User:Zde/AM of Mycenae

Archaeological museum of Mycenae

Object location37° 43′ 54.91″ N, 22° 45′ 22.19″ E Kartographer map based on OpenStreetMap.View all coordinates using: OpenStreetMapinfo


English: The museum exhibits newer local finds from Mycenae and from the surroundings. Oothers and more famous are in the National Archaeological Museum in Athens and variously around the world. See Myceanean art in the National Archaeological Museum of Athens
Čeština: Muzeum přímo v areálu v Mykénách vystavuje novější nálezy odtud a z okolí. Ostatní a slavnější jsou v Národním archeologickém muzeu v Athénách a různě po světě. Viz Myceanean art in the National Archaeological Museum of Athens


Building edit

Mynian ware edit

Middle Bronze Age

Middle Helladic III edit

End of the Middle Bronze Age, 17th century BC. Mostly finds from the grave A of the Grave Circle B. (Probably formation of the Mycenaean culture.)

Late Cycladic pottery edit

Findings from Grave Circle B, from Grave N, imported from Cyclades. Cycladic Late Bronze Age I, 1700 - 1550 BC.

Late Helladic art edit

= Art of the Mycenaean culture, Achaean, Late Bronze Age

Late Helladic I edit

16th century BC, mostly findings from Graves Circle B in Mycenae, probably including imports

Reconstructions of faces edit

Reconstructions of faces from the Grave Circle B, early 16th century BC, Exhibition in 2009

Late Helladic II edit

ca 15th century BC

Late Helladic III edit

1400-1050 BC, the peak period of the Mycenaean culture

Ivory edit

Jewellery and Glass edit

Fescoes‎ edit

The fresco goddess or priestess with spikes, 1250-1180 BC. Archaeological Museum of Mycenae, MM385.

Other fescoes‎ edit

Terracotta figurines edit

13th-12th century BC

Larger figures‎ edit

Mostly 1250-1180 BC

Bird Goddesses edit

Smaller female figurine, so called "Bird Godesses". Only a small selection.

Large snakes edit

From rooms of the Temple, LH III B2, 1250-1180 BC

Other edit

Pttery‎ edit

Tools edit

Linear B inscriptions ‎ edit

Linear B tablets edit

1400-1180 BC

On pottery ‎ edit

1300-1180 BC

Iron Age‎ edit

Greek Geometric pottery edit

8th-7th century BC

Archaic to Hellenistic Ages edit

6th-2nd century BC