Oops! It appears that you have disabled your Javascript. In order for you to see this page as it is meant to appear, we ask that you please re-enable your Javascript!

12 Great Facts About Alexander the Great

  1. The day he was born was a big day

Alexander_the_Great_mosaic

The day Alexander was born, his father (King Philip) was off preparing a siege on the Greek city of Potidaea. On the same day Alexander was born, his father got news that one of his generals (named Parmenion) had defeated the combined armies of Illyria and Paeonia, and that his horses had won at the Olympic Games. Strangely, the Temple of Artemis (one of the seven wonders of the ancient world) apparently burned down on that day. One historian mused that this probably occurred because Artemis herself was off attending Alexander’s birth.

  1. He had a serious crush on his horse

When Alexander was 10, a trader came to see King Philip. He offered to sell the horse to the king, but when people tried to mount the horse, it fought, refusing to be mounted. Philip, a busy King, ordered the horse away. However, Alexander asked to tame the horse, correctly thinking that the horse was afraid of its own shadow. Eventually, he succeeded, Philip bought the horse for him, and Alexander named it Bucephalas, meaning “ox-head.” When the horse died (of old age at 30 years old), Alexander named a city after him – Bucephala.

  1. His childhood tutor was Leonidas

Sorry, not that Leonidas. Image from the 300

This was Leonidas of Epirus, who may have influenced Alexander’s later conquests. Once, when Alexander threw large amounts of incense into the fire as an offering to the gods, Leonidas told him to be more sparing unless he had conquered the country where the incense came from. Later, after conquering much of Asia, Alexander sent his teacher 600 talents’ worth of incense.

  1. He learned from Aristotle

Yes, that Aristotle. When Alexander turned 13, his father looked for a tutor for young Alexander. In return for his services, Philip rebuilt Aristotle’s hometown Stageira (which Philip had destroyed) and repopulate it by buying back all the people who used to live there, but had been sold as slaves.

  1. The first thing he did in power was repel an invasion and found a city…named after himself

When Alexander was 16, his father left for war against Byzantion and left his son in charge. The Thracian Mahdi revolted against Macedonia, and Alexander reacted quickly, driving the Mahdi from their territory and filling the area with Greeks in a city which he called Alexandropolis.

  1. His relationship with his father was…complicated

Image by Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek

King Philip was not a very good father. He was often away at war, leaving young Alexander behind in Macedonia. Things seemed to look up when Alexander helped his father defeat the combined armies of Athens and Thebes. However, after his father united Greece (except for Sparta), he remarried a woman named Cleopatra Eurydice, ousting Alexander’s mother Olympia, and by extension, him. Should Philip have had a son with Cleopatra, that child would have been a more legitimate heir than Alexander. He and his mother were forced to flee Macedonia until a family friend reunited father and son.

  1. Alexander took power at age 20, and it was not easy

King Philip was assassinated in 336 B.C. at his daughter’s wedding. Shortly after, Alexander was named the king. This led to many people dying. These included threats to his power (three Macedonian princes who could have contested his claim), his mother-in-law Cleopatra and half-sister Europa (his mother Olympia had them burned to death) and the leader of Macedonia’s advance guard into Asia, who was considering defecting to Athens. Beyond those specific deaths, several city-states, on hearing of Philip’s death, took the opportunity to rebel, forcing Alexander to retake each.

  1. Alexander had hecklers

Your mother was a hamster.

During the revolts, Alexander stopped in Thermopylae, where he was met by many noblemen and dignitaries. However, one man was missing – Diogenes of Sinope, a famous philosopher who was unfazed by the arrival of Alexander. Alexander went to meet him, and asked him what he wanted, to which Diogenes replied something to the effect of “for you to step out of my sunlight.”

  1. He just couldn’t seem to catch a break

From the beginning, Alexander seemed to intend to invade Persia. After retaking many of the city-states in Greece, he was given the authority to do so on behalf of the members of his league of city-states. Before he could do so, however, he needed to march north and conquer the Thracian Triballians to secure Macedonia’s northern border. After he had accomplished this, he found out that the Illyrians and Taulantians were in open revolt, forcing him to march to reconquer the groups. Then Athens and Thebes rebelled again, making him march south. Only after razing Thebes did he finally turn to Asia.

  1. He was generous to the families of the fallen

Alexander rewarded his own fallen soldiers’ families with immunity from taxation and obligation for public service. Alexander also erected statues and honored the fallen soldiers of his enemies.

  1. After invading Persia, he picked up some Persian habits

While invading Persia, Alexander began a policy of adding the native Persians to his existing army. However, this was not the only pro-Persian change he made. He also took the Persian title of “King of kings,” began dressing in the Persian fashion and began having his subordinates either kiss his hand or prostrate themselves on the ground before him. To the Greeks, these were troubling signs, especially making his subordinates prostrate themselves before him – to the Greeks, this was sacrilegious, as a person was only supposed to prostrate themselves before a god.

  1. He may have been poisoned

Alexander’s death is shrouded in argument. Accounts differ, but they either say that Alexander fell ill with a fever or had a sharp pain after drinking undiluted wine, before falling to weakness and dying. Several historians, given that Macedonians often died due to poison, possibly fingering a recently removed Macedonian viceroy named Antipater.

phactual.com

25 Ancient Greek Cities that No Longer Exist or Are No Longer Greek

Εικοσιπέντε Ελληνικές πόλεις που δεν υπάρχουν πια ή δεν ανήκουν στην Ελλάδα τη σημερινή εποχή.

By taking a look at the world map today you would never believe that Greece, which is nothing but a small country, currently known as a beautiful tourist destination in southern Europe, had once dominated and colonized most parts of the then-known world. For those who love history though, Greece is without a doubt one of the most significant and influential nations of all time with amazing contributions to human culture including philosophy, various sciences, architecture, the Olympic Games, and democracy just to name the most prominent few. ΣΥΝΕΧΙΣΤΕ ΤΗΝ ΑΝΑΓΝΩΣΗ

Archeologists discover mythical tomb of the god of the dead in Egypt (Osiris)

Archeologists discover mythical tomb of the god of the dead in Egypt

A reproduction of the mythical Tomb of Osiris as described by Egyptian lore has been discovered in the necropolis of Sheikh Abd el-Qurna, on the West Bank at Thebes, Egypt. The complex includes a shaft that connects to multiple chambers, including one with demons holding knives.

The tomb—which was built following the descriptions of the Tomb of Osiris, like the Osireion in Abydos, one of the oldest cities of ancient Egypt—is centered around a statue of the god of the afterlife, Osiris. The emerald skinned deity is sitting in a central vaulted chapel facing a staircase with a 29.5-foot (9-meter) shaft in it. The shaft (in the center in the diagram below) connects to another room with a second shaft that goes down for 19.6 feet (6 meters) into two rooms.

Archeologists discover mythical tomb of the god of the dead in Egypt

Drawing of the tomb’s architecture made by Raffaella Carrera, of the Min Project.

