Understand
[edit]Admission fees
[edit]As of Nov 2024
- April-October:
- Adult €12
- EU senior, and non-EU age 6-25 €6
- Non-EU children under 6, EU residents under 26, people with disability free
- November-March:
- Adult, EU senior, and non-EU age 6-25 €6
- Non-EU children under 6, EU residents under 26, people with disability free
- Combined ticket (€20) is valid for Mycenae (the Archaeological Site, the Museum and the Treasure of Atreus), Tiryns, Asini, Palamidi, Museum of Nafplio and Byzantine Museum of Argos and lasts for 3 days from its issuance.
Hours
[edit]As of Nov 2024:
- Nov-Mar: 08:30-15:30
- April : 08:00-19:00
- May-Aug: 08:00-20:00
- 1-15 Sep: 08:00-19:30
- 16-30 Sep: 08:00-19:00
- 1-15 Oct: 08:00-18:30
- 16-31 Oct: 08:00-18:00
- Good Friday: 12:00-17:00, Holy Saturday: 08:30-15:30
- Closed: 1 January, 25 March, 1 May, Easter Sunday, 25 & 26 December
Site information
[edit]Get in
[edit]You can visit the place by using the local KTEL [1] bus from Nafplio, priced €2.90.
When coming from Athens, it is also possible to catch a bus to Nafplio, which makes a stop in the village of Fichti (4 km from the archeological site). From Fichti it is possible to take a taxi to the site. The bus from Athens to Fichti costs €11.80 as of February 2018.
Get around
[edit]See
[edit]- 1 Mycenae Archaeology Museum, ☏ + 30 27510 76585. 08:30-15:00 all days except public holidays. The relatively new museum is laid out quite clearly. The golden exhibits are copies of Schliemann's finds; the originals are in Athens. Also worth seeing are the small finds on display, which allow conclusions to be drawn about the religious beliefs of this archaic people.
- From the car park, a path leads to the Acropolis past exposed foundations of houses and shaft tombs. Behind the entrance ticket office, a path branches off to the left, leading past the only toilet in the complex to the museum. The main path leads to a Cyclopean wall built from huge blocks of stone.
- 2 The Lion Gate. It forms the entrance. Its stones are huge, the lintel alone is said to weigh around 20 tons. Above it is a stone block that serves as a relief triangle for the side wall blocks. Its front is formed by two lions, whose heads were probably made of a different material in ancient times.
- 3 Grave Circle A (behind the entrance to the Acropolis, on the right). Excavated by Schliemann, with six royal shaft graves.
- 4 Grave Circle B. A 17th– to 16th-century BCE royal cemetery.
- Behind it are some former residential buildings. Other building remains have been identified as granaries, followed by craftsmen's apartments and the artists' workshop. Further up, the path is relatively barrier-free. Here, the outline and structure of the palace can be seen. To the north, the terrain slopes down; here is an outer bailey with a partially accessible cistern; a simpler gate forms a second entrance to the castle.
- Outside the castle walls, several more foundations are visible, so it is likely that this area of the city still holds many secrets.
Dome tombs
[edit]- 5 The Treasury of Atreus (on the road to the Acropolis, a few hundred meters before it on the left). The most famous and largest of the dome tombs. A 36-m-long brick corridor, called a drómos, leads to a burial dome. The entrance area is over 10 m high, the dome behind it is built like a beehive. It has a diameter of 14.6 m, is 13.5 m high and was used for cult purposes. The burial chamber is in the dome to the right of the entrance and is not accessible. It can be seen from the main room, provided you provide your own lighting, e.g. with a flashlight.
- The other domed tombs, the Tomb of Clytemnestra, the Tomb of Aegisthus and the Lions' Tomb, are somewhat smaller and are located within the museum and excavation area.
Do
[edit]Buy, eat, drink, sleep
[edit]Look in the nearby village of Mykines, or in Argolis or Nafplio.
Connect
[edit]Go next
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