Myrtos-Pyrgos
Ashlar masonry walls to the east
of the "Country House"
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This site was excavated by Gerald Cadogan between 1970 and 1982. The site is
situated 1.7 kilometres to the west of Fournou Korifi, beside the east side
of the mouth of the river Myrtos on the south coast of Crete. The valley which
it overlooks would have supplied the village and its villa (or country house
as Cadogan prefers to call it), with crops such as barley, vetch and olive oil.
It was situated at the point on the coast where the route down from the mountains
ended up and overlooked the main land route of ancient times from the north
centre of the island towards the east which then ran south of the mountains
which contain the Lasithi Plain. The Myrtos valley is where this route reaches
the sea.
Cadogan divides its long history (from EM II to LM I) into four periods,
Pyrgos I-IV. The settlement here was begun at the same time as neighbouring
Fournou Korifi (EM IIA) and was, like Fournou Korifi, destroyed by fire in
EM IIB.
The tomb from Pyrgos II (MM IA and
after) with the ossuary on the right of the picture
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Unlike Fournou Korifi, however, Pyrgos was resettled, though Cadogan believes
that there may have been a period of desertion first. He dates the resettlement
to Pyrgos II whose beginning corresponds to MM IA. The two-storey house tomb
(pictured right) dates from this period and was used until Late Minoan I. There
were two ossuaries (areas where the bones of the dead are collected after the
bodies have fully decomposed) of which the circular one can be seen in the photo.
The remains of 65 dead were found in the tomb and the ossuaries, including nine
males in extended burials in the tomb chamber. Cadogan dated these remains to
Pyrgos III (the Old Palace period) or to Pyrgos IV (Late Minoan I).
The north-east cistern
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From the Pyrgos III period date the tower and cistern on the north slope
of the hill (see photo left), as well as a smaller cistern on the hilltop
itself. Cadogan believes that a large building existed on the hilltop which
would later form part of the Late Minoan country house whose remains are now
to be found on the site. (See photo below).
The pottery of Pyrgos III is very similar to the pottery that was found
in the Old Palace at Malia on the North Coast of Crete. So it is likely that
there were links with Malia despite the fact that the formidable obstacle
of the Dikti mountains and the Lasithi Plain lie between the two. According
to Cadogan, Pyrgos III also ended with a destructive fire.
The "Country House"
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The country house was built on the top of the hill during Pyrgos IV (Late
Minoan I). In Cadogan's view, the palatial quality of the architecture suggest
that the building must have been the ruling building of the Myrtos valley.
Among the finds were Linear A tablets, clay sealings (the impressions made
in clay by seal stones) and various contents from a shrine. Cadogan points
out that here we have evidence of religion, administration and economic activity
combined on one site. He feels sure that the movable finds taken from the
site have all the hallmarks of a shrine. He writes "The shrine is in the grand
house of the district, the social, economic and administrative centre, which
dominates the country around and lived off its produce. The building is of
metropolitan elegance and its inhabitants put objects of metropolitan workmanship
in their shrine and elsewhere in the house. All the evidence of the country
houses suggest that their links with the palaces, and especially Knossos,
were close; and the presence of bureaucratic documents in the shrine support
this...the blending of god and mammon, and the divine direction of most or
all parts of daily life (which) are such important features of Minoan civilisation.
They were attitudes that permeated the culture of New Palace period society,
or at least that of the grandees."
View south across the site
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The country house was burnt down in Late Minoan IB, though the surrounding
houses in the village were not apparently burnt. To Cadogan this suggests
that the fire was deliberately started, rather than the result of an accident
or earthquake.
In more recent times a watch-tower was built on the top of the hill and
the foundations can still be seen. It is from the Greek word for tower --
Pyrgos -- that the hill and the site take their name. The site is unfenced,
a little difficult to find and a steep climb.
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