Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Buck, Robert J. The Mycenaean Time of Troubles PDF
Buck, Robert J. The Mycenaean Time of Troubles PDF
.
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of
content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms
of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org.
Franz Steiner Verlag is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Historia:
Zeitschrift fr Alte Geschichte.
http://www.jstor.org
277
278
ROBERT J. BUCK
outside this area, eastern Attica, Achaea, Elis, the Ionian Islands, eastern
Argolid, and southern Laconia, seem to have received influxes of population in
L.H. IIIC." In Elis and Achaea eleven sites have been observed with L.H. III B
remains, but thirteen have L.H. IIIC, including six where no L.H. IIIB has
been recorded.'2Five of the ten L.H. III C sites in the Argolid lie in the eastern
sector, and six of the seven in Laconia are in the south."' Eleven L.H. IIIC
sites lie in eastern Attica.4 The term "refugee areas" is sometimes employed
for these districts.',
Some important sites, such as Mycenae and Tiryns, show evidence of
continued occupation, or of re-occupation, after extensive damage, but others,
such as Pylos, lay desolate. Towns that show continuing occupation, like
Amyklai, preserved a Mycenaean culture, with no sign of external influence.'
There are indications in L.H. III C-i of a faint revival, typified by the production of the Close and Granary styles of pottery. This revival had some influence
in the Cyclades, eastern Attica and the Iolkos area, but not, apparently, at
Argos.17By the end of L.H. IIIC-i, a few decades after the great disaster
Iolkos was destroyed and Mycenae and Tiryns underwent further damage.'8The
revival withered.
The ceramic remains of L.H. IIIB and of L.H. IIIC present a significant
contrast. In the former no local varieties have been recognized in Greece,
except on the basis of fabric; shapes and decorative motifs from different areas
are as uniform as possible with handmade material. In the latter recognizable
local styles evolve quite rapidly, although certain affinities between various
centres are observable.'9It has been inferredthat extensive intercommunication
11 Desborough, 222.
Elis and Achaea: L. H. III B only; Paraleimni (#282), Ayios Pantaleimon (#286),
Drakotrypa (#297), Vrisasion (#303); L. H. III B and III C, Aroe (#287), Koukoura
Chalandritsa (#293),
Ayios Athanasios
Kallithea (#291),
(#289), Troplaneika (#290),
(#298),
Gourgoumisa (#299); L. H. III C only, Ammouli (#279), Kanghadli (#283), Agraphidia (#288), Prostovitsa (#296), Lomboka (#300), Vromoneri (#302).
13 Argolic sites in east: Nauplion, Asine, Old Epidauros, Ano Ira, Hermiolne. The Laconian sites, except for Amyklaion, are around Gytheion and Monemvasia. The distribution
would seem to exclude a seaborne landing in the Laconian area.
14 Ayios Kosmas (#353), Alyki (#355), Vourvatsi (#359), Keratea (#360), Kopreza
(#364), Ligori (#366), Perati (#367), Brauron (#368), Spata (#37'), Velanideza (#373),
Ninoi (#379).
16 Desborough, 222; Broneer, Hesperia 35 (i966), 359f. Desborough and N. G. L. Hammond, CAH2, II, ch. 36, 5 (sep. fasc.).
1' Desborough, 224.
17 J, Deshayes, Argos, Les
louilles de la Deiras (Paris, I966), 248f.; slight recovery:
Desborough, 226, 228, Vermeule, 270; Mylonas, MMA, 228-231.
18 lolkos: Mylonas, MMA, 219, quoting the excavator. Mycenae and Tiryns; ibid.,
12
2 29f.
19 Furumark, The Mycenaean Pottery (Stockholm, 1941), 540; Desborough,
Blegen, Mycenaean Age, 24f.
25f.,
228;
279
existed throughout the Mycenaean world until the end of L.H. III B, but that it
was much diminished after the disasters.20
Whether the devastations took place at much the samie time in Central
Greece and the Peloponnese or over a span of several generations cannot be
determined on the archaeological evidence.21 The erection and strengthening
of walls and fortifications around many cities duiringL.H. III B have led some
to believe that trouble of some sort was expected.22The building of a Cyclopean
wall across the Isthmus of Corinth in the closing phases of L.H. III B leads to
the inference that the population of the northeast Peloponnese expected this
trouble from the north.3 Consequently many authorities have deduced an
invasionior series of invasions in a fairly short lapse of time.24The route would
be overland, with perhaps additional sea attacks along the Adriatic side, because
the Cyclades show no signs of destruction at this time: they seem to continue
an undisturbed existence.> On the other hand, the archaeological evidence is
not incompatible with internecine wars, disputes between areas, class warfare,
or disputes between overlords and feudatories,26and no archaeological trace has
yet been discovered that can be convincingly credited to any invaders.2"
The purpose of this paper is to examine the possible counterparts in Greek
tradition to this archaeologically attested time of troubles on the Greek mainland, to see whether as good a case can be made for associating any of the former with any of the latter. Many of the arguments, however, will depend on
the archaeological placing of the Trojan War, since it is a pivotal point in
anicienttradition. The evidence is equivocal and the interpretation difficult. The
majority of scholars follow Blegen in equating the destruction of Troy VII a
with the legendary capture. Many agree with him in setting it about or "before
the middle stage of ceramic style [L.H.] III B."2 Some, however, consider thic
21
280
ROBERT
J. BUCK
far too early and date it very close to the end of the period.29Others accept a
late date for Troy VII a, but regard VI h as the one destroyed by the Greeks,
thereby combining a late Troy VII a with an early Sack of Troy.3 This serious
divergency of interpretation must be kept in mind as the various possibilities
are considered.
