Results Archaeological site Cnossos

LARGE PALAIS

Archaeological site
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Cnossos, Greece
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2024
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2024

Palace in Knossos, the most important power center of the Minoan period.

The palace of Knossos, the most important centre of power in the Minoan period, is a vast, unfortified complex organized around a large central rectangular courtyard. The terraced roofs were supported by colonnades that were intended to be median in order to impose side doors. Lighting was provided by numerous windows and interior courtyards that functioned as skylights. The hydraulic system was state-of-the-art: a network of sewers drained the water from torrential rains as well as waste water. Water from the springs reached the palace through a series of baths or water stations. As there was no fixed fireplace, braziers were used when necessary. The palace was built on an artificial eminence, overlooking the valley of Kairatos. The unevenness of the terrain was fully utilised by the architect of the time, with two plans: the eastern wing is at a lower level than the central courtyard and the rest of the building. Today, the site is entered through the western courtyard.

The Procession Corridor owes its name to the frescoes that adorned its walls. Hundreds of figures of musicians, offering bearers, priests, and priestesses made up the double procession that converged on a woman, probably a goddess, priestess, or queen of the palace. The corridor leads to the propylaea, where gigantic double horns, similar to those of bulls, stand as symbols of Minoan religion. From here, a small staircase leads to the central courtyard, while another leads to the upper floor.

Itis in the courtyard that you will see the identically reconstructed stone throne room and its adjacent vestibule, through which the throne room can be observed. In this vestibule, Evans had placed the reproduction of the wooden throne, where he encountered a charred remnant of wood. It is from here that you can see the beautiful frescoes of wingless griffins that adorn the walls. These are close reproductions of the original frescoes which are now kept in the Archaeological Museum of Heraklion. In the center of the room, the stone basin was discovered in the vicinity by archaeologists. While Evans had imagined that the stone throne was that of King Minos (and perhaps the oldest throne in Europe), other archaeologists saw it as the throne of a priestess. In front of the stone throne, a large basin accessible by a few steps was probably used for purification before the ceremonies.

Above it were the ceremonial rooms, accessible by a small staircase of eighteen steps. At the bottom of the staircase is the main sanctuary of the palace, which consists of three important rooms: the vestibule of the pillared crypts, a room containing a huge jar, and the sanctuary's treasure chamber. It was here that valuable objects were discovered, such as the snake goddesses, now in the Archaeological Museum of Heraklion, and the clay tablets containing inscriptions in Linear B. In the western part of the building were built vast stores where the harvests and the wealth of the minos were stored in huge jars, pithoi.

On the other side of the court, in the eastern part, were the royal apartments. At the entrance to these, above the door, you will find the beautiful fresco of the dolphins, the original of which is also kept in the Heraklion Museum. You will notice that the queen's apartments were equipped with water drainage systems, made of baked clay pipes. This is a fine example of the irrigation system used at Knossos, reflecting the technical prowess of the Minoan civilization.

Moving northwards, you will come to the chess corridor, and then to other stores where other products were stored. The northern buildings were probably used as living quarters for the court and servants. In the northwestern part is the theater, separated from the palace building, which Homer mentions in two verses in theIliad (18, 591-2): "... the dancing place that once, in the vast Knossos, the art of Daedalus built for Ariadne of the beautiful braids"!

You will notice the real maze of the palace which deserves its name of labyrinth... But is the palace of Knossos, as the British archaeologist Evans thought, the palace of King Minos? If Evans had imagined discovering the palace of King Minos when he undertook the excavations of Knossos, nothing fully confirms it. We still wonder today if the palace of Knossos and its incredible maze of rooms had indeed inspired the famous myth of the Minotaur.

The first excavations on the site of Knossos were undertaken in 1878 by the Cretan Minos Kalokairinos, a wealthy merchant and inveterate archaeology enthusiast, while the island was still under Ottoman occupation. The first remains uncovered are those of the southern wing of the palace. Attempts were made by the American consul W.J. Stillman and H. Schliemann and by the French archaeologist M. Joubin. All these efforts came up against legislation that prevented the expropriation of the land. It was not until the liberation of Crete in 1898 that the site became state property and systematic excavations, undertaken by A. Evans, could take place.

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Visited in october 2024
Un incontournable ?
Le Palais de Cnossos fait parti des excursions à faire en Crète. Il est connu de tous et c'est LE truc à faire à côté d'Héraklion (qui manque un peu d'intérêt selon moi si on ne fait que se balader dans la ville).
Niveau explications en français ce n'est pas évident. Il y a des guides à l'entrée qui se proposent de nous faire la visite pour 25€ en plus du ticket d'entrée à 15€/pers.
Il existe également des audio-guides ou la possibilité de faire la visite avec une sorte de casque VR en plus du billet d'entrée. Attention, ces deux options ne sont pas vendues à la billetterie du Palais, mais avant (nous l'avons remarqué une fois en sortant :/ ).
Une application est toutefois téléchargeable, ce qui nous permet d'avoir le plan du site et des explications en français (plutôt bien fait, mais explications trop complexes et pas toujours très bien traduites).
Visité en octobre l'après-midi : parking facile, pas de queue, fluide.
Visited in may 2024
superbe
un incontournable de la crête superbe un vrai labyrinthe on est entre mythe et réalité de l'histoire pas beaucoup d'ombre donc prévoir gourde chapeau eviter quand il y a trop de monde en mai c'était correcte au niveau foule
Tchipi
Visited in august 2023
Value for money
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Originality
Le palais royal, la partie la plus visitée de Cnossos
En plein mois d'août, il faut faire la queue pour acheter les billets, pour visiter le palais royal aussi.
De nombreux guides officiels vous proposent leurs services.
Pour visiter le tombeau royal la queue se fait en plein soleil.
laure_13
Visited in july 2021
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Incontournable de Crète
La visite du site est un grand classique de la Crète. Il a été en partie reconstitué, ce qui permet d'imaginer assez facilement à quoi cela pouvait ressembler à l'époque. La visite est assez rapide (sans guide). Peu d'ombre. Billet cumulable avec le musée archéologique d'Heraklion.
gwadaboy
Visited in july 2021
Value for money
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Originality
l'incontournable de la Crète
Un site qui en dépit de la foule, de la chaleur de l'été et du peu de vestiges intacts dégage néanmoins quelque chose qui en fait un incontournable de la Crète. L'entrée à 15 € est très chère (gratuit enfants et étudiants européens). Pour éviter de faire la queue à l'entrée, il faut mieux visiter d'abord le musée d'Héraklion et acheter un billet jumelé pour les 2 à 20 €. Il y a un kiosque de guides officiels à l'entrée en plusieurs langues. Nous avons payé 100 € pour notre groupe pour une visite d'environ 1h 1/2. Je conseille le guide dans le mesure où il y a peu d'explications sur le site et qu'il est difficile de se représenter ce qu'il pouvait représenter à l'époque. Pas grandiose non plus mais il y a matière à faire quelques belles photos.
Grand parking sur place. Plutôt que le bus touristique comme nous l'avons fait, je conseille de s'y rendre avec le bus de ville : arrêt juste à droite de la gare routière à Héraklion et billet à 2 €
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