Mask of Agamemnon
Name: Mask of
Agamemnon
What it is: A gold
funerary mask of a man's face
Where it is from: Mycenae, an
archaeological site in southern Greece
When it was made: Circa 1500
B.C.
Related: Phaistos
Disk: 3,000-year-old inscriptions from Crete that have never been deciphered
This gold death mask
was found by German archaeologist Heinrich Schliemann in 1876 during
excavations of a Bronze Age tomb at the Mycenae archaeological site in southern
Greece.
Schliemann believed he
had found the body of the mythical king Agamemnon, who led the Achaean (Greek)
siege of Troy in Homer's "Iliad” (he is also mentioned in Homer's
"Odyssey" and features in some ancient Greek plays.) According to
Homer, Agamemnon ruled at Mycenae, and the artifact has been known as the
"Mask of Agamemnon" ever since.
But the artistic style
of the artifact and subsequent studies of the archaeological site on the
Peloponnese Peninsula suggest the mask was made in about 1500 B.C. -hundreds of
years before Agamemnon might have lived- and some suggest it was made even
earlier.
The mask is formed from
a thin sheet of gold and would have been made in the living likeness of the
deceased. The royal tomb where it was found contained the remains of eight
people. All of them had weapons, but only five wore gold death masks, which archaeologists
think indicated status.
The Mycenaeans were a
Bronze Age people who lived throughout southern Greece after about 1750 B.C.
They spoke an early form of Greek, and their civilization was greatly
influenced by the Minoan civilization of Crete.
Schliemann thought the
Mycenaeans were the Achaeans of the "Iliad" and believed their
remains showed the historical reality of the Trojan War. Although some
Mycenaean sites correspond to Achaean kingdoms in the "Iliad,"
archaeologists now think the Mycenaean civilization ended in about 1200 B.C.,
during the "Late Bronze Age collapse," while the Trojan War may have
happened hundreds of years later.
SOURCE: Microsoft Start News
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