Walking your Way to Death. Exploring the Relation Between the Location of Mycenaean Chamber Tombs and Roads in the Argolid

Author:

Efkleidou Kalliopi1

Affiliation:

1. Department of History & Archaeology , Aristotle University of Thessaloniki , Vasilissis Olgas 155, Thessaloniki , 54645 , Greece

Abstract

Abstract A persistent issue with the study of Late Bronze Age (ca. 1600–1100 BCE) chamber tombs in Mainland Greece remains our limited understanding of the factors that governed the choice of location for their construction. Mee and Cavanagh (1990) examined various parameters, such as religious beliefs, distance from settlement, the tombs’ use as territorial markers or relation to roads. They remained, however, inconclusive. The present study revisits this theme, but focuses on one of the factors formerly discussed, that is the relation of the tombs’ locations to roads. As the most extensive record of Mycenaean roads is preserved at the settlement of Mycenae in the Argolid and its hinterland, this site is considered to be the best case-study for analysis. In order to ascertain the significance of roads on the locations chosen for the chamber tombs, this paper builds a methodological approach that makes use of GIS-based mobility analysis and historical cartography. The analysis has shown that, at least at Mycenae, issues of accessibility to the tombs did not play as crucial role as the actual performance of rituals such as the funerary procession. It also sheds light on the form funerary processions probably took at Mycenae and on common notions of wheeled traffic use for the transfer of the dead to their tomb.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Education,Archeology,Conservation

Reference85 articles.

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3. Bevan, A. (2011). Computational models for understanding movement and territory. In V. Mayoral Herrera & S. C. Pérez (Eds.), Tecnologías de Información Geográfica y análisis arqueológico del territorio: Actas del V simposio internacional de arqueología de Mérida (pp. 383–394). Mérida: Anejos de Archivo Español de Arqueología.

4. Bevan, A. (2013). Travel and interaction in the Greek and Roman world. A review of some computational modelling approaches. In S. Dunn & S. Mahoney (Eds.), The Digital Classicist 2013 (pp. 3–24). London: Institute of Classical Studies/ Wiley-Blackwell

5. Bevan, A., Frederick, C., & Krahtopoulou, N. (2003). A digital Mediterranean countryside: GIS approaches to the spatial structure of the post-Medieval landscape on Kythera (Greece). Archeologia e Calcolatori, 14, 217–236.

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