A favorite of many scholars is the equation of the destructions at the end
of L.H. IIIB with the final Return of the Heraklids, which is usually taken as
the Dorian invasion.31This Return took place, accordingto Thucydides (i. I2. 3)
eighty years after the taking of Troy; others say two or three generations or
so.32 The fortifications erected or strengthened around many towns during L.
H. IIIB. could be a response to a threat overhanging the whole area. The wall
at the Isthmus could be a line of defence to protect the Peloponnese in case central Greece were to be overrun (the Spartans' wall after Thermopylae and
Justinian's in the time of the Slavic onslaught would be parallels). According to
Thucydides, Boeotia fell twenty years before the Peloponnese, that is, central
Greece was overrun first. The destructions in Boeotia couldbe earlier than those
in the Peloponnese; Thebes was destroyed sometime near the end of L.H. III B,
perhaps somewhat earlier than Peloponnesian sites.`* The wide devastations
could be considered the work of the Dorians and their fellow hillmen of the
Northwest Greek tribes as they flooded into the Mycenaean areas; the refugee
areas would be those to which many of the surviving Mycenaeansfled. Herodotus (I. I45; cf. 7. 94) and Pausanias (7. I. 7, 2. i8. 8, 6. 38. I) tell how the
defeated Achaeans occupied Achaea; how Attica became a haven for exiles
(Thuc. i. 2. 6); and how the Neleids left Pylos in haste (Paus. 4. 3. 3-8).
29 Mylonas, MMA, 2f5f., and Hesperia 33 (x964), 352-380, argues for a date at the end
of L. H. III B on the basis of the Mycenaean pottery at Troy, some of which is transitional
III B-C, he says. Vermeule, Greece in the Bronze Age, 274-278, dates Troy VIIa to early
L. H. III C and the war to a brief period of recovery after the devastations.
30 C. Nylander, Antiquity 37 (i963), 6-ii,
and 0. Broneer, Hesperia 36 (1966), 36If.
Their date for the Trojan War is about the same as Blegen's, while they place the end
of Troy VIIa in L. H. III C.
31 Stubbings, CAH2, II, ch. 27, igf. (sep. fasc.); Blegen, The Mycenaean Age, 25-28,
and AJA 64 (ig60), 159f.; Lord William Taylour, The Mycenaeans (London, i963), 175;
Broneer, Hesperia 35 (I966), 357-362, and Antiquity 30 (1956), 9-i8; G. L. Huxley, The
Early Ionians (London, I966), 19f.; C. G. Starr, The Origins of Greek Civilization (New
York, i96i), 6I-64; for earlier literature see H. Bengtson, Griechische Geschichte2 (Munich,
I 960), 49-5 1.
32 E.g., Paus. 4. 33, 8. 5. I; Vell. Pat. I. 2. i. Thucydides' figures are often supposed,
for no particularly good reason, to derive from Hellanikos. Hammond, CAH2, II, ch. 36,
pp. 22f., 26f., 33 (sep. fasc.), argues by extension from Thuc. I. 9. 2. that the sources were
ultimately Mycenaean, especially since figures (60, 8o, roo years) not generations are given,
and these to not give convenient multiples of a generation. Possible, but not too convinc-
ing.
3' See Blegen, The Mycenaean Age, 28, for an equation of the Fall of Thebes with the
Dorian Invasion; see also A. Schachter, Phoenix 21 (i967), 8f.
28I
This theory has not, however, met with universal acceptance. Two different
objections have been made. In the first it is pointed out that the great majority
of sites in the areas of the Peloponnese later held by the Dorians lay abandoned
and desolate after the end of L.H. III B. In the few that were still occupied, or
were re-occupied, including Mycenae, Tiryns, Argos and Amyklai, a Mycenaean
culture was maintained until well down into L.H. III C.mFurthermore a slight
recovery is observable in the Argolid and some other areas; the very doubtful
traces of new, non-Mycenaean, features do not appear until L.H. IIIC-2.36
Where, then, is the evidence for new peoples and for new settlers right after
the troubles? Certainly the Dorians must have entered the Peloponnese at some
stage, but, so the argument runs, they must have done so much later than the
end of L.H. III B. Even if the evidence for new features is to be rejected, this
objection is still very persuasive against any belief in an assault immediately
followed by settlement, and consequently against a single Dorian invasion as a
satisfactory counterpart to the archaeologically attested destructions.
