic conditions have changed little up to the present day with some shrinkage of forest and water resources. ➡️
➡️ During the 2nd millennium BC the inhabitants of the Mediterranean had to face more or less the same conditions and adversities within alternate periods of happiness and unhappiness.
Read 17 tweets
Mar 22
1/ The mirrors appear for the first time in the Aegean region during the Neopalatial Period in Crete (Mallia, Zakros, etc.), but also during the Shaft Graves Period in Mycenae (Tomb V - Grave Circle A) as an object imported from the Orient. Image
2/ It was a revolutionary innovation both for the Minoan and for the Mycenaean elite,related to personal beauty,while apart from their obvious daily use,they had also acquired metaphysical characteristics as grave goods. It seems that they had a rocky crystal in their front part. Image
3/During the Palatial period, mirrors became a popular object, common in funerary ensembles, while their inclusion in hoards is very interesting, suggesting that they were a luxury item and probably fungible, as they have sophisticated decoration on their ivory or wooden handle. Image
Read 11 tweets
Mar 20
1/ The Phrygians as an ally of the Trojans are mentioned in a total of six passages of the Iliad, not having some participation in the military operations. According to archaeolinguistic data, their presence in the events of the Trojan War constitutes a Homeric anachronism. Image
2/ The Phrygians, although they were a historical people, probably arrived in Anatolia during the LBA Collapse coming from the Balkans, after the events of the Trojan War (?), where they settled in the central highlands, around the river Halys, in the ancestral Hittite cradle. Image
3/ They established a new settlement in the ruins of the Hittite capital, Hattusa, living in roughly the same area where the Mushki had arrived from the Caucasus, with whom they eventually merged to create in the 8th cent BC a powerful and rich kingdom centered on Gordion. Image
Read 10 tweets
Mar 19
1/ It is a fact that already from the early LH IIIC period, depictions of land or naval battles appear in the Aegean and Western Anatolia region, indicating the existence of a framework for displaying heroic exploits, which seem to be related to this particular era.
2/ At the same time, some Post-palatial communities show a strong distancing from the Mycenaean palatial period. However, in several cases there are early examples of heroization of Mycenaean burial assemblages that show a connection with the Mycenaean heroic past.
3/ So I believe that the theme of the heroic past found plenty of material from the 13th century BC and afterwards, especially during the Late Bronze Age Collapse, but also during the transitional LH IIIC period where piracy and sea raids seem to have flourished.
Read 6 tweets

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