The Mycenaean legacy: how Greece remembered itself
In the Bronze Age, around 1600 to 1100 BCE, Greek speakers lived in palace centers like Mycenae, Pylos, Knossos, and Thebes. They recorded their acts in clay using Linear B — inventories, offerings, lists of labor. On those tablets we find familiar names: Zeus, Poseidon, and a title like Potnia. The voice of later Greeks did not begin with Homer; it echoes the voice of … Continue reading The Mycenaean legacy: how Greece remembered itself