The funerary room with the reliefs of demons holding knives is located west of the central chapel (on the left in the picture above.) It’s connected to a 23-foot (7-meter) shaft right in front to another empty room. At the bottom of the same shaft there are two rooms full of debris.

Talking to the Spanish news agency EFE, the leader of the Spanish-Italian team that has uncovered the tomb, Dr. María Milagros Álvarez Sosa, said these demons are there to protect the body of the deceased. According to Alvarez Sosa, it’s a tomb of “great importance”:

It’s a unique tomb in the Necropolis of Thebes because it embodies all the features of the mythological Tomb of Osiris.

Archeologists discover mythical tomb of the god of the dead in Egypt

The main chamber. You can see the statue of Osiris at the back, with the stairs and central shaft going down.

Archeologists discover mythical tomb of the god of the dead in Egypt

The entrance of the main structure of the tomb.

The tomb was initially catalogued by Philippe Virey in 1887. Later in the 20th century there were some attempts to draw a plan of the main structure. Tomb Kampp -327- however (marked in red in the plan below) was never described and published. Álvarez told EFE that her team will start revealing the chambers during the next archeological campaign, in the fall of 2015.

Archeologists discover mythical tomb of the god of the dead in Egypt

Archeologists discover mythical tomb of the god of the dead in Egypt

Included for reference, from left to right: Osiris, Anubis—protector of graves—and Horus—god of the sun, war and protection.

http://sploid.gizmodo.com

Pointe-à-Callière presents the largest exhibition on ancient Greece ever produced in North America

`pointe-2
MONTREAL.- Pointe-à-Callière, the Montréal Archaeology and History Complex, is presenting the world premiere of the original exhibition The Greeks – Agamemnon to Alexander the Great. The exhibition spans over 5,000 years of Greek history and culture and takes visitors on an exceptional and fascinating journey back to the origins of the cradle of Western civilization, its heritage and the traces it has left in the hearts and minds of the Greek people. The exhibition begins its North American odyssey in the country’s leading archaeology museum before continuing to the Canadian Museum of History in Gatineau, The Field Museum in Chicago and the National Geographic Museum in Washington. It brings together more than 500 priceless artifacts from 21 Greek museums, co-ordinated by the Hellenic Ministry of Culture and Sports. For Pointe-à-Callière, this achievement is another in the series of great international exhibitions it has produced over the years, including Archaeology and the Bible – From King David to the Dead Sea Scrolls and Japan, introducing Montrealers and visitors to some of humanity’s most impressive treasures. A fascinating period Greek Antiquity is a rich and spell-binding period, a time populated by mythical heroes and historical figures, under the watchful gaze of the gods on Mount Olympus. The exhibition is divided into six zones that introduce us to this great civilization and showcase rare and priceless artifacts. Visitors will meet many famous characters in Greek history, from Homer to Aristotle, Plato, King Philip II of Macedon and King Leonidas of Sparta. The heritage of ancient Greece, which we can still see all around us today in our politics, philosophy, arts and literature, mathematics, architecture, medicine and sports, is clearly illustrated in the exhibition. Visitors are invited on a tour of Greek history, starting in the 6th millennium BCE, explaining all these roots. From Agamemnon and the siege of Troy… We learned about the exploits and adventures of the heroic and legendary figures in the Trojan War through Homer’s epic poem the Iliad. Led by Agamemnon, the Greeks sailed a thousand ships all the way to Troy, where the Trojan Prince Paris was holding Helen captive. After laying siege to the city for ten years, the Greeks left an unexpected gift outside the gates: a giant wooden horse, filled with Greek soldiers. The unsuspecting Trojans brought the horse inside the city walls, leading to the fall of their city. In the 19th century, German archaeologist Heinrich Schliemann, convinced that the accounts in the ancient Iliad were historically accurate, found “Royal Tombs” at Mycenae containing the remains of ancient elites and their fabulous grave goods. Schliemann was in no doubt that these remains were in fact those of Agamemnon’s. The exhibition showcases objects from the tombs of the Grave Circle A, including two magnificent golden burial masks originally attributed to Agamemnon. One of them, the original golden mask, has in fact never been shown outside Greece before. To Alexander, larger than life The exhibition takes us all the way up to the days of Alexander the Great, a larger-than-life figure who was only 20 years old when his father, Philip II, was assassinated. But Alexander was ready to succeed him, thanks to his education, his training and the formidable Macedonian army. Within barely a single generation, the ancient world was transformed from a series of independent city-states into a unified empire under Alexander the Great. The young prince who became king, emperor then god in the eyes of the world, died of a malignant fever at the age of 32. But his legend survived, as did Greece’s extraordinary legacy to the Western world. The Golden Age of Ancient Greece Between these two crucial figures, the exhibition focuses on the Golden Age of ancient Greece, in the 5th and 4th centuries BCE, when philosophy, theatre and the visual arts flourished, particularly in Athens. This was also the birthplace, under Pericles, of Greece’s greatest gift to humanity: democracy, government by the people. For the first time, citizens could express themselves, debate issues and vote. The exhibition also looks at the founding of the Olympic Games in 776 BCE, when athletes converged in Olympia from all Greek city states to take part in the Games. Treasures of humanity Among the highlights of the exhibition are a number of items never before displayed outside Greece: gold offerings from the royal tombs of Mycenae, including the mask that Schliemann first associated with Agamemnon, as well as a double-eagle necklace worn by one of the deceased, dated to the 16th century BCE. Elsewhere in the exhibition, visitors will be able to admire a marble figurine from the island of Amorgos in Cyclades, dating to the 3rd millennium BCE and a superb ritual vase from Minoan Crete. There also are exhibited bronze helmets with gold funerary masks from the graves of the Bottiaean rulers, not to mention a magnificent funerary vase illustrating the scene of Achilles avenging the death of his friend Patroclus, from the island of Delos and dating to the late 6th century BCE. They will also see sculptures of Homer and other famous historic figures, and a superb votive relief to Asklepios, showing the god of medicine leaning on his staff, around which a snake is coiled, accompanied by his children as he receives the tributes of mortals whom he has cured. Lastly, there is a magnificent gold wreath of Queen Meda featuring two incredibly lifelike branches of myrtle, an aromatic plant, symbol of immortality, associated with goddess Aphrodite. A hands-on experience The exhibition offers visitors a whole range of interactives and items to handle, from a Cycladic female figurine to a reproduction of a warrior’s helmet and a sword. There are over twenty videos in the various exhibition zones, most of them produced by the National Geographic Society, the Acropolis Museum, the Museum of Cycladic Art in Athens and the Canadian Museum of History. Complementing the exhibition Many activities have been organized in conjunction with the exhibition. A free digital application designed by the New Media Laboratory of the Stavros Niarchos Foundation Centre for Greek Studies at Simon Fraser University in British Columbia will keep visitors informed before, during and after their tour of the exhibition. There is also a prestigious publication on the Greek collection, produced by the Hellenic Ministry of Culture and Sports; a catalogue has also been produced by the Canadian Museum of History and the partner museums in the consortium, surveying the themes and the key items in the exhibition. A number of major lectures will be given, at both Pointe-à-Callière and the Université de Montréal in early 2015, looking at major figures in Ancient Greece and archaeology issues. Tours and visitor activities, the Port Symphonies, Greek Independence Day, Greek cuisine on the menu at the Museum’s restaurant and films are just some of the events and attractions surrounding the exhibition.

