Kato Phournos tholos
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Κάτω Φούρνος | |
The tomb's stomion (entrance), viewed from over the chamber, in 2013 | |
Location of the Kato Phournos tholos in the Peloponnese | |
| Location | Mycenae, Argolis, Greece |
|---|---|
| Coordinates | 37°43′52″N 22°44′57″E / 37.73111°N 22.74917°E |
| Type | Mycenaean tholos tomb |
| History | |
| Material | Poros stone |
| Periods | Late Helladic IIA |
| Site notes | |
| Excavation dates |
|
| Archaeologists | |
| Public access | Yes |
| Designated | 1999 |
| Part of | Archaeological Sites of Mycenae and Tiryns |
| Reference no. | 941 |
The Kato Phournos tholos[a] is a Mycenaean tholos tomb at the Bronze Age site of Mycenae in southern Greece. It is one of the earliest tholos tombs (tholoi) at the site, dating to the Late Helladic IIA period (c. 1635/1600 – c. 1480/1470 BCE). Like other examples of the type, it consisted of a round burial chamber surmounted by a corbelled roof, itself entered by a narrow rectangular passage known as the dromos. It is situated on the west side of the Panagia Ridge, approximately 600 m (660 yd) west of the settlement.
The tomb was lined with ashlar masonry and contains a large burial pit in its chamber. It was looted in antiquity, and noted by early travellers to Mycenae. It was first recorded by the antiquary William Gell following a visit to Mycenae in 1805, though Gell mistook it for the remains of a gate. It was excavated by Christos Tsountas in 1893 and by Alan Wace, who also re-examined Tsountas's spoil heaps, in 1922. Finds from the tomb included the remains of several Palace Style storage jars (amphorae), made on Minoan Crete and approximately contemporary with the tomb's construction, as well as several fragments of Mycenaean pottery which postdated it, and a large number of female terracotta figurines from the archaic period (c. 700 – 479 BCE).
The Kato Phournos tholos is a Mycenaean tholos tomb.[3] Tholos tombs, or tholoi, are a form of monumental burial that originated in Messenia, in southwest Greece, at the end of the Middle Helladic III period (that is, c. 1700 – c. 1675 BCE).[4] They may have developed as a more monumental version of the burial mounds, or tumuli, used in mainland Greece throughout the Middle Helladic period; they may also have been influenced by similar styles of built tombs used in Minoan Crete.[5]
Tholoi consist of a narrow rectangular entrance passage, known as the dromos,[6] which leads into an underground burial chamber, separated from the dromos by an entrance-way called the stomion, which would usually be sealed with a dry-stone wall. The walls of the chamber, and sometimes the dromos, were lined with dry-stone masonry. The chamber was capped with a rounded roof constructed by the technique of corbelling, by which courses of blocks were overlapped in increasingly small circles. They were typically used for multiple burials, perhaps of members of the same family, and many were periodically re-opened for additional interments and for ritual activity.[5]
During the Late Bronze Age, a total of nine tholoi were constructed at Mycenae.[7] The Kato Phournos tomb dates to the Late Helladic IIA period (c. 1635/1600 – c. 1480/1470 BCE),[8] the first period in which the tombs were constructed at the site.[9] It is located approximately 600 m (660 yd) west of the settlement,[10] on the western slope of the Panagia Ridge.[7]
The tomb's dromos is 12 metres (39 ft) long and 3 metres (10 ft) wide,[11] and was lined with blocks of poros stone cut and dressed with hammers and chisels into ashlar masonry.[12] The stomion is 4 metres (13 ft) high, 2 metres (6.6 ft) wide, and 4 metres (13 ft) deep,[11] and constructed largely of blocks of coglomerate. The chamber is 10 metres (33 ft) in diameter;[11] Alan Wace, who investigated the tomb in 1922, estimated its original height as about 9 metres (30 ft).[12] The chamber contains a large burial-pit, approximately 5 by 2 metres (16.4 by 6.6 ft) in area and 1 metre (3.3 ft) deep, which follows the southwest part of the wall.[13] The floor of the tomb is cut from the rock, and covered in the stomion and chamber with a layer of cement.[12]




