Cycladic and Minoan Art
Introduction to Greek Art
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Proto
Greek Art
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1500 |
Theran Volcano Explosive Eruption |
1450 |
Collapse of Minoan culture; |
| 1450 - 1200 |
Mycenæ dominates trade in the Mediterranean |
| 1250 |
Lion Gate at Mycenæ. |
| 1250 - 1240 |
¿Ten year long Trojan War? |
The splendid Mycenæan culture, with its vast fortified palace-settlements, dominates the Aegean region in the last half of the 14th and the 13th centuries BC. Trade-oriented expansionism results in Mycenæan pre-colonial trading posts in the western Mediterranean, while the Trojan War presumably establishes Achaean control over the Dardanelles.
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| Woman |
Chariot with Lady Drivers
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Silver and Gold |
Rhyton |
| Limestone Woman's Head |
The Greek war against Troy should be dated about 1250 to 1240 if it happened at all. The story that Homer tells is problematic as history. The details of the story, the religion, and the society it describes represent a culture that was closer to what Homer was living in than a late Mycenæan one. On the other hand, archeologists are pretty sure that such a war did not occur in Homer's day, and from the text Homer distances himself from the conflict putting it in the distant past. If the story represents history, it is history dressed in clothes of a different culture. Of course it is still a wonderful story with real people and the all encompassing theme of the transient glory and innate stupidity of war. Something that people for thousands of years have not yet taken to heart. A summary of the Greek war against Troy. His two epics The Illiad, covering the last year of the ten year long war, and The Odyssey, covering the ten year long return of Odysseus to his home on the isle of Ithica, became the bible for the Greek Olympian religion and an inspiration for authors, artists, and composers for nearly three thousand years.
Cycladic and Minoan
Art
Introduction to Greek Art
2003-04-19