More Information: http://artdaily.com/news/75445/Pointe–agrave–Calli-egrave-re-presents-the-largest-exhibition-on-ancient-Greece-ever-produced-in-North-America#.VKaDDnuPmdc[/url] Copyright © artdaily.org

Uncovering The Lost City of Helike


The story of the destruction of Atlantis is one of the most famous stories from ancient Greece. Yet, there is a similar story of destruction told about the city of Helike. Unlike Atlantis, however, there are more written accounts about this site. Moreover, these writings contain clues that helped archaeologists search for the true location of the city. Using these clues, archaeologists have finally been able to track down the lost city.

Helike was situated in Achaea, on the northwestern part of the Peloponnesian peninsula. During its heyday, Helike was the leader of the first Achaean League, a confederation that consisted of 12 cities in the surrounding area. Due to this position, Helike was an important economic, cultural and religious centre. The might of Helike can also be seen in the colonies it founded, such as Sybaris in southern Italy and Priene in Asia Minor.

A coin from Helike. Obverse: Head of Poseidon; Reverse: A trident.

A coin from Helike. Obverse: Head of Poseidon; Reverse: A trident. Photo source: ww2.smb.museum.

The patron god of Helike was Poseidon, the Greek god of the sea and earthquakes. This is unsurprising, given Helike’s position in one of the most active earthquake zones in Europe. The cult of Poseidon can be seen in the temple and sanctuary of the Helikonian Poseidon, a bronze statue of Poseidon, and coins that bear the head of the god of the obverse and a trident on the reverse.

The Marriage of Poseidon and Amphitrite

The patron god of Helike was Poseidon (right). ‘The Marriage of Poseidon and Amphitrite’ by Felice Giani (Wikimedia Commons)

One night during the winter of 373 B.C., the city of Helike was obliterated. Some signs of the city’s impending doom were recorded, including the appearance of ‘immense columns of flames’ and the mass migration of small animals from the coast to the mountains several days prior to the disaster. A major earthquake, followed by a large tsunami from the Gulf of Corinth, wiped the city of Helike from the face of the earth. The rescue party that came in the following morning found no survivors.

The destruction of Helike was attributed to Poseidon. According to the stories, the god of the sea was enraged with the inhabitants of Helike due to their refusal to give their statue of Poseidon, or even a model of it, to the Ionian colonists from Asia. Some accounts even stated that the Ionian representatives were murdered. As a result, Poseidon punished the inhabitants of Helike by causing the sea to swallow to city, very much like that which happened to Atlantis.

According to legend, Poseidon created a huge wave to swallow the city of Helike

According to legend, Poseidon created a huge wave to swallow the city of Helike (Wikimedia Commons)

Unlike Atlantis, however, Helike was not completely lost, as it was visited by travellers in the following centuries. The philosopher Eratosthenes, who visited the site 150 years after its destruction, wrote that there was a standing bronze statue of Poseidon submerged in a ‘poros’, and was a hazard to fishermen’s nets. The Greek traveller Pausanias also visited the site, and wrote that the walls of the ancient city were still visible under water, though they were by then much corroded by the salt water. The ancient Romans were also fond of sailing over the site, as they could admire the city’s statuary. The location of Helike, however, was lost over time.

Bronze statue of Poseidon, which may be similar to the one reportedly seen at Helike

Bronze statue of Poseidon, which may be similar to the one reportedly seen at Helike. (Wikimedia Commons)

Although speculations about the actual site of Helike already began in the early 19th century, it was only in the late 20th century that Helike was re-discovered. As Helike was a submerged city, its location was one of the big mysteries of underwater archaeology. Yet, it was this conviction that the city was hidden somewhere in the Gulf of Corinth that made its discovery impossible. In 1988, a Greek archaeologist, Dora Katsonopoulou, raised the possibility that the ‘poros’ mentioned in the ancient texts might not refer to the sea, but an inland lagoon. If so, it would be plausible that Helike is not located in the Gulf of Corinth, but inland, as the lagoon would have been silted up over the millennia by river sediment. Although the team found a Roman city, as well as an Early Bronze Age settlement, it was in 2001 that the team found Helike in Achaea, Greece. In 2012, the destruction layer was uncovered, which confirmed that the site is indeed Helike.

Whilst the city of Helike has been re-discovered, excavations are still being carried out in the area. This is significant, as the area has been settled by different groups of people, and it is through the uncovering of settlements from various periods of history that a more complete picture of the region, from the prehistoric era to the modern period, can be produced. After all, although the story of Helike may be fantastic, it is but one point in a long series of events that span over the millennia.

Featured image: Excavations at the site of Helike. In this case, a Hellenistic-era building; possibly used as a dye-works (Wikimedia Commons)

References

Clark, J., 2014. Was There a Real Atlantis?. [Online] Available at: http://history.howstuffworks.com/history-vs-myth/real-atlantis1.htm

Gidwitz, T., 2004. City of Poseidon. [Online] Available at: http://archive.archaeology.org/0401/abstracts/helike.html

Wikipedia, 2014. Helike. [Online] Available at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helike

www.bbc.co.uk, 2002. Helike – The Real Atlantis. [Online] Available at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/science/horizon/2001/helike.shtml

www.helikeproject.gr, 2014. The Helike Project. [Online] Available at: http://www.helikeproject.gr/

By Ḏḥwty

– See more at: http://www.ancient-origins.net/ancient-places-europe/uncovering-lost-city-helike-002510#sthash.FB7OsVRA.dpuf

Coolest Archaeological Discoveries of 2014

Coolest Archaeological Discoveries of 2014
This colorful mosaic, showing Persephone’s abduction by Hades, was uncovered at the Amphipolis tomb in Greek Macedonia.

Thanks to the careful work of archaeologists, we learned more in the past year about Stonehenge’s hidden monuments, Richard III’s gruesome death and King Tut’s mummified erection. From the discovery of an ancient tomb in Greece to the first evidence of Neanderthal art, here are 10 of Live Science’s favorite archaeology stories of 2014.

