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Download Free PDF. From Warriors to Raiders: The Evolution of Mycenaean Weapons, Armament and Tactics. Patrick Lowinger. Prior to the 12th century BCE collapse of the Mycenaean citadels (city-fortresses), Mycenaean armies controlled Crete and the western coast and littoral regions of the Aegean Sea.
Prior to the 12th century BCE collapse of the Mycenaean citadels (city-fortresses), Mycenaean armies controlled Crete and the western coast and littoral regions of the Aegean Sea. These armies had developed a rather complex and advanced system of warfare which included considerable advances in weapons, armor and chariotry.
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.
Introduction. The cohesion of military information indicates that the author of the information as imagined. Iliad had contemporary, accurate tactics and injuries cannot be. Inconsistencies may be due to corruption through the ages-long oral transmission or forgery (i.e. ΧΙΙΙ-685).
Especially the Late Helladic palatial tablets from Pylos, Knossos and Mycenae, provide valuable information about the military hierarchy, organization and equipment. These tablets contain public records compiled by the bureaucrats of each palace, and reveal that the military organization and the maintenance of the heavier military equipment ...
Mycenaean Culture. The Mycenaean culture was militaristic, and war and conquest played an important part in Mycenaean life. Soldiers and military scenes are quite common in Mycenaean art. Nonetheless, they were also great traders who took part in the wider Mediterranean-wide web of commerce.
how Mycenaean military was organised, the role it played in the society of the time, and how warfare was physically waged – researched through the mediums of documentary evidence and weaponry.