The second objection is far less compelling. It is made by some of those
who place the sack of Troy near the end of L.H. III B, a few years before the
destructions on the Mainland. Since there is a traditional timespan of eighty
years, or two to three generations, between the capture of Troy and the return
of the Heraklids, obviously, it is argued, the destructions at the end of L.H. III
following so soon after the Trojan war, cannot be the work of the Dorians.36On
the basis of a chronology from tradition a Dorian invasions at that time is
rejected.
The cautious use of traditional materials, including chronologicalindications,
may be permitted in confirming or supporting other evidence; but, given the
nature of early Greek chronologies, it is most unwise to rely on them in constructing an argument. Forsdyke37has said all that is needful on their dubious
qualities. In this case chronologies and genealogies based on tradition are of
little value for denying the possibility of a Dorian invasion at the end of
L.H. IIIB. But the first objection is valid. Therefore the final Dorian attack
of tradition is an unlikely counterpart for the destructions at the end of L.H.
III B.
A second possible counterpart might be one (or more) of the earlier attempts
of the Heraklids to return. At least four are found in tradition, and they form
an extremely tangled mass, confused in chronology and in event.
One has it that the Heraklids overran the Peloponnese "and took all the
cities. After a year had elapsed plague visited all the Peloponnese, and an
oracle made it clear that this had happened because of the Heraklids: they
34 Desborough, 250-257
and CAH2, 1I, ch. 36, 5-7 (sep. fasc.).
35 Desborough, 252.
86 Mylonas, Hesperia 33 (I964), 352-380,
and MMA, 227f.
37 Greece before Homer (London, 1956), esp. pp. 28-43.
ROBERT J. BUCK
282
had come back before the proper season."" A kind of addendum notes that
Tlepolemos, after killing Likymnios, went into exile from Argos during that
year. The chronological indications do not help much: this attack took place
some three generations before the final assaults, which gives a fairly wide
range around the Trojan War. The setting before the War seems to depend
on the inclusion of Tlepolemos. But he is readily separable from the tradition
of invasion. Page and others are doubtless correct in regarding him as an
anachronismvis-a-vis the rest of the Heraklids, from an originally separate tradition, and to be disassociated from the Dorians.39Some have even regarded the
presence of Tlepolemos at Argos as an attempt, probably of Argive manufacture, to connect the Argolid and Rhodes ;40for in Diodoros (4. 58. 5-7) he enters
Argos peaceably. Clearly a tradition of invasion was utilized to give an alternative explanation of his entrance into Argos. The invasion may be severed
from Tlepolemos, and can then be dated as late as a generation after the War.
Unfortunately, however, one cannot say whether it is an old tradition or not.
It may be Pherekydan, but it may have originated from a dramatic source
at Athens about the time of the Great Plague.
Two of the other invasion tales are very much alike. An attack was made
on the Isthmus; the Heraklids were defeated and lost a leader in the process,
Hyllos by the hand of Echemos in one story, Aristomachos by the hand of
unnamed persons in the other.u The Heraklids withdrew, in the Hyllos version
to eastern Attica (Trikorythos in Diodoros), and presumably there in the one
about Aristomachos. They agreed to remain for a span of time, fifty or one
hundred years in the Hyllos version (depending on the source).
The fourth was an abortive combined land and sea assault based on
Naupactus. Some unspecified disaster destroyed the fleet, and a famine discouraged the army.42
The assault by Aristomachos and the combined operation are set a couple
of generations after the Trojan War, in the reign of Tisamenos at Mycenae.
The Hyllos story is usually dated a generation earlier than the War, but
Pausanias (I. 4I. 2), puts the incident in the reign of Orestes, though he later
retracts (8. 5.
I).
The Hyllos and Aristomachos stories are so very similar that they are surely
duplicates, given different leaders for chronological reasons. This is not an
improbable occurrence in Greek legend. Echemos in association with Hyllos
-mApollodoros 2. 8. 2.
see also E. Wust,
39 Page, History and the Homeric Iliad (Berkeley, I959), 147-I49;
i617.
and
references
RE 12 (I937), I614-I6I8 S.V. "Tlepolemos,"
40 Wilst, op.cit., (n. 39), I617 and Rieman, RE Supp. 8 (1956), 259 s.v. "Likymnios";
Hammond, CAH2, II, ch. 36, 28 (sep. fasc.).