 1. An Alexander the Great-era tomb at Amphipolis

Rarely do archaeological digs attract so much attention in real time. But at Amphipolis, an ancient coastal city in northern Greece, the discovery of a lavish 2,300-year-old tomb has created a national frenzy. In August, state archaeologists broke through the entrance of a huge burial mound that’s been billed as the largest of its kind in the Greek world. (Its perimeter measures about 1,600 feet, or 490 meters.) [See Photos of the Ancient Tomb at Amphipolis]

Excavators found broken sphinxes, two female statues called caryatids, a remarkably intact mosaic floor and some skeletal material, which is awaiting analysis. It’s still unclear who was buried inside the tomb, but some have speculated that it could be someone from Alexander the Great’s inner circle.

2. Stonehenge’s secret monuments

Capping a four-year survey of the landscape around England’s Stonehenge, researchers reported that they found signs of at least 17 previously unknown Neolithic shrines. The big announcement — which was accompanied by TV specials on the BBC and Smithsonian Channel — could change the way historians have thought of Stonehenge.

Stonehenge is undoubtedly a major ritual monument, which people may have traveled considerable distances to come to, but it isn’t just standing there by itself,” project leader Vincent Gaffney, an archaeologist at the University of Birmingham, told Live Science in September. “It’s part of a much more complex landscape with processional and ritual activities that go around it.” [See Images of Hidden Stonehenge Monuments]

3. A shipwreck under the World Trade Center

In the summer of 2010, archaeologists in New York discovered a school-bus-size shipwreck in an unlikely place: the site of the World Trade Center, still under construction after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. This year, tree-ring researchers who were studying the ship’s fragile timbers announced that they had uncovered new details about the vessel.

The ship was likely built in 1773, or soon after, in a small shipyard near Philadelphia, according to the study, which was published in the journal Tree-Ring Research. What’s more, the ship’s timbers may have originated from the same white oak forest where wood was harvested to build Philadelphia’s Independence Hall, the researchers said.

4. Richard III’s twisted spine, kingly diet and family tree

Once lost to history, the skeleton of Britain’s King Richard III was found under a parking lot in 2012, and since then, the monarch’s remains have been a boon for scientists who study centuries-old DNA, diet and disease. Among this year’s findings, scientists reported that they found a mitochondrial DNA match between Richard and two of his living relatives, offering further confirmation that the bones really belong to the king. A model of Richard’s misshapen spine showed that he suffered from adolescent idiopathic scoliosis.

Isotopes locked in Richard’s teeth and bones revealed that the king ate (and drank) quite well during his two years at the throne. And, after a much-delayed autopsy, researchers also determined this year that Richard likely died a quick death on the battlefield; they found two wounds on the back of Richard’s skull that were likely candidates for the fatal blow.

5. A teenager in a “black hole”

At the bottom of an underwater cave called Hoyo Negro (Spanish for “Black Hole”) in Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula, divers discovered a near-complete skeleton of a teenage girl. Dubbed “Naia,” the girl was found alongside unlikely gravemates: saber-toothed cats, pumas, sloths and bears. Researchers think Naia and the animals likely fell to their deaths 12,000 to 13,000 years ago, before the pit filled with water when the world’s glaciers started melting.

Scientists also found that DNA from Naia’s remains resembled modern Native American DNA. The discovery, which was reported in May in the journal Science, could help solve the long-standing debate over the identity of the first Americans. [In Photos: Human Skeleton Sheds Light on First Americans]

6. Syria by satellite

The paralyzing political situation in Syria has become somewhat of a test for satellite archaeology. Shut out of the war-torn country, archaeologists have turned to aerial images to learn about the state of Syria’s ancient ruins. So far, their findings have been grim.

Five of Syria’s six UNESCO World Heritage sites show “significant damage,” and some buildings are now “reduced to rubble,” according to an analysis of satellite images by the nonprofit and nonpartisan American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). Meanwhile, the American Schools for Oriental Research was given a $600,000 grant from the U.S. State Department to fund a Syrian Heritage Initiative for a year. At the organization’s annual meeting last month in San Diego, researchers with the initiative reported that 63 of the 400 archaeological sites they analyzed exhibited war-related looting.

7. Jesus’ wife?

This story might be more of an “undiscovery.” In September 2012, Harvard University divinity professor Karen King announced the sensational finding of a small papyrus fragment written in Coptic. The text contained references to a “Mary” and the translated line, “Jesus said to them, ‘My wife, she will be able to be my disciple.'” The suggestion was that Mary Magdalene may have been Jesus’ wife — or that some people in ancient times at least believed she was his wife.

Biblical scholars had aired their suspicions about the authenticity of the so-called “Gospel of Jesus’ Wife” because of problematic features, such as bad handwriting and grammatical errors. And earlier this year, a Live Science investigation revealed that the papyrus has a flimsy provenance. The anonymous owner of the papyrus claims to have purchased the document from a now-deceased man whose family said he never collected antiquities. The text is looking more and more like a forgery.

8. Mummy cheese

The world’s oldest known cheese was found this year, tucked away on the bodies of 3,800-year-old mummies in northwest China’s Taklamakan Desert. Scholars had previously uncovered archaeological clues suggesting that cheese making began as early as the sixth millennium B.C., but actual samples of ancient cheese are hard to come by.

Archaeologists found clumps of a yellowish substance on the chests and necks of mummies during recent excavations in China’s Xiaohe Cemetery. A chemical analysis showed that these blobs were really cheese. These dairy treats would have been nutritious, easily digestible and quite similar to yogurtlike kefir, according to the study in the Journal of Archaeological Science. The cheese was presumably left in the graves as a snack to be enjoyed in the afterlife.

9. King Tut’s 3,300-year erection

Researchers have long noted several anomalies of King Tutankhamun’s embalming. The young pharaoh was buried in a lavish tomb in Egypt’s Valley of the Kings without a heart, an excessive amount of black oils and goolike resins were applied to his body, and his penis was mummified erect at a 90-degree angle. A recent study in the journal Études et Travaux suggests that King Tut’s unusual burial was part of a deliberate effort to fight a religious revolution unleashed by his father.

King Tut’s father, Akhenaten, is famous for trying to introduce monotheism to Egypt. He wanted religion to center on the worship of the Aten, the sun disc, and destroyed images of other gods. King Tut, meanwhile, was trying to bring back polytheism during his reign. To emphasize that return to tradition, Tut’s embalmers may have tried to make the king look like Osiris, the Egyptian god of the underworld, who is often depicted with an erect penis to evoke his regenerative powers.

10. Artists like us?

Sometimes, big discoveries come in small packages. This year, two separate studies of tiny, simple etchings cast doubt on whether modern humans are really the only Homo species to have created art. A geometric carving on a rock in the back of a cave in Gibraltar may have been created by Neanderthals, the closest known relatives of modern humans, some 40,000 years ago, according to one study in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Researchers who tried to recreate the gridlike etching said this carving wasn’t the accidental byproduct of butchery, but rather an intentional design.

Earlier this month, another group of scientists in Java, Indonesia, reported in the journal Nature that they found a series of slashes and an “M”-shaped zigzag” on a shell that’s between 540,000 and 430,000 years old. They attributed the scribbles to Homo erectus, an ancestor of modern humans. In both cases, it’s unclear what meaning (if any) the “artwork” held, but the studies suggest our human ancestors and extinct relatives were capable of abstract thinking.

