"Bronze Age's echo,
Mycenae's enigmatic
Tomb of kings and myths."
—h/t ChatGPT
This photo-of-the-day was taken at Mycenae, Greece. It shows a large
underground beehive-shaped tomb constructed between 1400 and 1200 BCE. It was
the largest dome in the world for a thousand years. Today, no one knows who
was buried here. Sometime in the last three hundred years, it became known as
the Tomb of Agamemnon, the king of Mycenae who commanded the Greeks during the
Trojan War. It's also known as the Treasury of
Atreus, another ancient king of Mycenae known more through myth than
history.
Whatever its true history, we're talking ancient. It's during the late
Bronze Age. For comparison, the pyramids were built in the early Bronze Age, a
thousand years earlier than this tomb. And the Parthenon was built half a
millennium later. There are centuries of history mostly lost to us today.
What's left are the ruins of a few monuments.
A bonus photo of the exterior is after the jump.