41 Apollodoros 2. 8. 2. For the Echemos-Hyllos version see Diodoros 4. 58. I-5; Paus.
I. 41. 2, I. 44. IO, 8. 5. I, 8. 45. 3, 8. 53. Io; IIdt. 9. 26. Echemos is mentioned in Hesiod
(frgs. go, 93 Rz).
42 Apollodoros 2. 8. 2.
283
seems most unlikely. Dikaiarchos, quoted in Plutarch (Thes. 32), tells how
Echemos and a certain Marathos came to Attica from Arcadia with the Tyndarids; after some fighting they took Aphidna and, apparently, areas further
south: Marathos is the eponym for Marathon, and Echemos allegedly for the
Academy (a bad guess). Echemos, then, is given some connection with eastern
Attica, the area where the Heraklids are supposed to have settled, when (as
far as I can compute) Hyllos and his kinsmen are supposed to have been
there.
The most reasonable explanation for this state of affairs would seem to be
that two interpretations were later made of a vague folk-memory of an incursion of Peloponnesians into Attica anid of their temporary settlement. By
somleit was taken to refer to Heraklids, by others to Arcadians and Laconians.
The latter, since the "refugee areas" of L.H. III C seem Mycenaean, is presumably the interpretation closer to truth. A warm memory of the killing of an
enemy chief might well be cherished among a dispossessed group of Arcadians.
Since they were not the only refugees in the area,"3the story could be spread,
and become common property, and suffer some mutation in the process. To
judge by analogies in other oral traditions, a memory of some disaster at the
Isthmus and of a separate killing of an enemy chief could easily be combined
into a tale of the defeat and death of that chief at the Isthmus." Thus the
tradition about Echemos should be regarded with great suspicion.
The story of Hyllos is equally improbable. Several modern scholars have
suggested that he and his brothers were originally cast in the role of conquerors
of the Peloponnese;45when genealogies were compared he seemed a little too
close to Herakles for a comfortable fit. Consequently he was moved back before
the Trojan War, and his invasion with him. Echemos was recruited to put him
firmly in place. One might conclude from all this that there was no first invasion, but to do so would probably be wrong.
For one thing all these legends, excepting the Hyllos version as we now have
it, agree that something happened a couple of generations after the Trojan
War, earlier than and not to be confused with the final Return. The tradition
in Pausanias (9. 5. 8) that Autesion, the king of Thebes, two generations after
the Trojan War, settled with the Dorians, might be considered here as well.
Then there is one little scrap, the famous oracle that told the Heraklids to wait
until the "third crop."46 However this is interpreted, it seems very probable
43 There is a tradition that Orchomenians and other Boeotians set out from Thorikos
with many Peloponnesians. Nikolaos of Damascus, FGrH go F 51.
44 Compare, for example, the Song of Roland with what is recorded as
having happened
in history.
"@E. N. Tigerstedt, The Legend of Sparta in Classical Antiquity (Stockholm, 1965),
34 and his notes for earlier citations. Add Eitrem, RE 17 (19I4), 123 s.v. "Hyllos", no. 3.
48 Apollodoros 2. 8. 2; see also K. Muiller, The Dorians (London, 1839), I,
63f, who
argues for a source in Attic drama for the passage in Apollodoros.
284
ROBERT J. BUCK
285
bronze swords and spears of L.H. III B and L.B. III C dates have been recovered
from Epirus, more than might be expected to be held by prinmitiveherders.50
The flocks, and their wool, provided some degree of prosperity and hence
of (imported) bronze swords of good Mycenaean style. Mountaineers well
equipped with weapons have frequently in history subdued their lowland
neighbours.
A second objection is that the concentration on the early Dorians and
their adventures in the Peloponnese is apt to lead to neglect of the problems
of Central Greece and Thessaly. These areas must be accounted for, if the
traditional counterpart is to fit satisfactorily. This is not really much of an
objection. The traditional evidence from Boeotia and Thessaly is pretty scanty
at best; their chronologies (in spite of Thucydides) are shaky, but Thessalian
and Boeotian settlements be/ore the final capture of Mycenae, Tiryns, etc.,
as Thucydides says, but after a series of attacks by the various West Greek
tribes had broken the main enemy resistance would dovetail nicely. A possible
objection that the attack on Mycenae was by surprise and so could not be part
of a full-fledged invasion,5' has no merit at all.
In general the traditions that can be interpreted to give this second counterpart are tangled and weak. But there is nothing inherently improbable in
having a set of hard-fighting invaders deliver a series of heavy blows, fall back
or withdraw from certain areas, and later filter into a depopulated land in
increasing numbers, finally overthrowing nearly all of the surviving Mycenaean
fortresses in Greece. The technique of erecting a strongpoint within convenient
distance of the citadel to be reduced, and from it ravaging the surrounding
countryside, was rememberedat Argos (Polyain. 2. 2) and Corinth (Thuc. 4. 42).
