Hellenizing Mycenae: From Heinrich Schliemann’s Excavations to National Museum

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Cambridge University Press

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In the 1870s, Heinrich Schliemann's excavations in Mycenae brought to light an unknown civilization. His intellectual network exploited the impact of these fascinating discoveries by implementing a double appropriation process. Many foreign intellectuals and members of the upper class sought to engage with the impressive findings. Meanwhile, a Greek intellectual elite played a pivotal role by Hellenizing Mycenaean antiquities to integrate them within a vision of a glorious national past. These processes were brought together with the inauguration of the branch of Mycenaean Archaeology by the Greek king and the establishment of the National Museum.

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Kourkoulakos Antonis & Vasileios Balaskas, 2025. ‘Hellenizing Mycenae: From Heinrich Schliemann’s Excavations to National Museum’, Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies 49.2, 251-268.

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International