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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.
- Swords in ancient Greece - Ancient World Magazine
Further reading. If you want to read more about swords in...
- Encased in bronze - The panoply from a Mycenaean tomb at Dendra
When it comes to the history of warfare in the Late Bronze...
- Swords in ancient Greece - Ancient World Magazine
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.
The valuable tableware and ritual vessels, the daggers with the impressed decoration, the masterful signet rings, the exotic artefacts as well as the large number of bronze weapons of the deceased rulers comprise the first unit of the exhibition.
Local workshops produced utilitarian objects of pottery and bronze, as well as luxury items, such as carved gems, jewelry, vases in precious metals, and glass ornaments. Contact with Minoan Crete played a decisive role in the shaping and development of Mycenaean culture, especially in the arts.
Provenance: Mycenae, Grave Circle A, Tomb V Dimensions: L. 16 cm., w. 4.7 cm. Date: 16th c. BC Exhibition Place: Room 4, Showcase 1. The luxurious bronze dagger found in the same burial assemblage as the famous ‘Agamemnon mask’, preserves the decorated blade intact, except for the tip where the -probably- gilded handle applied.
26 Ιουν 2020 · When it comes to the history of warfare in the Late Bronze Age Aegean, an important find is the bronze panoply recovered by Swedish archaeologists from a tomb at Dendra in 1960.
In the second half of the nineteenth century, archaeologists began to focus on understanding prehistoric Greece and its extraordinary flowering during the Greek Bronze Age (about 3000–1050 B.C.).