In the palace of Knossos in Crete,
at the centre of Minoan civilization, a magnificent throne room built
during the 15th century BC is considered the oldest such room in Europe.
Knossos flourished for approximately two thousand years. It had large
palace buildings, extensive workshop installations and luxurious
rock-cut cave and tholos tombs. As a major center of trade and the
economy, Knossos maintained ties with the majority of cities in the
Eastern Mediterranean.
The palace was a great labyrinthine complex of 20,000 meters in length, a
ceremonial, religious and political center that reflected great wealth,
power, and highly advanced architecture.
It was based around a central courtyard with more than one thousand interlinked, maze-like halls and chambers.
The throne room was unearthed in 1900 by British archaeologist Arthur
Evans, during the first phase of his excavations in Knossos.
It was found in the center of the palatial complex and west of the
central court. The chamber contains an alabaster seat on the north wall,
identified by Evans as a “throne,” while two Griffins resting on each
side are gazing at it, seemingly paying obeisance to the figure who sits
there.
They represent mythical creatures that combine a lion and an eagle – two
beasts that rule the land and the earth and symbolize divinity and
kingship. However, these griffins are unusual: although they are
beautifully elaborated with collars and something like a crown, they do
not have wings.
According to Evans’s estimates, a total of thirty people could be accommodated both in the throne room and its anteroom.
Initially, Evans identified the stone throne as the seat of the mythical
king of Crete, Minos, evidently applying Greek mythology. Other
archaeologists suggest that the throne room was a sanctuary of a female
divinity and that a priestess who sat there was her the person who
represented her on earth.
According to most archaeologists, the throne itself may have actually had more religious than political significance, functioning in the re-enactment of epiphany rituals involving a High Priestess, as suggested by the iconography of griffins, palms, and altars in the wall-paintings. More recently, it has been suggested that the room was only used at dawn at certain times of the year for specific ceremonies.
Various archaeologists claim that the room and its furniture most
likely date to the time of the Mycenaean takeover circa after 1,450 BC
when political conditions in Crete were entirely different, as indicated
by the concurrent appearance of elite tombs, individual burials and the
presence of the Mycenaean Greek “Linear B” script.
At that time, the palace at Knossos seems to have been modified in a
minor way in order to include features such as the throne room.
Especially, the stylized paintings of heraldically opposed griffins were
popular in later era Mycenaean wall painting but not seen before in
Crete.
For instance, similar wall decoration was also found in the throne room of the Mycenaean palace of Pylos in the Peloponnese.
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