This would, presumably, be an effective tactic at any stage.
Several authorities support a third possible counterpart from tradition for the
troubles at the end of L.H. III B: the discords attendant on the return of the
heroes from the Trojan War, and the stasis that lasted for a couple of generations afterward.52Several warriors were killed, deposed or exiled on their
arrivals back home; others, for one reason or another decided to go elsewhere."
Various grim tales record the post-war feuds between rival factions at Athens,
Mycenae, Argos and elsewhere." The Neleids at Pylos were regarded with sus60 N.G.L.Hammond,
51 Mylonas, MMA,22j
Epirus (Oxford,I967), 325-33I, 353-361.
Stasis: Hammond, CAH2, II, ch. 36, 48f. (sep. fasc.). Disputes between rival factions
of nobles: Mylonas, MMA, 232; Vermeule, Archaeology 13 (I960), 71; Wace, Historia 2
(1953), ui8 and Viking, 1954, 222. Social revolution: M. Andronikos, Hellenika i3 (1954),
62
221-240.
53 Thuc. I. 12. 2 is often quoted in this context, and Apollodoros, Ep. 6. See Stubbings
CAH2, II, ch. 27, 16-20 (sep. fasc.) on the Nostoi and a good selection of heroes.
5 Post-War factions: Leukas against Idomeneus; Kometes against Diomedes; Aegisthus
against Agamemnon; Theseids against Menestheus; the Suitors against Odysseus; and
Nauplios against assorted veterans. There are many others.
286
ROBERT J. BUCK
picion by the populace (Paus. 4. 3. 6); Hesiod (Erg. I58-i68) tells of the Race
of Heroes who were utterly destroyed, chiefly in Greece and in the Trojan
War, as well as of the Brazen Race destroyed before the war. There are many
stories, too, of unrest and warfare in pre-War Greece: the troubles at lolkos;
the quarrels in the family of Tyndarus; the destruction of Thebes; the feud
of Atreus and Thyetes; the devastations by Heracles; the defeat of Eurystheus.
It was pointed out long ago that breaks occur in the genealogies a couple of
generations before the War,55as if new ruling families had taken over in many
parts of Greece. All in all there are plenty of traditions reflecting much unirest
around the time of the War, both of disputes between factions of nobles, and
of warfare between districts. The War itself is sometimes regarded as a major
incident among these, an unwise one."M
There is a small amount of external evidence that may, perhaps,bear on this
argument. The Hittite records occasionally refer to a land termed Ahhijawa.57
Sometime between I250 and I200 i.e., in the latter part of L.H. IIIB, the
Ahhijawans seem to have been active along the coast of Asia Minor, particularly in the west. There is mention of Attarssiyas the Ahhijawan indulging
in raids and warfare, and the king of Ahhijawa is present at one stage." If the
Ahhijawans can be equated with the Mycenaean Greeks (Achaiwoi or some
such), in spite of certain philological difficulties,69then the latter were campaigning on the coasts of Asia Minor, just as the legends say they were, at
an appropriate time. It might be argued that a combination of dislike by the
populace of the ruling families, perhaps aggravated because many were newcomers, and of suspicion of these new rulers in the older noble families, had
produced certain strains within the L.H. IIIB area. In easing these strains
certain areas, such as Thebes, had suffered violence. Both defeated and successful groups went overseas on raids and expeditions, not too successfully. Heavy
Mycenaean casualties in Asia Minor (as reflected in the Trojan legends) may
have produced a dangerous situation back in Greece, one that erupted at the
end of L.H. IIIB. By the time the fighting was over, a combination of local
hatred and family feuds had wrought heavy damage, the leadership was dead
5 Sir John Myres, Who Were the Greeks (Berkeley, 1930), 308-312.
56 J. F. Daniels, AJA 52 (1948), IO9.
57 Page, History and the Homeric Iliad, i-I9
for a useful summary of the evidence.
68 Ibid., 97-11I2 59 Ibid., 3. Page points out that A. must be overseas, and concludes (15f.) that it is the
island of Rhodes. It is important that on other than philological grounds he concludes
that A. is the Hittite term for (a section of) Greece. Pace Sommer, it is also worth remembering that people do mangle foreign words. The late Professor Morris Swadesh told
me that the Indians of Vancouver Island, for example, had a place name "h'uuchuk tli'
ath"; the English rendering is Youchaklsit. No doubt the Hittites could do equally badly
with Greek.
287
or discredited, and the Mycenaean world was ruined. The Dorians and their
friends simply moved in to fill a vacuum.60
This possible counterpart, attractive though it may sound, runs into trouble.
