English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

In other words,what are the reason that causes the destruction of Knossos?

Thanks in advance for helping.

2007-11-16 16:20:17 · 5 answers · asked by Kirin Desuke 2 in Arts & Humanities History

5 answers

Knossos
The Minoan Palace of Knossos lies at a distance of 5 km from the town centre of Iraklion along the road to Archanes.
Knossos South Propylaea

The Palace of King Minos

The imposing Palace is built on the hill of "Kefala" next to the river "Kairatos", in a site which was admired for its natural advantages, the strong position, good water supplies, access to the sea and proximity to a large fertile forest. The forest that produced the "Cephalonian Pine" a tree that supplied the beams and the columns for the construction of the Palace.

The site itself includes the Palace of Knossos, The Minoan Houses, the "Little Palace", the "Royal Villa", the villa "Dionysos" with famous Roman mosaics, the south Royal Temple - Tomb and the "Caravanserai".

The Palace and the Minoan houses are open for visits to the public. It is well known that the area lies on a great seismic site. The Palace had been destroyed time after time and always emerged from its ruins more magnificent than before until the last time that there was no recovery.


Excavations showed that the area was inhabited since the Neolithic times (6000 BC and perhaps even earlier) and verified that the Neolithic levels of Knossos are amongst the deepest in Europe.

An important Pre Palace already existed on this Neolithic site as far as 3000 BC. while the first Palace was built around 2000 BC and destroyed 300 years later.

On the same site a new Palace was built, more elaborate than the previous, only to be severely damaged from an earthquake one hundred years latter.

During this period we see the development of a series of satellite buildings like the "Little Palace", the "Royal Villa" and the "South House". Knossos has now developed into a large city whose population - judged by the adjacent cemeteries - must have not been less than 100 000 inhabitants.

The Palace now lives and prospers until the next disaster of around 1450 BC connected to the volcanic eruption of Santorini. Following this event, it is restored once more and used by the Achaean sovereign until at least 1380 BC although other city states in Crete had already been destroyed.

After its final destruction the palace was not used again except for the "temple of Rhea" in later historical times.


Knossos survived through the historical times as a great city - state until the first Byzantine times. Its final decline came during the Middle Ages where it was diminished to an unimportant small village with the name "Makrys Toihos".

Its central court divides the Palace of Knossos into two wings, the West and the East. The West wing where the visitor enters today is where the religious and official staterooms are found while domestic rooms and workshops occupy the East wing.

2007-11-16 16:26:22 · answer #1 · answered by amoxi7 3 · 0 0

No. Archaeologists are nonetheless working in this, regardless of the shown fact that that is going to probable consistently proceed to be a secret. we don't even understand what the Minoan civilisation referred to as themselves (no, it wasn't Minoan - that regulate into accompanied as a label of convenience). And am I the only individual who shows that utilising BCE quite of BC is extremely stressful?

2016-11-11 21:26:36 · answer #2 · answered by clapper 4 · 0 0

earthquake, possibly connected to the eruption of the Santorini volcano

2007-11-16 16:22:17 · answer #3 · answered by baystreet690 4 · 1 0

Probably an earthquake

2007-11-16 17:30:47 · answer #4 · answered by brainstorm 7 · 0 1

It was probably an earthquake.

2007-11-16 16:50:50 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers