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  1. The military nature of Mycenaean Greece (c. 1600–1100 BC) in the Late Bronze Age is evident by the numerous weapons unearthed, warrior and combat representations in contemporary art, as well as by the preserved Greek Linear B records.

  2. 8 Ιουν 2021 · There are a lot of bad takes with respect to what warfare was like in the Late Bronze Age Aegean. In this article, Josho Brouwers offers a comprehensive overview of Mycenaean warfare.

  3. The Mycenaean military was a formidable force in the Late Bronze Age, characterized by its well-equipped and organized warrior class, advanced fortifications, and effective use of chariots and infantry.

  4. 12 Ιαν 2012 · The earliest concrete evidence for warfare in the Aegean comes from the Early Bronze Age, as the large number of daggers on Crete indicates. However, it is with the rise of the Mycenae that a warlike ethos becomes more prominent, as is evident by the numerous and spectacular weapons retrieved from the Shaft Graves at Mycenae, as well as the ...

  5. This paper investigates these early iconographic and literary accounts, asking whether they should be seen as “warfare” in the formal sense, as piratical (and anti-piratical) naval operations, or as a combination of both, and seeking to define these terms in the context of the Late Bronze-Early Iron Age transition.

  6. Myth and legend from the Classical world told us of the existence of an earlier complex society: The Mycenaeans. Echoes of Atlantis may well be found in the Minoan world. Tales of the Dorians and returning Heraclids are, however, not popular.

  7. In the Late Helladic period the Mycenaeans established an extraordinary network of overseas contacts, which stretched the length of the Mediterranean and beyond.

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