Popular revolts and local hatreds might well affect the great centres, but it is
hard to understand why the devastation was so widespread, why so many
minor sites like Zygouries, Berbati and Eutresis were abandoned, and why there
were such considerable movements of population.6' It is true, on the other
hand, that civil wars of a really savage nature between rival factions might
cause widespread damage and great expulsions, but, if these happened, it is
very odd that the traditions of several of the areas hardest hit at the end
of L.H. III B, such as Messenia, Laconia and Boeotia, have little or nothing to
say about civil difficulties of any sort after the Trojan War. There is nothing
to support any theory of stasis in these districts, and, hence, no traditional
counterpart. Messenia is represented as enjoying, somewhat grudgingly, years
of peace and prosperity under the guidance of Nestor and his two or three
Neleid successors.62The ravagings of Herakles are placed, as early as Homer,
well before the Trojan War." Laconia continued peacefully, if reluctantly,
under the successors of Menelaus for two generations." Its dynastic quarrels
fall before the Trojan War. There is no hint of internecine trouble from Boeotia
unitil three or four generations after the Trojan War.0 The bloody family
fights and the disputes between towns are all set before the War, these, too as
early as Homer. It is possible, I suppose, to argue that the various disasters
affecting these areas somehow got shifted in date by Homer or his predecessors,
but such an argument raises more problems than it solves.
Lowering or raising the archaeological date of the Sack of Troy does not help
much. If it is placed near the end of L.H. III B, traditions of civil discord may
provide an explanation for damage at Mycenae and Argos, but not for any in
Messenia, Laconia, or Boeotia." If it placed in the middle of L.H. IIIB, the
destructions at the end of the period are far too late to arise from immediate
post-War problems anywhere. In the latter case the traditions of stasis could
provide a possible explanation for a weaking of the Mycenaeans, so that a
0 E. Fischer, Antiquitas Hungarica i
I6-i9. I owe this reference to the kindness
(I947),
of Professor T. Kelly.
61 Desborough, 223; cf. Blegen, The Mycenaean Age, 23-25.
s2 Paus. 4. 3. 3; Blegen, The Mycenaean Age, 22.
8 Iliad 5. 392-397; ii. 689-692.
6 Paus. 3. I.
5. These were Orestes and Tisamenos.
r In Paus. 9. 5. 8. Tisamenos is succeeded by Autesion, who goes with the Dorians; he
by Damasichthon of a different family. He in turn by Ptolemaios and Xanthos, his son
and grandson.
6 This point has been noted by Mylonas, MMA, 227, who is therefore compelled to
summon "a piratical attack by people who remain unknown" to explain the destruction of
Pylos. This is perilously close in spirit to the Illyrian theory that he deplores so strongly.
288
ROBERT J. BUCK
later incursion succeed, but they are at present difficult to tie in with any
archaeological data.
The wall at the Isthmus presents a problem: it implies that a considerable
and united effort was possible in L.H. IIIB; it faces north. If it is considered
as a Peloponnesian defence against Mycenaean Central Greece, it does not fit
well with most traditions. They tell of aggression from Argos and Mycenae
against Central Greece, e.g., the Seven and the Epigoni against Thebes, and
Eurystheus against Athens. Very few tales may be read to signify attacks in the
other direction: the Rape of Helen by Theseus, and, perhaps, the assaults of
Herakles. Certainly the wall does not serve any theory of post-War civil
disputes that looks to tradition.
All in all, no matter when the Sack of Troy is dated, the legenids of the
Nostoi and of post-War stasis do not provide a satisfactory traditional counterpart to the devastations of the end of L.H. III B. At the best they may indicate
trouble among the ruling classes of some areas, with grave after-effects on their
ability to undertake effective defence.
It is always possible that the destructions at the end of L.H. III B resulted
from some civil wars forgotten by tradition, but the use of a traditional counterpart, if discoverable, seems a more economical proposition. It seems, then,
likely that the Nostoi and attendant disputes preceded the disasters of the end
of L.H. IIIB.
It is not surprising under these circumstances that several scholars have
argued for still another theory, an incursion into Greece at the end of L.H. II B
unattested in any tradition, most popularly by the Illyrians.67This movement is
usually contemplated in the larger context of the disturbances in the eastern
Mediterraneanthat saw the destruction of the Hittite Empire and the defeat
and settlement of the Philistines. Since sea raids on Greece via the Aegean
seem now excluded by the evidence," the scheme should be one of overland or
Adriatic raiders swooping down for loot, and then either settling or moving on
overseas to Egypt and the Syrian-Palestinian coast. A recently revived
variation on this sees the first wave of Greek-speakingimmigrants, those of the
East Greek branch (lonians, Arcado-Cyprians and Aeolians), coming in at the
end of L.H. III B, followed soon after by their linguistic kinsfolk of the West
Greek branch.69
and AJA 50 (1946), 253 esp. note 9; H. Krahe,
1-20
(1941),
H. Bengtson, Griechische Geschichte2,
5ff.; V. Milojcic, AA, 1948-49, 12-I5;
49-51; C. Nylander, Antiquity 37 (1963), 9f.; see also C. Starr, The Origins of Greek Civilization, 66-69; Vermeule, 271-279.