Copyright 2014 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Amphipolis: No2 of 10 bright discoveries of 2014

Top Ten Archaeological Discoveries of 2014

This year has been a year of spectacular discoveries in archaeology, from 4,000-year-old sunken ships, to enormous megalithic stones, mysterious man-made ditches, the oldest known examples of cave art in the world, a monumental tomb in Greece, and even a newly revealed pharaoh of Egypt.  Advances in technology also enabled the discovery of hidden Maya temples in the jungles of Mexico, hundreds more structures in the Stonehenge landscape, and new understandings of the human genome. It is almost impossible to narrow down one year of magnificent findings to ten, so we have chosen to feature ten discoveries of 2014 that revealed striking new information about our ancient past.

10. 4,000-year-old sunken ship found in Turkey is among oldest in the world

4,000-year-old sunken ship found in Turkey is among oldest in the world

An excavation at the port of Urla underwater archaeological site in Turkey revealed a sunken ship that is believed to date back 4,000 years. The surprising discovery is the oldest known shipwreck ever found in the Mediterranean, and is also among the oldest known shipwrecks worldwide.

The port of Urla, which served the ancient Greek settlement of Klazomenai, sunk following a natural disaster, probably an earthquake, in the 8th century BC, making the area popular for underwater research. Numerous sunken ships have already been found in Urla, ranging from the 2nd century BC to the Ottoman period. Uncovering a ship that is believed to date back to around 2,000 BC, is incredibly rare and significant and an important milestone for archaeology.

9. Newly dated Asian cave drawings rewrite history of human art

Newly dated Asian cave drawings rewrite history of human art

A study published in October 2014, in the journal Nature, revealed that more than 100 ancient paintings of hands and animals found within seven limestone caves on the island of Sulawesi in Indonesia, are as old as famous prehistoric art in Europe. The research showed that humans were producing rock art by 40,000 years ago at opposite ends of the Pleistocene Eurasian world.

Maxime Aubert, study lead and archaeologist and geochemist of Australia’s Griffith University, explained that before this discovery, experts had a Europe-centric view of how, when, and where humans started making cave paintings and other forms of figurative art. However, the fact that people in Sulawesi were also producing art at the same time suggests that either human creativity emerged independently at about the same time around the world, or when humans left Africa they already had the capacity and inclination for art.

8. Mysterious Man-Made Ditches Predate Amazon Rainforest

Mysterious Man-Made Ditches Predate Amazon Rainforest

A study published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences earlier this year revealed that a series of mysterious lines and geometric shapes carved into the Amazonian landscape were created thousands of years ago before the rainforest even existed. The purpose of the massive earthworks and who created them remains unknown, and scientists are beginning to realise just how much there still is to learn about the prehistoric cultures of the Amazon and life before the arrival of Europeans.  The unusual earthworks, which include square, straight, and ring-like ditches, were first uncovered in 1999, after large areas of pristine forest was cleared for cattle grazing. Since then, hundreds of the earthen foundations have been found in a region more than 150 miles across, covering northern Bolivia and Brazil’s Amazonas state.

Until recently, it was believed that the earthworks dated back to around 200 AD. However, the latest study has revealed that they are, in fact, much older. Study author John Francis Carson, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Reading in the United Kingdom, explained that sediment cores had been taken from two lakes near the major earthwork sites.  These sediment cores hold ancient pollen grains and charcoal from long-ago fires, and can reveal information about the climate and ecosystem that existed when the sediment was laid down as far back as 6,000 years ago. The results revealed that the oldest sediments did not come from a rainforest ecosystem at all. Rather, they showed that the landscape, before about 2,000 to 3,000 years ago, looked more like the savannahs of Africa than today’s lush rainforest. The earthworks predate the shift from savannah to rainforest, which reveals that the creators of these ditches carved them before the forest moved in around them.

7. Largest known megalithic block from antiquity revealed at Baalbek

Largest known megalithic block from antiquity revealed at Baalbek

A new analysis conducted by the German Archaeological Institute at the ancient stone quarry of Baalbek/Ancient Heliopolis, in Lebanon, calculated the size and weight of an enormous monolith, and concluded that it is the largest known stone block ever carved by human hands.

Located at an altitude of approximately 1,170 meters in the Beqaa valley, Baalbek is known to have been settled from at least 7,000 BC, with almost continual settlement of the Tell under the Temple of Jupiter, which was a temple since the pre-Hellenistic era. During the period of Roman rule, Baalbek was known as Heliopolis (“City of the Sun”), and housed one of the largest and grandest sanctuaries in the empire. One of the most awe-inspiring features of Baalbek are the incredible megalithic foundations of the Temple of Jupiter. The temple was built on platform of stones that are among the largest building blocks seen in the whole world. How they were cut so finely and moved into place has defied explanation, particularly considering the blocks are known to have weighed over 1000 tons.

The gigantic blocks used in the foundations of the Temple of Jupiter came from a nearby quarry located around 800 meters (2,600 ft) from the temple. The limestone quarry houses two massive building blocks that never made it to the temple – one weighing about 1,240 tons, and the other, known as the “Hajjar al-Hibla,” or The Stone of the Pregnant Woman, weighs about 1000 tons. But the German archaeological team found a third building block next to the Hajjar al-Hibla stone and underneath it. Still partially buried, the monolith measures measures 19.6 meters (64 feet) in length, 6 meters (19.6 feet) in width, and at least 5.5 meters (18 feet) in height. Its weight has been estimated at 1,650 tons, making it the largest known stone block from antiquity.

6. 500,000-year-old shell engraved by Homo erectus challenges previous beliefs about human ancestors

500,000-year-old shell engraved by Homo erectus

Research conducted on a mollusk shell, dated to between 430,000 and 540,000 years, found over a century ago on the Indonesian island of Java, revealed that it contains the oldest engraving ever found and that it was almost certainly etched by a Homo erectus, an early human ancestor that emerged around 1.9 million years ago and became extinct around 150,000 years ago. The discovery challenged preconceived notions about human ancestors, showing that, like Homo sapiens, they produced abstract design or perhaps even an early form of written communication.

Josephine Joordens, a post-doctoral researcher at Leiden University in the Netherlands, and colleagues, published a paper in December 2014 in the journal Nature, revealing that the discovery provides evidence for symbolic activity and shows that “engraving abstract patterns was in the realm of Asian Homo erectus cognition and neuromotor control.” While to many this may seem unsurprising, the finding challenges conventional perspectives about the evolution of human behaviour.

5. Oldest-known Human genome sequence sheds light on interbreeding with Neanderthals

Oldest-known Human genome sequence sheds

A study published in the journal Nature in October 2014 revealed the DNA results from a 45,000-year-old leg bone from Siberia, producing the oldest genome sequence ever carried out for Homo sapiens – nearly twice the age of the next-oldest known complete modern human genome. The results have helped pinpoint when Homo sapiens first interbred with Neanderthals, and adds more pieces to the puzzle of ancient human migration across the world.

