Knossos Greece

Crète: Knossos. Cette cité abritait le palais du roi Minos, le plus important des palais minoens (vers 2000 ans av J.C.). Les ruines ont été découvertes en 1878 par un crétois, Minos Kalokairinos qui entreprit les premières fouilles. En 1900, l'archéologue britannique, Arthur Evans, achète le site et entame des fouilles de grande envergure et la restauration de Knossos à la découverte de la civilisation qu'il a appelée minoenne, du nom du roi légendaire Minos. En réalité, Knossos est un ensemble complexe de plus de 1 000 pièces imbriquées. C'était un centre administratif et religieux, mais aussi un centre de stockage de denrées. On ne sait pas vraiment à quoi ressemblait le palais .Comme on le voit aujourd'hui, il est le fruit du travail de Sir Arthur Evans qui fit de nombreuses reconstructions très controversées, parfois erronées, à grand renfort de béton. Image credit: │JL│

History
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Knossos, also known as the "Palace of Minos," has a very long history of human habitation, beginning with the founding of the first Neolithic settlement in around 7000 BC.

Knossos grew in size over the centuries until, by the 19th-16th centuries BC, the settlement included a monumental administrative and religious central buildings (i.e., the Palace) as well as a surrounding settlement of 5000-8000 people.

A long-standing debate among archaeologists is whether the Palace acted primarily as an administrative or religious center. It is likely it was a combination of both, as the headquarters of a theocratic culture.

Another important debate is whether Knossos led the administration of Bronze Age Crete or was on equal footing with the several other contemporary palaces that have been discovered on Crete. Many of these palaces on Crete were destroyed and abandoned in the early part of the 15th century BC, possibly by the Mycenaeans.

The palace of Knossos was discovered by Sir Arthur Evans in 1894. However, due to the civil war in Crete against the Turks, it was not until March 16, 1900, that he was able to purchase the entire site and conduct major excavations.

Assisted by Dr. Duncan Mackenzie, who had already distinguished himself by his excavations on the island of Melos, and Mr. Fyfe, the British School of Athens architect, Evans employed a large staff of excavators and by June of 1900 had uncovered a large portion of the palace.

Description
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The remarkable Palace of Knossos is a painstaking reconstruction from original materials excavated on the site by Sir Arthur Evans. The palace seen today was originally built (and restored multiple times) over a period from 2000 to 1250 BC. Visitors tour the site on an elevated walkway.

One of the more remarkable discoveries at Knossos was the extensive murals that decorated the plastered walls. All were very fragmentary and their reconstruction and re-placement into rooms by the artist Piet de Jong is not without controversy.

These sophisticated, colorful paintings portray a society who, in comparison to the roughly contemporaneous art of Middle and New Kingdom Egypt, are conspicuously non-militaristic. In addition to scenes of women and men linked to activities like fishing and flower gathering, the murals also portray athletic competitions, likely of a ritual nature, in which youths performed daring acrobatics on the backs of charging bulls.

The centerpiece of the palace was the so-called Throne Room. This chamber has a dramatic chair built into the wall, facing a number of benches. This room has a tank which it is speculated was used as an aquarium.

Other parts of this extremely large palace include spacious apartments with running water in terra-cotta pipes, flush toilets, long halls with storerooms containing huge ceramic jars used to store grain, a huge amphitheater with tiers of stone steps seating 200, and religious shrines.

The palace is about 130 meters on a side and since the Roman period has been associated as the source of the myth of the Labyrinth.