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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.
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.
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.
Although the exact causation is still debated among archaeologists and historians, the collapse of many, if not all of the Mycenaean population centers, ushered in a dramatic change in the weapons, tactics, and the very nature of Mycenaean warfare.
12 Ιαν 2012 · This article provides a concise history of weapons and warfare in the Aegean during the Bronze Age. Aspects to be covered are offensive equipment, defensive equipment, and chariotry.
Specifically, in the first bronze-working system, the enlisted smiths had a certain amount of bronze allotments. The smallest allotment to a smith in Jn-series, 1.5 kg, was sufficient for 1000 arrowheads (Chadwick, referenced by Smith 1992, 179).
Mycenae was inhabited for several millennia before the start of the Bronze Age and remained occupied, if not prosperous, for at least a millennium after its end. The site lies on a rocky knoll between two hills in the northeast corner of the Argive plain some eight miles from the sea.