MUSEUM OF THE FALLEN
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The Wall/ Vanished Worlds/ Minoan civilization
The Bull-Leaping fresco from the Palace of Knossos, c. 1450 BCE, Heraklion Archaeological Museum, Crete.

Jebulon, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons · CC0

Vanished Worlds

Minoan civilization

3000 BCE 1100 BCE

Europe's first great civilization, of bull-leapers and labyrinthine palaces, weakened by a volcano and absorbed by the Greeks who told its myths.

Born
3000 BCE
Died
1100 BCE
Lived
1,900 years
Dead for
3,126 yrs
Cause of death
Assimilation
Replaced by
Mycenaean Greece
The Obituary

The Minoans, named by archaeologist Arthur Evans after the mythical King Minos, built the first advanced civilization on European soil. From around 3000 BCE they raised sprawling palace complexes on Crete — Knossos, Phaistos, Malia — decorated with vivid frescoes of dolphins, lilies, and acrobats vaulting over charging bulls. They traded across the Mediterranean and wrote in a script still unread. The massive volcanic eruption of Thera, around 1600 BCE, dealt a blow from which they slowly faltered. By 1450 BCE mainland Mycenaean Greeks had taken control of Crete, and Minoan culture was gradually absorbed into the Greek world.

Worth remembering

  • Their script, Linear A, remains undeciphered; the later Linear B was Greek.
  • The palace at Knossos inspired the Greek myth of the labyrinth and the Minotaur.

Sources

  1. Minoan civilization flourished on Crete c. 3000–1100 BCE; declined after the Mycenaean takeover Wikipedia
  2. The Minoan eruption of Thera severely disrupted Aegean Bronze Age society Wikipedia

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Buried nearby