Royal Tombs
Royal Tomb
Vergina (Greek: Βεργίνα) is a small town in northern Greece, located in the regional unit of Imathia, Central Macedonia. Since the 2011 local government reform it is part of the municipality Veroia, of which it is a municipal unit. The town became internationally famous in 1977, when the Greek archaeologist Manolis Andronikos unearthed what he claimed was the burial site of the kings of Macedon, including the tomb of Philip II, father of Alexander the Great. The finds established the site as the ancient Aigai (Greek: Αιγαί).
The modern town of Vergina is about 13 km south-east of the district centre of
Veroia and about 80 km south-west of Thessaloniki, the capital of Greek
Macedonia. The town has a population of about two thousand people and stands on
the foothills of Mount Pieria, at an elevation of 120 m (360 ft) above sea
level.
During the 8th and 7th century BC the area was ruled by Illyrian tribes, which
established a strategic base at the location of Aegae. When in the early 7th
century BC local Thracian and Paeonian tribes revolted, the Illyrians pulled
out. In approximately 650 BC, the Argeads, an ancient Greek royal house led by
Perdiccas I, fled from Argos and established their capital at Aegae, thereby
also establishing the Kingdom of Macedon. Actually, the word Aigae is the plural
of the ancient Greek word Aiga (Αίγα) which means goat. The capital city of the
Mαcedon kings was called so after Perdikas I, had a dream in which he was asked
to build the capital city of his kingdom where goats led him. From Aegae they
spread to the central part of Macedonia and displaced the local population of
Pierians. The area of modern Vergina, which has inhabited by Pierians, thus
remained uninhabited until the middle of the 6th century BC. After 550 BC, a
Macedonian population settled in the area. In the 5th century BC, King Archelaus
I moved the Macedonian capital north to Pella on the central Macedonian plain.
Aegae remained an important ceremonial center but lost a festival in honor of
Zeus to Dion. Aegae continued to flourish into the 3rd century BC until it
was destroyed in the 1st century BC.
Modern Vergina was founded in 1922 near the site of the two small agricultural
villages of Koutles (Greek: Κούτλες) and Barbes (Greek: Mπάρμπες) previously
owned by the Turkish bey of Palatitsa and inhabited by 25 Greek serf families.
After the Treaty of Lausanne and the eviction of the Bey landlords, the land was
distributed in lots to the existing inhabitants, and to 121 other Greek families
from Bulgaria and Asia Minor after population exchange agreements between
Greece, Bulgaria and Turkey. The name for the new town was suggested by the then
Metropolitan of Veria, who named it after a legendary queen of ancient Beroea
(modern Veria).
Royal Burial Chamber
Archaeologists were interested in the hills around Vergina as early as the 1850s, supposing that the site of Aigai was in the vicinity and knowing that the hills were burial mounds. Excavations began in 1861 under the French archaeologist Leon Heuzey, sponsored by the Emperor Napoleon III. Parts of a large building that was considered to be one of the palaces of Antigonus III Doson (263–221), partly destroyed by fire, were discovered at Palatitsa, which preserved the memory of a palace in its modern name. However, the excavations had to be abandoned because of the risk of malaria. The excavator suggested that this was the site of the ancient city Valla, a view that prevailed until 1976.
golden wreath and chest recovered from a tomb
In 1937, the University of Thessaloniki resumed the excavations. More ruins of the ancient palace were found, but the excavations were abandoned on the outbreak of war with Italy in 1940. After the war the excavations were resumed, and during the 1950s and 1960s the rest of the royal capital was uncovered. The Greek archaeologist Manolis Andronikos became convinced that a hill called the Great Tumulus (Greek: Μεγάλη Τούμπα) concealed the tombs of the Macedonian kings. In 1977, Andronikos undertook a six-week dig at the Great Tumulus and found four buried chambers, which he identified as hitherto undisturbed tombs. Three more were found in 1980. Excavations continued through the 1980s and 1990s. Andronikos claimed that these were the burial sites of the kings of Macedon, including the tomb of Philip II, father of Alexander the Great (Tomb II). Andronikos maintained that another tomb (Tomb III) was of Alexander IV of Macedon, son of Alexander the Great and Roxana.
This view is challenged by some archaeologists. Studies by Eugene N. Borza,
utilizing the construction of ceilingsthe of Tomb II, the incorporation of a
weight measurement system introduced by Alexander the Great on golden objects in
the tomb, Asian themes on the tomb's friezes, and the discovery of a scepter
similar to that found on coins minted under Alexander's reign, as well as
studies which utilized anthropological data, suggest that this tomb belongs to
Alexander's half-brother Philip III Arrhidaeus and his wife, Adea Eurydice.
Instead, according to Borza, Tomb I, also known as the Tomb of Persephone may
have contained the remains of Phillip II and his family. If this theory is true,
then the golden weaponry and royal objects found in Tomb II may have belonged to
Alexander the Great.
On the other hand, a 2010 research supports that Tomb II cannot belong to Philip
III Arrhidaus and his wife. This research, based on detailed study of the
skeletons, sustains the facial asymmetry caused by a possible trauma of the
cranium of the male, an evidence that is consistent with the history of Philip
II.
The museum, which was inaugurated in 1993, was built in a way to protect the
tombs, exhibit the artifacts and show the tumulus as it was before the
excavations. Inside the museum there are four tombs and one small temple, the
heroon built as the temple for the great tomb of Philip II of Macedon. The two
most important graves were not sacked and contained the main treasures of the
museum. Tomb II of Philip II, the father of Alexander was discovered in 1977 and
was separated in two rooms. The main room included a marble sarcophagus, and in
it was the larnax made of 24 carat gold and weighing 11 kilograms. Inside the
golden larnax the bones of the dead were found and a golden wreath of 313 oak
leaves and 68 acorns, weighing 717 grams. In the room were also found the golden
and ivory panoply of the dead, the richly-carved burial bed on which he was laid
and later burned and silver utensils for the funeral feast. In the antechamber,
there was another sarcophagus with another smaller golden larnax containing the
bones of a woman wrapped in a golden-purple cloth with a golden diadem decorated
with flowers and enamel. There was one more partially destroyed by the fire
burial bed and on it a golden wreath representing leaves and flowers of myrtle.
Above the Doric order entrance of the tomb there is a wall painting measuring
5.60 metres which represents a hunting scene.
In 1978 another burial site (Tomb III) was also discovered near the tomb of
Philip, which belongs to Alexander IV of Macedon son of Alexander the Great. It
was slightly smaller than the previous and was also not sacked. It was also
arranged in two parts, but only the main room contained a cremated body this
time. On a stone pedestal was found a silver hydria which contained the bones
and on it a golden oak wreath. There were also utensils and weaponry. A narrow
frieze with a chariot race decorated the walls of the tomb.
The other two tombs were found to have been sacked. Tomb I or the Tomb of
Persephone was discovered in 1977 and although it contained no valuable things
found, on its walls was found a marvellous wall painting showing the abduction
of Persephone by Pluto. The other tomb, discovered in 1980, is heavily damaged
and may have contained valuable treasures while it had an impressive entrance
with four Doric columns. It was built in the 4th century BC and the
archaeologists believe that the tomb belonged to Antigonus II Gonatas.
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