Visit Knossos
palace and the Archaeological museum of Heraklion
The museum is located in the town of
Heraklion
and the Palace of Knossos is just
outside the town.
Get
to know Knossos
"Palace
of Mystery"
From
the narrow, busy road heading from Heraklion to Archanes, the ruins of
the heart of Minoan culture are scarcely visible. Visitors pull off
into parking lots and walk a few yards to the gate, past a minimalist gift shop
and then to a bronze bust of Arthur Evans, the controversial
"discoverer" of the palace.
Knossos,
still redolent with an ancient, indefinable atmosphere, easily leads
visitors astray. The maze of its passageways, now often interrupted
and in ruins, seem to shift and twist even as you walk within them,
and it's common to become parted from your companions, certain that
they turned down that corridor just up ahead, only to find it empty.
But
that's much better than finding the legendary denizen of these
corridors, the half-man, half-bull Minotaur said to once be confined
within the heart of the palace, the illicit offspring of a mating
between Queen Pasiphae and a royal bull she was cursed into loving.
Here the hero Theseus was protected by the brave Minoan maiden Ariadne,
daughter of King Minos, who gave him a piece of string to find his way
back through the tangle of hallways. Alas for Ariadne, Theseus later
abandoned her to the embrace of Dionysus on the island of Naxos, or,
much less coldly, put her ashore to recover from seasickness and then
was swept away from her by a strong wind. With family stories like
these, no wonder the atmosphere of Knossos is disturbing.
Even
up close, what remains of the buildings are uninspiring, broken now
and then by a crimson pillar stretching up unexpectedly between
unpainted walls or a restored reproduction of one of the original
frescoes showing the slim, beautiful Minoans of both sexes. To the
south, the giant "Horns of Consecration" announce the
presence of a palace to be reckoned with, powerful long before the
"Golden Age of Greece" shifted influence to mainland Greece.
At
the time that Knossos was most powerful, Greek cities looked up to
Crete. Tribute was sent, in the form of produce and gifts, and, if the
legend is correct, young men and women. Additional excavations suggest
that Knossos presided over a city of 100,000 people - huge by ancient
standards, though Crete itself was known to be densely populated by
comparison to the rest of the Grecian world.
Knossos
can eat time endlessly, but most visitors are impressed by the rows of
huge decorated storage jars called pithoi, and the so-called
"Throne Room" with a carved chair of stone. Who sat there -
king or priest, queen or priestess? Or both? No one knows. All around
the site the Cretan countryside in this lush, fertile area competes
for attention.
Aside
from the "Horns of Consecration" -a name given them by Evans
- the other symbol of the Minoans is the labrys. The mystery of the
Minoans remains in this symbol, sometimes depicted as a double-edged
tool of war, sometimes as a butterfly. There is a debate of opinion
between whether the Minoans were immensely peaceful -their palaces
have very poor defences- or if they were such efficient warriors on
forays outside their island that no one dared to attack them on their
own territory. Wielders of the axe or admirers of the butterfly -
visit Knossos and wonder for yourself.
How
to Get There: Drive about two miles south from the centre of Heraklion
(Iraklio), on the road to Archanes. Knossos is on the east side of the
road; watch for signs and, more reliably, increased congestion and
tour buses. Many cruise ships also offer day trips to Knossos when
they are in port; try to combine your visit with a visit to the
Archaeological Museum of Iraklion, which is second only to the
National Archaeological Museum in Athens and well worth seeing. The
Number 2 bus from the main station at the port also goes to Knossos;
if time permits, this may be a much cheaper option than taking the
tour from the ship, though you may risk ending up on your own without
a guide.
Hungry?
There are several surprisingly decent little snack shops, with
attendant souvenir racks, directly across the road from Knossos. Keep
an eye out for the gift shop offering an extensive collection of
inexpensively-priced reproductions of Minoan finds - unlike almost
everything else for sale in Greece, some of these you really won't see
elsewhere. The ceramic reproductions of the faience snake goddess
found at Knossos are much too new looking, despite the welded lead
seal asserting that they are official, authentic reproductions, but
they're the best you'll see anywhere.
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