68 See p. 279 This does not mean that Islanders and Mycenaeans may not have joined in
the journeys to Syria and Egypt, but there was no damage by sea to Greece.
following J. P. Harland
69 S. Hood, The Home of the Heroes (London, 1967), 122-130,
el at.
67
G. Bonfante, CP 36
Antike,
I944,
289
290
ROBERT J. BUCK
FGrH go F 51.
This tradition has left traces in Hdt. I. 146 and Paus. 7. 2. 4, 7. 2. I0 according
to Wilamowitz, SDA W, I906, 65.
77 Nilsson, Mycenaean Origins, 15i, draws the wrong inference from such evidence and
posits several waves of invasion.
78 R. Carpenter, Folk Tale, Fiction and Saga in the Homeric Epics (Berkeley, 1946),
76
117-133.
79
(Colophon),
178-i87
(Teos),
192-I96
76-gI
(Priene),
I I5
(Magnesia),
(Chios).
147-I60
291
21 (1967),
4.
Jacoby,
FGrH II,
2,
affinities.
'9.
ROBERT J. BUCK
292
A relative sequence utilizing tradition could run: first, the taking of Troy;
second, the Thracian attack and the withdrawal of most of the raiders; third,
entrance of the Thessaloi into Thessaly and the expulsion of the Boiotoi; fourth,
the entrance of the Boiotoi into Boeotia; fifth, the Return of the Heraklids.
If the destruction of Troy VII a is set in the middle of L.H. III B, then the
Thracian attack comes two generations or so later. This span of time would
allow for the nostoi and the attendant confusions. The Thessalian invasion,
involving the collapse of Iolkos in L.H. IIIC-i, could cross the wake of the
withdrawing invaders, who would be turning their attention elsewhere. Possibly
the Knobbed Ware of Troy VIIb was left by the forerunners of the Thracians,
Phrygians, and Mysians.89The story that Thracians in Boeotia were eventually
defeated and driven into the fastnesses of Parnassus by the Boiotoi90is explicable if it refers to a straggling group left behind. The entrance of the Boiotoi
could, then, fit Thucydides' sixty years quite well. The Dorians, doubtless somewhat disturbed in their habitats of Doris and Phocis, could start moving their
straggling bands to fill the vacuum in the Peloponnese, some by sea from
Naupactus, some by land through Isthmus. Twenty years after the invasion
of Boeotia by the Boiotoi they could have finally overthrown the disturbed and
weak, though slightly reviving, power of Mycenae. In summary, this theory
looks to Thracians to deliver a series of hard blows at the end of L.H. III B,
with the Dorians and their associates drifting into the Mycenaean areas later.
In spite of all the arguments, this theory is not particularly attractive either.
Tradition preserves no memory of a Thracian attack on the Peloponnese. There
are hints of a Thracian presence in Arcadia; vague memories of some fighting,
somewhere, sometime; obscure links with the Thracian Phlegvians; and some
affinity between Arcadian and Thracian cult practices. This is, however, all
very tenuous, and nothing to build from. The wall at the Isthmus is another
difficulty. If it represents a response to an overrunning of Bueotia, then the
Thracian assault on Central Greece should be set back to mid L.H. III B, which
is on archaeological evidence most unlikely. If it is a response to a Thracian
threat, then this threat must have been apparent as early as mid L.H. IIIB.
This is possible, but not too probable. All in all, if one posits a Thracian assault
as the cause of the destruction at the end of L.H. III B, one finds a fairly good
fit with the evidence from Central Greece, but no fit at all with that from the
Peloponnese.
It is possible, however, that a Thracian assault on Central Greece should
be associated with the early Heraklid attack on the Peloponnese. While the
Thracians were reducing Boeotia, the Heraklids could be profiting by the confusion and could be attacking via the Isthmus. The traditions of the refugees
from the Peloponnese would speak of a Heraklid invasion, with, perhaps, some
89
90
(sep. fasc.).
293
ROBERT J. BUCK
294
somewhat specialized roles." The palace seems to have had a tight control over
the lines of command and to have had rigid channels of communication; and it
has been suspected that this system was organized to keep the populace
subdued.4 A highly centralized and controlled society can easily become disorganized under heavy stress; or, at the least, the centralization and control
become increasingly ineffective. If the populace were becoming disenchanted
with and hostile to their rulers, the possibility of a strong defence would be
substantially reduced.
