The one step never taken in determining the purpose of the 'Cyclopean Wall' was to show that all the segments that supposedly constitute this wall actually are parts of a single structure. Broneer, Simpson, and others all merely assumed that this was true. [1]
Wiseman also accepted Broneer's interpretation of these segments as one structure but he does try to justify why they all should be considered the same structure. [2]
However, the sparse nature of these segments, their frustrating undatability, the cross-purposes at which they seem to operate, as well as the varying construction techniques and peculiar route of their hypothesized reconstruction cast strong doubt on this automatic assumption.[3]
The discoverer of the first segment, Dr. Kardara, as well as the younger scholars, Morgan, Gregory, Loader, etc. weren't so easily convinced of the unity of this 'wall'. And while they have written clearly on this subject I see no convincing alternative explanations for the nature and location of these several segments.[4]
It is possible to see sections Ro, St, and Sk as having unified significance.[5] It seems that these three segments form a nearly straight-line stretching from the shore of the Saronic Gulf to a spur that leads up to the Mytika plateau. In other words this undoubted single wall (originally) proceeded from the beach, along a rise or bluff over a now-vanished creek, to the closest high ground. This group seems like a straightforward, lowlands coastal defensive wall.I suspect that Pe, Sp, Zo, Vl, and Pa form a complex of their own and divorced from the purposes of the previous. We might say the following things about this 'complex'.
A) Of all the segments in this group only Pe might realistically be part of a defensive wall based solely on the fact that it rests at or near the edge of the Mytika plateau. Broneer tried to emphasize this by suggesting that the forward extensions of Pe were 'small towers'. But the forward extensions of Pe are not 'towers'. Their small size and small extension (2/3 of a meter) are better interpreted as buttresses.[7] Segment Pe does sit on moderately sloping ground and this lends support to the idea that these north-ward projections are simply buttresses. So the attempt to make this stretch a defensive wall is weakened once the 'towers' are disposed of.
B) It is impossible that Sp ever formed part of a defensive wall. The top of Mytika here is about 82 m asl. Segment Sp is at 56 m asl. The difference is 26 m or 85 feet.[8] In other words, behind Sp stretches a steep slope which is the height of an 8 story building. It simply cannot be that this segment was part of a defensive position. It cannot be defended and the rule is that a wall that is not defended will fail. And given the visible trend on both sides of Sp it seems that the course of the wall stayed well below the top of the ridge for a much greater distance. Dr. Kardara, the discoverer of the first segments on Mytika, asserted her view that Sp was part of a buttress system for a road.[9] As far as I am aware she seems never to have found a reason for changing her opinion about this.
C) Segment Zo is the odd man out of this group. It appears to have been built for purposes of its own, perhaps it was part of the much later Stadium attached to the Isthmian games. Photographs of Zo taken by an associate of mine dramatically demonstrate how very different its construction is from the other members of this group.[10]
Segment Zo (portion). Photo by Dr. Hajo Becker. 10/2023. All rights reserved. |
D) Vl appears to have been at about the same level as Sp. Not much is known about Vl (it has never been excavated) but, if its elevation was the same as Sp's (and there's no sign of it on the Mytika ridge above where I think it is), then again, it is impossible for it to have been part of a defensive system. I believe that this gives us some weak reason to think that Sp and Vl formed part of the same group. Simpson has suggested that it is obvious that this entire complex formed a defensive structure because it was constructed at the top of (Mytika) ridge. But between Pe and Pa this assertion is simply not true. No one ever built fortifications way BELOW the top of a ridge when a ridge was handy.[11]
E) Just after Vl the valley separating Rachi and Mytika rapidly narrows (from about 100 m to 50 m) and it rises to the level of the Mytika plateau where the Rachi joins it. At this juncture we find the wall segment Pa which seems to have been intended to join the Rachi side to a continuation (no longer to be seen) of Vl. There is no wall continuation to the N on the Rachi side .
The head of the valley in vicinity of Segment Pa. Photo faces N. Rachi on left, Mytika plateau on right. Photo by Dr. Hajo Becker. 10/2023. All rights reserved. |
Rachi on L, Mytika on R. Taken from 37.907818° N, 22.987935° E and facing N.
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This map shows the position from which the previous photo was taken:
F) The Mi and Ge sections form a group of their own. They are close together and are clearly parts of the same wall. At present there is a 980 m gap between Pa and Mi. In antiquity this gap may have been a bit smaller; sections of Mi seem to have been removed by local farmers. How much has been removed of what was originally built is anyone's guess. When we plot Mi and Ge on a map we notice that they do not begin until the end of the Rachi has gone back to the valley floor.
There never was any continuation of the wall on the Rachi side to connect Pa and Mi. In positing such a wall Broneer and Simpson lost sight of something fundamental. It's not often enough remarked that the Mycenaeans were geniuses at getting hillsides to do their work for them. A good example of this is the draining of Lake Copais in Boeotia. In the thirteenth century BC the powers in charge at Orchomenos (some of this is suppositious but the dikes are the best evidence) wished to enlarge the channel of the Melas as a way to drain the Copais Lake. (We do know that Lake Copais was drained under the Minyans.) The trick was to drain the Cephissus (a larger river than the Melas) into the channel of the Melas. They actually did divert the Cephissos river in this way but found that the channel of the Melas wasn't large enough to handle the combined rivers. So they built an enormous 17 km. dike from Orchomenos, just on the S edge of the Melas, and continuing to Topolia Bay on the east where the combined waters were drained into pre-existing sink holes or katavothrae (e.g., the Grand Katavothra at F857) which ring that bay. The point is that the Mycenaeans built nothing or very little on the north side of the Melas. They didn't need to. They simply let the plunging hills on that side be the other side of their channel. [12]
Whatever purpose led to the construction of Group 2 on the Mytika side - that purpose was fulfilled on the Rachi side by just utilizing the steep hills already existing and building little or nothing extra. And our hypothetical builders didn't build additional walls on that side until the Rachi itself terminated in the plain and became too low to carry out their purpose.
What purpose?
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