Fascinating facts about Mycenae
This site is over 3,000 years old!
Mycenae dates back to around 1600 BCE, making it one of the oldest major archaeological sites in Europe. It flourished during the Late Bronze Age—around the same time the Egyptian New Kingdom was building temples and tombs of its own.
The Lion Gate sculpture is Europe’s oldest
Constructed around 1250 BCE, the Lion Gate features the earliest known monumental sculpture in Europe. Its Cyclopean stonework and heraldic lions make it the most iconic entryway of the ancient Greek world.
The Treasury of Atreus has a tall dome
The beehive tomb, built around the same time as the Lion Gate, has a corbelled dome that rises 14.5 meters. It was the largest of its kind for over a thousand years and rivals the scale of Roman architecture.
Mycenae is a UNESCO World Heritage Site
Designated in 1999, Mycenae is recognized for its cultural importance and well-preserved Bronze Age architecture. Together with nearby Tiryns, it tells the story of Greece’s earliest advanced civilization.
Heinrich Schliemann claimed he found Agamemnon’s mask!
In the 1870s, Schliemann excavated Grave Circle A and discovered a golden burial mask he believed belonged to Agamemnon. While historians now dispute the claim, the mask remains one of the most famous artifacts in Greek archaeology.
The Mycenaeans used Linear B, one of the earliest forms of Greek
Linear B was a syllabic script used primarily for administrative purposes. Found on clay tablets and storage tags, it records inventories, offerings, and land allocations—giving us rare insights into Mycenaean bureaucracy and economy over 3,000 years ago.
They traded with Egypt, Crete, and the Eastern Mediterranean
Artifacts unearthed at Mycenae include Egyptian scarabs, Minoan-style frescoes, and pottery with Levantine influences. These finds suggest the Mycenaeans were deeply embedded in a vast trade network that connected major Bronze Age powers across the Mediterranean.
The underground cistern was a secret lifeline during wartime
Hidden near the palace, a steep staircase carved into solid rock leads to an underground cistern — a brilliant piece of engineering that once supplied water during sieges. This clever design meant Mycenae could survive isolation, showing how advanced and prepared the citadel was for war.
The Mycenae Archaeological Museum houses rare warrior frescoes
Inside the on-site museum, you’ll find fragments of frescoes showing armed warriors and chariots. These images help reconstruct the militaristic and elite nature of this Bronze Age power.