Spectacularly Preserved Settlement from Ancient Greek Legends Discovered
In the distant centuries before Homer wrote the Iliad, the real-life progenitors of the epic poem's characters might have visited a small harbor outpost on the Greek coast.
Archaeologists have discovered a spectacularly preserved walls of an ancient harbor town of built 3,500 years ago along an isolated, rocky stretch of Greek shoreline by the Mycenaeans, the civilization on which many of the Homeric legends were based.
“This is really a remarkable find,” said Professor Daniel J. Pullen,
chairman of FSU’s Department of Classics. “It is rare indeed to locate
an entire town built during the Late Bronze Age that shows this level
of preservation.”
Pullen and a colleague, Assistant Professor of
Classical Studies Thomas F. Tartaron of the University of Pennsylvania,
led students from both universities in conducting an initial study of
the site during May and June of 2007. What they found was unique: an
archaeological site that required very little digging.
“Because
of soil erosion and tectonic subsidence” -- the latter induced by
earthquakes along the numerous local faults -- “much of the soil had
already been stripped from the site,” Pullen said. “So the
architectural remains of about 20 acres of closely built structures
were plainly visible.”
Although more than three millennia of earthquakes and other factors
have collapsed the structures, what remains are the buildings’
foundations, walls that in some places still stand nearly 5 feet tall,
and a number of clues as to the settlement’s construction and purpose.
“All
of the structures were laid out in a grid pattern, which suggests that
the entire community was planned and then built all at once, rather
than piecemeal,” Pullen said. “This would indicate that the settlement
was built with some strategic purpose -- perhaps as a military or naval
outpost.”
The settlement, referred to as Korphos-Kalamianos by
Pullen and Tartaron, rests on the shores of the Saronic Gulf in the
western Aegean Sea about 60 miles to the southwest of the Greek
capital, Athens. Directly across the gulf, the ancient city-state of
Kolonna on Aigina likely was a rival of the emerging city-state of
Mycenae, which sits about 40 miles inland to the west, during the
period between 1400 and 1200 B.C. when Korphos-Kalamianos was built.
“We
have identified some fortification walls with gates on the inland side
of Korphos-Kalamianos, which does suggest that the town had at least
some role as a fortress, possibly to protect the harbor,” Pullen said.
Pullen
and Tartaron’s 2007 work involved conducting a systematic study of the
architectural remains at Korphos-Kalamianos and producing an accurate
map of their location using Global Positioning System and other
high-tech instruments.
“We don’t know exactly why, but some
portion of the settlement is now submerged in the Saronic Gulf,” Pullen
said. “We can say that in the Bronze Age the configuration of the
coastline at Kalamianos was very different from that of today. So this
summer, we plan to collaborate with Greece’s department of underwater
antiquities on a bathymetric survey of the shallow waters around the
Korphos region that should clarify aspects of the Bronze Age
coastline.”
Posted by Casey Kazan.
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