Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gbm5v Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T00:19:49.479Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Chariots in late bronze age Greece

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Extract

The long-standing debate on the military use of chariots in Late Bronze Age Greece was joined in 1973 by P. A. L. Greenhalgh. In his provocative book, he argued that Mycenaean warriors using thrusting spears had fought at speed from massed chariots. At the same time he rejected as unrealistic Homer's descriptions of chariots as conveyances for warriors who dismounted to fight on foot.

These opinions were recently briefly restated in ANTIQUITY, where Dr Greenhalgh reaffirms his theory, using the well-known metal panoply from chamber tomb 12 at Dendra as additional evidence (Greenhalgh, 1980). In doing so, he disregards the objections that have been raised against his position (Littauer, 1977; Anderson, 1973; 1975).

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd. 1983

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

Mrs Littauer is joined here by Dr Joost Crouwel, of the Archaeologisch-Historisch Instituut of the University of Amsterdam, in a rebuttal of P. A. L. Greenhalgh's 1973 book, followed by his 1980 contribution to this journal. They did not intend this to grow into a full-scale paper, but Topsy evidently took over. They say that the problems involved in attempting to use a thrusting spear from a speeding chariot would make the use of a lance directly from a fast chariot very doubtful in Mycenaean Greece.

References

ANDERSON, J.K. 1965. Homeric, British and Cyrenaic chariots, AJFA, LXIX, 34952.Google Scholar
ANDERSON, J.K. 1973. Review of P. A. L. Greenhalgh 1973, Antiquity, XLVII, 335.10.1017/S0003598X00039272CrossRefGoogle Scholar
ANDERSON, J.K. 1975. Greek chariot-borne and mounted infantry, AJA, LXXIX, 17587.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
CHRISTOPOULOS, G.A.. (ed.). 1974 A history of the Hellenic World, I: Prehistory and protohistory (Athens).Google Scholar
CROUWEL, J.H. 1981. Chariots and other means of land transport in bronze age Greece (Amsterdam).Google Scholar
GREENHALGH, P.A.L. 1973. Early Greek warfare: horsemen and chariots in the Homeric and Archaic Ages (Cambridge).Google Scholar
GREENHALGH, P.A.L. 1978. How are the mighty fallen, Acta Classica, XXI, 138.Google Scholar
GREENHALGH, P.A.L. 1980. The Dendra charioteer, Antiquity, LIV, 20105.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
KILIAN, K. 1980. Zur Darstellung eines Wagenrennens aus spätmykenischer Zeit, AM, XCV, 2131.Google Scholar
KILIAN, K. 1982. Mycenaean charioteers again, Antiquity, LVI, 20506.Google Scholar
LITTAUER, M.A. 1972. The military use of the chariot in the Aegean in the Late Bronze Age, AJA, LXXVI, 14657 Google Scholar
LITTAUER, M.A. 1977. (Review of P. A. L. Greenhalgh 1973), Classical Philology, LXXII, 3634.10.1086/366382CrossRefGoogle Scholar
LITTAUER, M.A. & CROUWEL, J.H. 1979. Wheeled vehicles and ridden animals in the Ancient Near East (Leiden).Google Scholar
MARINATOS, S. & HIRMER, M. 1973. Kreta, Thera und das mykenische Hellas (Munich).Google Scholar
MARKLE, M. 1977. The Macedonian sarissa, spear and related armor, AJA, LXXXI, 32339.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
RUTTER, J. 1975. Review of SLENCKZA, E. 1974, AJA, LXXIX, 3778.Google Scholar
SANDARS, N.K. 1978. The Sea Peoples. Warriors of the Ancient Mediterranean (London).Google Scholar
SCHLIEMANN, H. 1886. Tiryns (Leipzig).Google Scholar
SNODGRASS, A.M. 1964. Early Greek armour and weapons (Edinburgh). 1967. Arms and armour of the Greeks (Cornell).Google Scholar
VERDELIS, N.M. 1977. The metal finds, in ÅSTRöM, E.. et al., The Cuirass Tomb and other finds at Dendra I, SIMA, IV, 2865.Google Scholar
YADIN, Y. 1963. The art of warfare in Biblical lands (New York).Google Scholar