Phourni
Tholos Tomb B
Tholos Tomb B -- the dromos entrance
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Continuing southwards through the cemetery we come to Tholos Tomb B.
Tholos Tomb B was built before 2000 BCE at the end of the Early Bronze
Age and was almost certainly used for the burial of people of royal descent
up until LM IIIA so it remained in use for hundreds of years.
Tholos Tomb B
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Although the Tholos Tomb B complex, which numbers 12 spaces, underwent
modifications, especially during the early period of its existence, it
was essentially a rectangular complex with the tholos tomb at its centre.
The dromos approaches the tholos from the south east and the tholos had
two side chambers, one to the west and one to the east which no longer
exists. At some point the floor of the tholos was raised and a bench was
built around the tholos wall. At the same time an entrance into the eastern
chamber was opened up. The entrance from the tholos and the entrance to
the western chamber were blocked up.
The south west chamber seems to have been built around the larnax which
it contained since it would not have been possible to manoeuvre the larnax
into the chamber after it was built. The larnax was in fact an ossuary, containing
the bones of 19 people, including two children. Most of the people had died
below the age of 35.
Tholos Tomb B complex -- the pillar
crypt
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Another chamber in the complex, south-east of the western chamber, is a pillar
crypt, constructed during the second building phase of the MM IA period.
At this point the complex had two storeys and the room above must have
had a funerary function as human remains had fallen through into the pillar
crypt. A silver pin with a Linear A inscription on it had also probably
fallen from the room above.Unusually the walls of the pillar crypt had
been plastered and decorated with frescoes. South of the pillar crypt
is a passage way leading to five steps that lead to the corridor which
lies to the west of the pillar crypt and where sockets for wooden supports
indicate stairs to the second floor.
North-west of the tholos tomb there are two chambers. One contained a disturbed
burial while in the other, the northern side chamber of the tholos tomb, there
had been two burials in two layers. A larnax contained two bodies.
The pre-palatial funerary complex
Funerary buildings
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On three sides of the Tholos Tomb B complex, to the west, south and east,
are the remains of pre-palatial funerary buildings. Tholos Tomb B was built
on top of one of these older buildings, called Funerary Building 7, which
originally had six rooms and extended south and east of the site of tholos
tomb B. When excavated, some of the rooms proved to have been badly disturbed,
but one room yielded up six larnakes containing 14 skulls, while another 15
skulls were found in the spaces between the larnakes. West of Tholos Tomb
B is room 6, which was used as an ossuary. There were in fact six rooms here,
four of which run north-south and each of which was added as the need arose
for more burial space. Some of them have no doors and so would have been entered
from above by a staircase. The very large number of skulls and bones found
in this area suggest its use as an ossuary where the bones would be placed
after their removal from the funeral areas.
Tholos Tomb C
This tholos tomb was built above ground level and is one of the best
preserved Pre-palatial tholos tombs in Crete. It was known to be vaulted
because of the way the stones fell when its roof collapsed. Funerary building
9 served as a butress to the eastern part of the tomb. The burials found
here dated to the EM III period (2250-2100 BCE). Eleven larnakes were
found in the tomb together with a pithos burial containing the remains
of 18 people in total. 24 bodies had been buried between the larnakes
and three more in the entrance, giving a total of 45, the first time a
known number of burials from this prepalatial period has been identified.
The tholos tomb itself was devoid of funerary offerings but a total of 269
finds were made of which 164 were found buried under the larnakes and the
remaining 95 buried below the surface burials. Among the finds was the richest
group of figurines to be found in the Aegean including a number of Cycladic
figurines.
Tholos Tomb D
Tholos Tomb D is the most southerly building of the Phourni cemetery
and inside was found an undisturbed female burial dating from from LM
IIIA2 (after 1350 BC). This burial took place slightly later than the
royal burial in Tholos Tomb A. Only the one female burial took place here
but it proved to be an extremely important one and the excavators discovered
some very interesting information about royal burials during the LM III
period.
The position in which the body had been placed and the position of the adornments
the body had been be decorated with could be detected. The wealth of the woman
buried here indicates that this is the second most important burial after
that of Tholos Tomb A and once again we are probably talking of the burial
of a member of the royal family.
Tholos Tomb E
Tholos Tomb E
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Tholos Tomb E was probably the first tomb to be built in the Phourni cemetery
as it dates from the EM II period (2400-2300 BCE). Tholos tomb E was also
built above ground but sadly is not very well preserved. One feature that
can still be seen today is the presence of two massive stones that formed
the entrance to the tomb.
Tholos Tomb E
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When excavated Tholos tomb E proved to be undisturbed and two burial
layers were unearthed. The first layer, as noted above, dated to the EM
II period. The later layer, however, dated to a later period, MM IA, (2100-2000
BCE). The large number of offerings in the EM II layer indicate that a
large number of burials must have taken place. However, evidence for these
burials was destroyed when the tomb was once more used for burials in
the later MM IA period. What is known is that the burials were surface
burials and that at least two larnakes had been used. Among the funerary
offerings from the EM II layer were eight seals, some of them the earliest
firmly dated seals of this type from Minoan Crete to be found.
The MMIA layer of the tomb produced evidence of 56 burials of which 36 were
contained in 29 larnakes and two pithoi while the other burials had been placed
on the ground between the larnakes. The first larnakes had been placed against
the walls of the tholos and then progressively towards the centre of the tomb,
piled up one on top of the other so that there were three on top of each other.
Once again the most interesting of the funerary offerings were the seals.
Information taken from the guide book to Archanes by J
and E Sakellarakis which contains an absolute wealth of information about
all the excavations in the area of Archanes as well as photographs of the
many finds from the graves. Published by Ekdotike Athenon.
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