Tag: Angus smith

Mycenaean Tombs Discovered Near Mycenae Could be From Ancient Egalitarian Society

A team of archaeologists has unearthed five chamber tombs in the Nemea Valley, just a few hours walk from the ancient city of Mycenae. The tombs date from ca. 1350 1200 BC, roughly the same time that Mycenae was thriving. The people buried in the tombs were likely not from the city itself, but rather from Tsoungiza, an agricultural settlement that lies next to it. The cemetery has been named Ayia Sotira. But despite a wealth of human remains, there have been no discoveries of elite burials. Are the archaeologists yet to discover the prize tombs, or could this be evidence of ancient egalitarian society?

The existence of the tombs is no doubt related to the growth of Mycenae, said Professor Angus Smith, of Brock University in Canada. He is one of the directors of the excavation project. He believes that the Mycenaean people were attracted to the valley because of its agricultural fertility.

Smith discussed the findings at an archaeology event at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto, Canada, and spoke to Heritage Key about the significance of the discovery.

The team excavated the five tombs between 2006 and 2008. They consist of a dromos (tomb entryway) and chamber. Between the two of them there is a Stomion, a wall of stone that blocks entry to the tomb.

Unfortunately looters are also aware of the site. When the team arrived at Ayia Sotira, they found ‘probe holes’ that had been dug into the ground by looters searching for airways.

Perhaps the most important finds were the human remains. Between the five tombs the archaeologists found skeletal remains of 21 individuals in total. They are now being analyzed to try and get information about the diet that they consumed.

Doing detailed work is difficult as the remains are generally poorly preserved – the team was hoping to perform DNA analysis but scientists dont believe that will be possible.

Work so far suggests that the people lived a tough life to say the least. In ‘tomb six’ the team found what appears to be an extended family, with two men, one woman and two children aged 18 months and four years. One of the men had severe trauma on his left tibia. It didnt kill him, but the wound would have healed very painfully.

This healing was apparently not easy as it was associated with severe bone infection and inflammation of the membrane around the bone, said Professor Smith. The other burials in tombs (there were 10 in total) also had signs of stress on their lower limbs.

Evidence of Secondary Burial

 Sotira Project. A shot of the burials in one of the tombs. The team found evidence of a gory burial practice that is not uncommon in the ancient world. Archaeologists call it ‘secondary burial’.

You bury somebody, then you wait for that person to decompose, then you go back into the tomb or grave and you collect the bones after all the flesh has decomposed, explained Professor Smith.

The team found bits of obsidian and flint debris in the tombs and believe that tools made of this material were used to cut the people up.

Its kind of gruesome, Smith admitted in his lecture. However, it did have a practical use. A person that had been cut to pieces uses up less space than a regular burial. Thats probably the most practical reason why it might have been done.

There may also have ritualistic reasons. In tomb four the team found a small pit that had the ‘secondary burials’ of two adult men. The man at the top was in his late 30s. Both of their skulls were displayed at a higher level than the rest of the skeleton, said Smith.

These men were carefully placed in this pit, he said. We shouldnt think they just swept the bones into the pit willy nilly.

The Burial Goods

Perhaps the biggest surprise the team had was with the burial goods. For a civilization known for its rich elite burials, the goods they found in the tombs were modest finds.

The goods the team found included alabaster pots, bowls, jugs, a female psi figurine, faience and glass beads. They also found, after water sieving the remains, stone microbeads that were no bigger than a millimetre in size. In tomb five they found 462 of them stowed away in a side-chamber.The beadsarelikely the remains of a necklace.

Theydid not find gold or silver artefacts. However, they did find fragments of a conical rhyton in tomb three. Its a vessel which has two holes in it said Professor Smith. There is a hole which you pour liquid into and a second hole, at the bottom, where it comes out. It can be used for libation rituals and is often associated with elite burials. This find raises an important question: where are the rulers?

Who’s in Charge Around Here?

When Heinrich Schliemann excavated Mycenae in the 19th century, he found no shortage of elite tombs. In one passage of an 1878 publication he describes a tomb on the Acropolis:

Photo courtesy Ayia Sotira Project. Stone microbeads, found in one of the tombs. These beads are no bigger than a millimetre. Discovery of three human bodies which had been partially burnt where they lay fifteen diadems of thin gold plate found on the bodies also crosses of golden laurel-leaves… Knives of Obsidian A silver vase with a bronze mouth plated with gold.

So where are the elites at this newly discovered cemetery?

We see a distinctly different character to those around Mycenae. The wealthy and very wealthy tombs are missing, said Professor Smith.

