More on Heracles to Alexander the Great exhibition at OxfordIn the 1970s one of Greece’s foremost archaeologists discovered a series of tombs that had lain hidden for centuries beneath the great tumulus of Vergina in the ancient Macedonian city of Aegea.
What Professor Manolis Andronikos had unearthed was the undisturbed and unlooted tomb of King Philip II and other members of Alexander the Great’s immediate family.
“The Macedonians lived under the same political system uninterruptedly for 500 years,” says Robin Lane Fox, Ancient Historian at the University of Oxford. “Nowadays we admire the ancient Greeks for their invention of democracy, but even among the Athenians it lasted much less long.
“Macedon’s system was monarchy, the most stable form of government in Greek history. It persisted from about 650 to 167 BC and only stopped because the Romans abolished it."
Following the mythological origins of the Temenids through to the rise and domination of Aegae as the seat of power of Macedon, the haul of perfectly preserved artefacts opens up a period that stretches from Alexander the Great through classical and Archaic times to the beginning of the first millennium BC.
Among the objects are priceless items including a golden head of Medusa, one of two found in the tomb of King Philip II, together with arms and armour, golden wreaths, marble sculpture and exquisite silver banqueting vessels.
A queen and high-priestess, wife of Amyntas I and most probably mother of Alexander I, she was found in an undisturbed tomb, bedecked head-to-toe in gold jewellery which had been sewn into her clothes.
A reconstruction of this and other burials showcases more treasures including marble heads, figurines, golden shield decorations and a strange collection of terracotta heads that once adorned full size funerary figures.
An international first for the Ashmolean, the exhibition is a rare chance to see a wealth of objects ranging from beautifully intricate gold jewellery, silverware and pottery to sculpture, mosaic floors and architectural remains.
The Exhibition runs until August 29 2011.
Author: Richard Moss | Source: Culture 24 [April 06, 2011]