Legend has Thebes occupied originally by Boeotia’s …
Years: 1485BCE - 1342BCE
Legend has Thebes occupied originally by Boeotia’s aboriginal (autochthones) Ectenians under the leadership of Ogyges (Ogygus), called Ogygion by some classical poets.
Greek legend attributes the founding of the ancient citadel, Cadmea, to the brother of Europa, Cadmus, who was aided by the Spartoi (a race of warriors sprung from dragon's teeth that Cadmus had sown).
The building of the celebrated seven-gated wall of Thebes is usually attributed to Amphion, who is said to have charmed the stones into moving by the playing of his lyre.
Archaeological evidence indicates that the site was inhabited in both the early and late Bronze ages.
Frescoes of Theban women in Minoan dress adorn the fifteenth-century BCE Minoan-style palace at Cadmea; some Cretan vases also suggest contacts between Thebes and Knossos in the period 1450-1400 BCE. (Clay tablets confirming Mycenaean-Minoan links will be found in 1970, while the discovery of Mesopotamian cylinder seals in 1964 will strengthen the theory that Cadmus, “a Phoenician,” introduced writing to Greece.)
According to Greek myth, Cadmus' descendants ruled Thebes intermittently for several generations, including the time of the Trojan War.
The 1909 excavation of the "House of Cadmus.” whom legend states was born in Tyre and taught letters to the Greeks, of a collection of Mesopotamian cylinder-seals, including one referring to a Kassite king who ruled between 1381 and 1354 BCE, indicates that this myth may have some historical basis.
Locations
Groups
- Greece, archaic
- Kassites
- Mycenaean Greece
- Phoenicia
- Minoan (Cretan) culture, Late
- Babylonian Kingdom of the Kassites
- Mycenae, archaic Kingdom of
