6803 x 9566 px | 57,6 x 81 cm | 22,7 x 31,9 inches | 300dpi
Data acquisizione:
9 marzo 2023
Ubicazione:
Napflion Archaeological Museum. Greece
Altre informazioni:
Mycenaean Palace style pottery - Piriform jar with marine design probably of stylised repeating octopus design. Nafplio Archaeological Museum. Against grey background. Photographer Paul E Williams. The Tholos tomb of Kazarma is an underground dome tomb in the Argolis. The dromos , about 5 m long and 2.50 m wide , led from the south to the entrance of the tomb. The entrance corridor (stomion) had a width of 1.55 m and a length of 2.50 m. Only the foundation walls of both the Dromos and the Stomion have been preserved. Only the rear part of the tomb dome has been preserved up to a height of 4 m. The dome was originally 7.20 m in diameter and around 7 m high. The most common Mycenaean archaeological finds are examples of Mycenaean pottery. The potter's wheel was developed in the Near East around 3500 BC and 2000 years later, during the Late Helladic period, Mycenaeans adopted it. This led the Mycenaeans to produce fine pottery with hand painted decorations that was exported throughout the eastern Mediterranean. Mycenaean decorations are a continuation of the styles used by the earlier Minoans of Crete. Popular deigns were floral patterns, marine and octopus designs and swirling circular designs. The Mycenaeans were a Bronze Age Culture found primarily in mainland Greece in city states such as Thebes, Mycenae and Tiryns. The Mycenaean civilisation spanned the period from approximately 1750 to 1050 BC and ended abruptly during the collapse of Bronze Age culture in the eastern Mediterranean, to be followed by the so-called Greek Dark Ages.