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Aegisthus: dromos and façade after excavation, 1922

 Item
Reference Code: GBR/3437/MCNE/3/1/4/2
Aegisthus: dromos and facade after excavation
Aegisthus: dromos and facade after excavation

Scope and Contents

From the File:

The Aegisthus tomb is one of the three earliest tholoi known at Mycenae, dating to 1600-1500 BC. A. J. B. Wace and his team cleared the dromos, the doorway and two thirds of the chamber in 1922. (The remaining third of the tholos was deemed too dangerous to complete its clearance in 1923.)
The tomb receives its name in reference to its proximity to the ‘tomb of Clytemnestra’, equally imaginatively named in reference to Homeric epic. In the Odyssey Aegisthus features as the lover of queen Clytemnestra, her co-conspirator in the murder of her husband Agamemnon, and lastly as king of Mycenae.

Dates

  • Creation: 1922

Creator

Extent

1 photographic print(s) (1 photograph)

Language of Materials

English

Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements

H. 12.2 x W. 16.3 cm, contact print.

Repository Details

Part of the University of Cambridge: Faculty of Classics Archives Repository

Contact:
Faculty of Classics
Sidgwick Avenue
Cambridge CB3 9DA United Kingdom
+441223 335193