A disunited or distracted area mav, however, act in such a way that it
appears to have a united and vigorous foreign policy, as history has often
demonstrated. One may consider the state of western Europe in the time
of the first three Crusades as an example for analogy: great disunity existed
amongst the Crusaders, but from a Saracen point of view they were all too
united. The evidence from Hittite sources of extensive activity by the "Ahhiyawa" in Asia Minorin L.H. III B would not be out of place for such a Mycenaean
world as is posited here. The Hittite evidence gives the impression that the
"Ahhiyawa" were roughly handled; epic and other legends give the Greeks
ultimately a victors, but make it plain that losses were heavy in various adventures in Asia Minor, and that any limited confidence originally entertained
in the leadership was gone by the end of the Trojan War. The result could be
the situation underlying epics of the Trojan Cycle and of the legends of the
'Nostoi': loss of confidence in the leadership; hatred and bitterness against
the nobles; consequent attempts at replacement; revolution; interstate wars;
civil wars; murders and exiles. If this were the case, with the military classes
decimated and the survivors fighting amongst themselves, the Mycenaean
world doubtless be so weakened and riven with hatreds that it would no
longer be capable of puttinig up any unified or effective resistance to any
external attack. The collapse of a neighboring state could be regarded with joy
rather than alarm-until it was too late.
The traditions of the Nostoi then, should, at best, refer to troubles in
various states between the Trojan Wars and the Great Catastrophe, troubles
perhaps contributory to the disaster, but not part of it.
Several traditions state that victorious attacks were made against Greece
after the Trojan War. The names of the attackers vary from area to area:
Thessaloi against Thessaly; Thracians and, later, Boiotoi against Boeotia and
other parts of Central Greece; Dorians anidother West Greeks against different
districts of the Peloponnese. All were hillmen, or displaced by hillmen, a
heterogeneous series of bands, originally situated around the periphery of the
Page, History and the Homeric Iliad, 179-187 for a good description.
Mylonas, MMA, 227f., suggests that "the elaborate control over every aspect of life
indicated by the tablets from Pylos" may stem from a regime established by a small
group of "foreign" warlords over a peaceful agrarian population.
93
94
295
ROBERT J.BUCK
296
have made some sort of deal with the invaders.'0' The archaeological peculiarities of Argos, which indicate a separation from Mycenae during L.H. III C,
might be well explained by a similar joining with the invaders and a consequent sundering of relations with the Mycenaean survivors.'?2In some areas
besides Attica the invaders may even have received temporary checks.
At any rate the Mycenaean political and social organization was shattered.
In numerous areas the population had its villages sacked and its food supplies
destroyed or stolen. Many must have been killed, or have died of famine or
sickness in the aftermath of the social collapse. Many fled to Arcadia, Achaea,
Attica or to the coastal areas, anywhere that there was a rumour of food, a
hope of security, and a chance to get out. Areas like northern Laconia, central
Messenia and the interior of Boeotia seem to have been left desolate.
The invaders may have begun to settle some areas, e.g., western Argolid,
central Laconia, western Boeotia, but let others lie empty for a time. The
population was gone; there was nothing left worth looting. Resistance in a few
areas may also have given potential settlers pause. Eventually, however,
reinforcements began to come up: the rear echelons; various friends and
relations attracted by the reports of exciting happenings and good land. Area
after area began to be resettled, particularly Thessaly, Elis, Messenia, Laconia
and Boeotia and West Attica, to judge by the evidence of new forms of inhumation, observable during L.H. IIIC.103
Meanwhile the Mycenaean survivors continued to occupy some of their old
sites, such as Athens, Nauplia, Epidaurus, Asine and, perhaps, Corinth, as well
as the refugee areas. They also began to re-occupy a few of the sites that
had been overrun - if they had ever completely abandoned them - such as
Mycenae and Tiryns.104A "revival" becomes observable in areas in cultural
contact with Mycenae, and Mycenae itself seems to be the home of two important ceramic styles of L.H. III C, Granary and Close.lcrThis revival, however,
enjoyed but a tenuous existence. When the pressure of the invaders had built
up sufficiently, these shadowy remnants of Mycenaean power were swept away.
The Granary at Mycenae was destroyed a few decades after the end of
L.H. III B,106and the level of culture thereafter slid down a few more notches.
101 For Arcadia, see Paus. 8. 5. 4; for Amyklai see Ephoros, FGrH 70 F 117.
102 See J. Deshayes, Argos, les fouilles de Deiras, 248-250;
the situation in L. H. III C
might have had some influence on the description of the Argolid in the Catalogue in the
Iliad, where Diomedes' rule over Argos has long been thought rather odd.
103
Desborough, 230-232;
233-235.
297
298
The idea that a crumbling Mycenaean world collapsed before attacks from
West Greek and other hillmen at the end of L.H. III B, hung on with a much
changed and precarious existence in a few areas for a few decades, and was
finally extinguished, even at Athens, when the last Peloponnesian citadels fell
and the invaders were reinforced, seems to match best the archaeological
evidence and a cautious analysis of the confused traditional material.
University of Alberta (Canada)
ROBERT
J. BUCK