One idea is that there was an elite tomb and it was plundered in ancient (or recent) times. Another possibility is that there is a tomb of an elite person at Ayia Sotira that just hasnt been discovered yet.

There is a third, and rather tantalizing,idea that these people lived egalitarian lives.

Despite being close to a rich city, the people of this settlement, for whatever reason,had no elites.

It does seem to be a community of agriculturalists who dont seem to have a clear leader or clear elite mixed in amongst them, said Professor Smith. Were they governed by the palace at Mycenae which sort of oversaw them? Or were they removed enough that they had their own system of politics and government but one that didnt produce clear elites.

Egalitarian societies are not unheard of in ancient times. The Iroquoian people of the Great Lakes region, the peaceful Manchey Culture in Cardal, and the neolithic people of Europe all knew how to share the wealth.

Ontario Aegean Archaeology Day to Hit Toronto this Saturday

Snow-weary Toronto residents are set to get some Aegean relief this Saturday. The Royal Ontario Museum, in Toronto Canada, will be hosting Ontario Aegean Archaeology Day.

Nine speakers from universities in Ontario and New York State will present their research on the ancient Aegean. The event is free if you have a museum membership – non-members will have to pay the usual museum admission fee.

The event will be held in the Eaton theatre, and is sponsored by the museum, the Hellenic Republic of Greece, Greek Communities of Canada and the Archaeology Centre at the University of Toronto.

Don’t Miss These Talks

Professor Dimitri Nakassis is part of the Pyla Koutsopetria Archaeological Project which is investigating archaeological sites on the south coast of Cyprus, near the modern day village of Pyla. Among the sites is a mysterious settlement called Pyla-Kokkinokremos that only existed for a generation or two ca. 1250 BC. The people buried hoards of gold, silver and bronze before fleeing the site ca. 1200 BC.

This date, 1200 BC, is important since it signifies the onset of an Ancient Dark Age that saw the Mycenaean, Hittite and Egyptian civilizations collapse, and new kingdoms, such as the one at Tayinat, rise up. This Saturday Professor Nakassis will be talking about this Dark Age and what we can learn about it from ancient literary sources.

Professor Angus Smith, of Brock University, has been helping to excavate the site of Ayia Sotira on the Greek Peloponnese. The site is a cemetery with several Mycenaean chamber tombs. He is also working on the Mochlos project, which is investigating a small island off the north-eastern coast of Crete.They are currently diggingup levels of the site that date to before the Minoan palaces were built.

The chair of the second session is Professor Maria Shaw. Recently she put forward a theory that out of work Minoan artists came to Egypt at the time the Palace of Knossos was in decline. Those workers created the frescoes seen at Tell el-Daba. She will not be presenting at this event, but her husband, Professor Joseph Shaw, will be giving a talk on the ancestry of the Minoan hall system.

Full Schedule

(Source – Royal Ontario Museum)

10:30 am – Introduction: Paul Denis, ROM

Chair – 1st session: Professor Carl Knappett, Art, University of Toronto

10:40 am – Professor James Conolly, Anthropology, Trent University
Of Blades and Arrows: Hunters and Farmers of Antikythera in the Later Neolithic and Early Bronze Age

11:10 am – Dr. Jill Hilditch, Art, University of Toronto
As Far as the Eye Could See – Islandscapes and Community Space in the Early Bronze Age Cyclades

11:40 am – Professor Tristan Carter, Anthropology, McMaster University
Body Politics: Adornment and Identity in the Later 3rd Millennium BC Southern Aegean

12:10 pm – Professor Vance Watrous and Matt Buell, Classics, Buffalo University
Gournia 2008-2009: Revealing a Minoan Town on the Aegean Coast

12:40 – 2:00 pm – Lunch

Chair – 2nd session: Professor Maria Shaw, Art, University of Toronto

2:00 pm – Professor Joe Shaw, Art, University of Toronto
Tracing the Ancestry of the Minoan Hall System

2:30 pm – Professor Rodney Fitzsimons, Classics, Trent University and Dr. Evgenia Gorogianni As the Tide Turns: Local Responses to Pan-Aegean Cultural Changes at Ayia Irini, Keos

3:15 pm – Professor Angus Smith, Classics, Brock University
The Humble Dead: Mortuary Ritual in the Minoan/Mycenaean Hinterland

3:30 – 4:00 pm – Coffee Break

4:00 pm – Professor Carl Knappett, Art, University of Toronto
Network thinking in the Aegean Bronze Age

4:30 pm – Professor Dimitri Nakassis, Classics, University of Toronto
Apocalypse or Liberation? Narratives of Collapse in the Greek Late Bronze Age

5:00 pm – Lectures Conclude