The ancient leg bone was found in 2008 on the left bank of the river Irtysh near the settlement of Ust’-Ishim in western Siberia. The human femur was sent to the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany, where testing was conducted. The results revealed that the DNA of the “Ust’-Ishim Man” contained 2% DNA from Neanderthals, roughly the same proportion that can be found in modern Europeans today. This reveals that interbreeding between Neanderthals and modern humans must have occurred prior to the age of the Ust’-Ishim Man. While previous estimates suggested the interbreeding may have occurred as early as 36,000 years ago, scientists have now revised their estimates to between 50,000 and 60,000 years ago.

The research team also compared the genetic sequence of Ust’-Ishim man with the genomes of 50 different groups of modern humans, Neanderthals, and Denisovans. The results indicated that this man was equally closely related to present-day Asians and to early Europeans. This suggests that the population to which Ust’-Ishim man belonged diverged from the ancestors of present-day Europeans and Asians before, or around the same time, that these two groups separated from each other.

4. New Pharaoh Discovered In Egypt – Introducing King Seneb Kay

New Pharaoh Discovered In Egypt – Introducing King Seneb Kay

In January, 2014, archaeologists in Egypt discovered the burial place and the remains of a previously unknown pharaoh who reigned more than 3600 years ago. The skeleton of King Seneb kay (also written Senebkey) were uncovered at South Abydos in Sohag province, about 500 kilometres south of Cairo, by a University of Pennsylvania expedition working with the government.

Never before heard of in ancient Egyptian history, King Seneb kay’s name was found inscribed in hieroglyphics written inside a royal cartouche – an oval with a horizontal line at one end signalling a royal name. King Saneb kay was found in a wooden sarcophagus inside a badly damaged stone tomb with no roof.  He was originally mummified but his body was destroyed by ancient tomb robbers and only his skeleton remained. No funerary goods were found in the tomb, which confirms it had been looted in ancient times.

“This was the first time in history to discover the king,” said Ali Asfar, Head of Antiquities for the Egyptian government.

3. Archaeologists Discover Two Long Lost Ancient Maya Cities in Jungle of Mexico

Two Long Lost Ancient Maya Cities in Jungle of Mexico

In an amazing discovery in the jungles of Mexico, archaeologists uncovered two ancient Mayan cities, including ruined pyramid temples, palace remains, a monster mouth gateway, a ball court, altars, and other stone monuments. One of the cities had been found decades ago but all attempts to relocate it had failed. The other city was previously unknown and is a brand new discovery, shedding new light on the ancient Mayan civilization. Expedition leader Ivan Sprajc, of the Research Center of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts (ZRC SAZU), explained that the finding was aided by aerial photographs of the tropical forest of central Yucatan in the state of Campeche, Mexico.  Some anomalies were noticed among the thick vegetation of the forest and so a team was sent in to investigate further. Archaeologists were stunned to discover an entire city in an area between the Rio Bec and Chenes regions, extending some 1,800 miles, which are characterised by their Classic architecture dating to around 600 to 1,000 AD.

Sprajc explained that both cities “open new questions about the diversity of Maya culture, the role of that largely unexplored area in the lowland Maya history, and its relations with other polities.”

2. Spectacular Macedonian tomb and human remains unearthed in Amphipolis, Greece

Spectacular Macedonian tomb and human remains unearthed in Amphipolis

Archaeologists excavated a spectacular Macedonian tomb in Kasta Hill, Amphipolis, dating to the period of Alexander the Great (4th century BC), resulting in the discovery of human remains which are currently undergoing testing.

Kasta Hill lies in what was once the ancient city of Amphipolis, conquered by Philip II of Macedon, father of Alexander the Great, in 357 BC. Experts have known about the existence of the burial mound in Amphipolis, located about 100km northeast of Thessaloniki, since the 1960s, but work only began in earnest there in 2012, when archaeologists discovered that Kasta Hill had been surrounded by a nearly 500-meter wall made from marble.

Several months ago, archaeologists discovered a path and 13 steps leading down from the surrounding wall. It was then that they uncovered a limestone wall protecting and concealing the entrance of the tomb of Amphipolis. Behind the wall, archaeologists revealed two marble sphinxes, both headless and missing their wings, but these were recovered during excavations.  Bit by bit, the grand tomb began revealing the secrets that had lain hidden for 2,300 years, including two magnificent caryatid statues, a detailed mosaic depicting the Abduction of Persephone, and a secret vault containing a limestone sarcophagus with human remains. Archaeologists are due to announce the discovery of the tomb’s occupant in one month’s time.

1. Radar finds HUNDREDS more megalithic monuments, chapels, and shrines around Stonehenge

Radar finds HUNDREDS more megalithic monuments, chapels, and shrines around Stonehenge

In a groundbreaking news release in September 2014, archaeologists revealed the results of a four-year-long project to map the hidden landscape beneath the surface of the Stonehenge environs, and what they found was nothing short of amazing. Through their high-tech devices they could see a landscape teeming with burial mounds, chapels, shrines, pits, and other structures, which had never been seen before. The biggest surprise was a 330 metre long line of up to 60 buried stone pillars, inside the bank of a large, bowl-shaped feature called Durrington Walls, Britain’s largest henge, which sits beside the River Avon.

The discovery dramatically alters the prevailing view of Stonehenge as the primary site in the landscape. Instead it presents the Salisbury Plain as a an active religious centre with more than 60 key locations where ancient peoples could carry out sacred rituals and fulfil their religious obligations. “This is not just another find,” said Professor Vince Gaffney of the University of Birmingham. “It’s going to change how we understand Stonehenge.”

http://www.ancient-origins.net/

HOPLITES! Greeks at War – Full animation

Every student of history surely feels impressed by one achievement or another of the ancient Greeks, whether in the field of engineering, art, or the convergence of the two. Even a bored college undergrad in a thousand-seat lecture hall has to admire ancient Greek vases when they pop up in the lecturer’s Powerpoint slides. That much-studied culture’s penchant for stylizing images of their society on their pottery has allowed us to see their world as, in some sense, a living, breathing one — or to see it through the eyes of the artisans who lived to see it themselves. But for all their mastery of the art of the vase, they never actually got their images to live nor breathe. For that, we must turn to 21st-century technology, specifically as applied by Panoply, a project animator of Steve K. Simons and ancient Greece scholar Sonya Nevin, which was designed to bring these vases to life.

openculture.com

The Seven Wonders of the Ancient World

1
Great Pyramid of Giza

Great Pyramid of Giza

Hedwig Storch
Hedwig Storch
The oldest of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, and the only one that survives to the present day, this is one of three pyramids at the Giza Necropolis in Egypt.
2
Hanging Gardens of Babylon

Hanging Gardens of Babylon

Legend has it that the King Nebuchadnezzar II built this palace around the 6th century BC, in present-day Iraq. One Greek writer described it: “The foundations of its turrets are sunk thirty feet into the ground and the fortifications rise eighty feet above it at the highest point. On its summit are the hanging gardens, a wonder celebrated by the fables of the Greeks. They are as high as the top of the walls and owe their charm to the shade of many tall trees. The columns supporting the whole edifice are built of rock, and on top of them is a flat surface of squared stones strong enough to bear the deep layer of earth placed upon it and the water used for irrigating it.”
3
Temple of Artemis at Ephesus

Temple of Artemis at Ephesus

A Greek temple dedicated to the goddess Artemis, this was built and destroyed three times. In the 19th century archaeologists found remains of the temple in western Turkey.
4
Statue of Zeus at Olympia

Statue of Zeus at Olympia

Standng 43 feet tall, this statute of Zeus on his throne was made by the Greek sculptor Phidias around 435 BC at the sanctuary of Olympia. It was probably destroyed sometime around the 5th century AD.
5
Mausoleum at Halicarnassus

Mausoleum at Halicarnassus

Built between 353 and 350 BC in present-day Turkey, this building stood 148 feet tall and was the tomb for Mausolus, ruler of Caria, and his wife. A series of earthquakes during the Middle Ages has left it in ruins.
6
Colossus of Rhodes

Colossus of Rhodes

It took 12 years for Chares of Lindos to build this statue of the Greek god Helios. It stood over 98 feet high. However, the statue only lasted from 280 BC to 226 BC, after which an earthquake broke it at the knees.
7
Lighthouse of Alexandria

Lighthouse of Alexandria

This mosaic is one of the few contemporary images we have the Lighthouse, which was built in the 3rd century BC. Standing over 330 feet high, this building continue to be used until the 12th century AD. However a series of earthquakes destroyed the lighthouse by the 14th century.

Clues to Amphipolis tomb’s mysterious occupant slowly surface

Mysterious monumnet ... The sphynxes which guard the entrance to the Amphipolis tomb. Sou

Mysterious monument … The sphinxes which guard the entrance to the Amphipolis tomb. Source: Greek Ministry of Culture Source: Supplied

BOLD sphinxes. Enticing nymphs. A menacing rape-scene mosaic. While these finds have amazed, they’re yet to inform. But the evidence is mounting, and we may soon know who lies beneath the mysterious Amphipolis mound.

It may be Greece’s greatest ancient monument: A 2300-year-old, 590m diameter burial mound containing a mysterious mix of structures.

Excavations since August have exposed a myriad of artistic wonders.

Delicately crafted, scantily clad female-formed columns. Piercing eyed, female-headed sphinxes.

Most prominent is a masterful mosaic depicting a supernatural rape scene.

3D RECONSTRUCTION: See the walk-through of the tomb at the bottom of this story

But it is a scattering of bones and a few faded paintings which now have archaeologists excited. These may contain the final clue as to the identity of the tomb’s occupant — a person who may have direct ties to the legendary Alexander the Great.

It is the idea that the mound is linked in some way to Greece’s greatest hero — Alexander the Great — which has the nation on the edge of its collective seat. The national hero still inspires great pride and passion, and the pressure on the archaeologists to produce results is immense.

Explore Amphipolis

But the amazing artwork has itself inspired detractors: It’s so advanced that some have cast doubt that it really dates from the era of legendary general’s death in 325BC. Instead they insist it must belong to one of his successors, or may even be a Roman monument attempting to tie their own achievements to that of the legendary general.

Now the evidence is mounting against the detractors. Coins showing the great General have been recovered in the tomb, and heavily faded artwork appear to show scenes reminiscent of Mycenaean fertility cults.

As the penetrating eye of science is turned on the faded images and decayed bones, much of Greece holds its breath: Is this the tomb of Alexander’s mother, Olympia?

The answer, whatever it may be, will no doubt become one of archaeology’s greatest discoveries of 2015.

Amphipolis

Ancient memorial … An artists rendition of one proposed reconstruction of the Amphipolis mound. Source: Greek Ministry of Culture Source: Supplied

The geophysical map of Amphipolis.

The geophysical map of Amphipolis. Source: Supplied

WHAT LIES BENEATH

IT was touted as the biggest, most significant archaeological find in decades: Six months later, what have we learned from excavations at the massive Amphipolis complex?

The first three rooms have been exposed, but we still don’t know whom the tomb was built for, or even if it was a tomb: It could have been a memorial.

But a new scan of the Amphipolis mound, known as Kasta Hill, indicates the massive ancient monument may contain much more.

The Greek Ministry of Culture yesterday released the results of a geophysical (ground-piercing radar and electrical) survey. The extensive study, which began on November 11, is still undergoing computer processing.

The 1999 seizmic survey of Amphipolis.

The 1999 seismic survey of Amphipolis. Source: Supplied

So far, four areas of “especially high electrical resistance” have been identified, indicating the possible presence of further structures beneath.

These new “hot spots” have been identified as priority sites for anticipated new excavation efforts in the next Northern Hemisphere summer.

The geophysical survey results follow a 1999 seismic tomography study of the mound — essentially measuring the distortions of sound passing through the earth to build up a subterranean map. This study, abandoned due to lack of funds, also suggests there may be a series of structures underneath the soil and rubble.

If confirmed, such structures will resolve what archaeologists have been suspecting since this year’s dig began: That this remote hill is in fact a complex set of separate constructions — not just an enormous earth-covered mound for a single burial chamber.

The already excavated tomb is also scheduled to undergo further geophysical scanning, the ministry states, in order to discover any further concealed secrets.

Amphipolis

Awe-inspiring … A digital reconstruction of the entrance to the Amphipolis tomb. Source: Supplied Source: Supplied

Ancient riddle ... A reconstruction of one of the guardian sphinxes. Source: Greek Minist

Ancient riddle … A reconstruction of one of the guardian sphinxes. Source: Greek Ministry of Culture Source: Supplied

An impression of the plan to engrave Alexander the Great on to a mountain. Source: Suppli

An impression of the plan to engrave Alexander the Great on to a mountain. Source: Supplied Source: Supplied

ANCIENT WORK OF GENIUS?

The Greek archaeologists examining the Amphipolis tomb complex have expressed their belief that it may have been the work of a single architect.

One candidate for the enormously ambitious project is Alexander’s personal architect, Deinocrates (which translates to Master of Marvels). The Greek Reporter argues he had the vision, having already proposed sculpting the whole of Mount Athos into the reclining form of the great general.

The only complication is that Deinocrates primarily worked in Egypt, on the construction of the city of Alexandria. But links have been drawn between the distinct edging of stonework found in both locations, as well as similarities in the local ancient road plan, to support the theory.

Likewise, the imposing mosaic of the second chamber also has declared astoundingly intricate and detailed for the era. Despite missing a large circular section at its centre (archaeologists say many of the fragments have been recovered), it is clearly the work of a master artist.

The fresco depicting the abduction of the goddess Persephone by Pluto, god of Hades, foun

The fresco depicting the abduction of the goddess Persephone by Pluto, god of Hades, found on the floor of the Amphipolis tomb. Source: Greek Ministry of Culture Source: Supplied

A painting showing two dancers and a bull from the tomb’s third chamber. Source: Greek Mi

A painting showing two dancers and a bull from the tomb’s third chamber. Source: Greek Ministry of Culture Source: Supplied

Then there are the faded paintings found on the architraves of the third chamber.Pictures released earlier this month appear to show a man and a woman, wearing red belts or sashes on golden loincloths, dancing among bulls. Another image shows a winged goddess standing between an urn and a brazier. The chamber’s ceilings were covered with rosettes.

According to The Greek Reporter, this imagery has been linked to another royal sanctuary of the era — in Macedon. The Sanctuary of the Great Gods on Samothrace was an island complex associated with bull sacrifice and heavily adorned with stone rosettes. Also found there was the famous statue of Nike — the winged goddess of victory.

It was also a cult strongly associated with Alexander’s mother and father.

Amphipolis

Eternal gaze … Archaeologists work on preserving one of the two Caryatids — female goddess columns — in the tomb’s second chamber. Source: Greek Ministry of Culture Source: Supplied

BONE WHISPERERS

Amid the most significant find announced during the excavation was that of a scattered skeleton and fragments of a wooden coffin decorated with bone and glass in the third chamber.

“The bones were found inside and outside the burial pit,” a Greek government official told reporters in November. “The skull was quite some distance away from the pit, the lower jaw was just outside the pit and the largest part of the skeleton was inside the pit. A close look shows that the legs and arms are almost intact, rib bones and parts of the spine as well as the pelvic bones are in fragmentary condition, therefore it is impossible for archaeologists to say if they belong to a man or a woman.”

Despite the supporting assertion by chief archaeologist Katerina Peristeri that she has no idea as to the identity of the skeleton, speculation is running rampant.

The stone coffin, left, and an artist’s reconstruction of the third chamber. Source: Gree

The stone coffin, left, and an artist’s reconstruction of the third chamber. Source: Greek Ministry of Culture Source: Supplied

The remains, said to be still covered in earth to ensure their preservation, have yet to be reassembled to a suitable state for the identification of key gender features.

The Greek government again last week sought to dispel rumours that the bones had already been identified as belonging to a 54-year-old woman. Such details would place the tomb squarely in the domain of Alexander the Great’s mother, Olympias.

MOTHER OF A LIVING GOD? The Amphipolis mosaic explained

The outline of the Goddess Nike can be seen in one of the tomb’s paintings.

The outline of the Goddess Nike can be seen in one of the tomb’s paintings. Source: Supplied

Speculation surrounds the fact that the skeleton’s pelvic region appears to have been particularly heavily fractured. Olympias was stoned to death at the order of usurper General Cassandros in 316BC“The study of skeletal material, found in the fourth place of the burial monument on the Casta hill, is commissioned to a team of scientists from the Aristotle and Democritus Universities … The analysis of this material is part of a broader research program, which includes the holistic approach of a sample of about three hundred skeletons, coming from the area of Amphipolis and chronologically cover the period from 1000 B.C. to 200 B.C”

“The results — such as sex, age, stature — the macroscopic study of skeletal material from the fourth place of the burial complex, will be announced in January,” the statement reads.

Chief excavator Peristeri has a much more pragmatic point of view: She states that the lion statue which once sat atop the mound was male and that the wall encompassing its base was once covered in engraved shields. This indicates the mound was made for one of Alexanders’ generals, she says.

Others point to a legend recorded by the Greek historian Plutarch which states King Philip, Alexander’s father, dreamt he had put a seal of a lion upon Olympias’s womb. This was interpreted by soothsayers as predicting she would bear a bold and lion-like son.

Placing a statue of a lion above a pregnant belly-shaped burial mound fits this imagery.

But the answer may be amid the remains of the burial chamber itself.

Unreadable traces of inscriptions have been found on the columns and marble plates about the stone tomb in the third chamber. These will undergo ultraviolet analysis in an effort to trace their outline, and hopefully a name. The process is scheduled to start early next year.

Amphipolis

Alexander the Great, Conqueror of the known world, is shown in this Roman floor mosaic, believed to be a copy of a 3rd Century painting. Source: Supplied

AGE OF EMPIRES

Alexander the Great swept through Europe and Asia on a conquest like no other seen before his time. Nothing could stop him — except possibly poison, or more probably a terminal bout of typhoid fever.

His untimely death meant wrack and ruin for his fledgling empire. His generals immediately set about carving out pieces for themselves.

The body of the great general is said to have been preserved in a vat of honey before setting out for his homeland, Macedonia. It would be diverted several times before finding its final resting place, somewhere near the city erected in Egypt in his name — Alexandria.

The location of his tomb has since been lost to history.

Left struggling to hold the strands of empire together was his mother, Olympias. A devoted follower of religious mysteries, she had been divorced by Alexander’s father — King Philip II after a 20 year marriage. She, and Alexander, had been restored to power after his murder.

But the queen frequently clashed with the trusted adviser Alexander left behind as his regent for Macedonia: General Antipater.

On Alexander’s death, Antipater’s son — Cassander — wanted the crown.

Olympia asserted her authority as the regent for Alexanders young son. She then sought to strengthen her hold on power by marrying Alexander’s sister, Cleopatra, to a succession of generals opposed to Cassander.

An attack on Cassander’s corner of Macedonia at first appeared successful with the rout of his army. But a surprise counter-attack toppled Olympia from the throne and Cassander arranged to have her murdered. Alexander’s wife and son, Roxana and Alexander IV, were imprisoned at Amphipolis where they were later executed.

Amphipolis

Explore for yourself … The 3D walk-through of the tomb is embedded at the bottom of this story. Source: Supplied

3-D WALKTHROUGH

The stunning scale of the new archaeological discovery has inspired recession-wracked Greece, harking back to an era when Alexander the Great ruled half the known world.

This fascination has been seized by a government desperate for any morale-building leverage it can find.

As a result, it has thrown significant funding at the excavation of the monument — and its promotion.

Such is the excitement that full 3-D reconstructions of the tomb was being produced even as excavators advanced.

With digging completed for the season, a full digital reconstruction of the sphinx-guarded entrance, the female caryatids supporting the inner door and the elaborate mosaic of the main room has now been released.

Amphipolis Tomb

http://www.news.com.au
Υποστηρίζεται από Tempera & WordPress.
>

By continuing to use the site, you agree to the use of cookies. more information

The cookie settings on this website are set to "allow cookies" to give you the best browsing experience possible. If you continue to use this website without changing your cookie settings or you click "Accept" below then you are consenting to this.

Close