80 Shackled Skeletons Found in Greek Grave After Ancient Mᴀss Execution

A mᴀss grave was recently discovered four miles outside of Athens in the historic harbor city of Phalaeron. But this wasn’t just any mᴀss grave—36 of the 80 skeletons were restrained in iron shackles and were arranged in a row next to each other. Because of this, some researchers speculate that they might be adherents of Cylon, a despot who attempted to conquer Athens in the seventh century B.C.

About 1,500 skeletons have been discovered in a 1-acre cemetery near Phalaeron, according to Tia Ghose of LiveScience. But, this most recent set was discovered in a location where the Greek National Opera and a new branch of the Greek National Library are being built. Scientists were able to date the cemetery between 650 and 625 B.C., a time period that ancient historians claim was full of unrest for Athens, thanks to two tiny vases discovered among the bound skeletons.

The teeth of the remains, according to AFP, indicate that they were largely from younger, healthy individuals. This supports the hypothesis that they were political outlaws who attempted to take control of Athens. A bioarchaeologist from the University of West Florida in Pensacola named Kristina Killgrove, who was not involved in the study, tells Ghose that “these might be the bones of persons who were part of this coup in Athens in 632 [B.C. ], the Coup of Cylon.”

The ancient historians Plutarch and Thucydides claim that Cylon participated in the 640 B.C. Olympic Games as an athlete. His triumph there earned him a higher position and the hand of the Megarian tyrant’s daughter. Because of the bad harvests and social disparity, Athens experienced unrest during the following 10 years. In 632, Cylon launched a coup with the aid of his father-in-army, law’s expecting that the citizens of Athens would follow him. Though most didn’t, some did.

As a subsтιтute, Cylon fled the city, and his rebels sought refuge on the Acropolis. They eventually started to hunger, but Megacles, the city archon, guaranteed them safe pᴀssage. But he killed them as soon as they exited the shrine. According to Thucydides, “They even killed several of them in the very presence of the dreadful Goddesses at whose altars they had sought sanctuary while pᴀssing by.” “The killers and those who follow them are considered cursed and transgressors against the Lady.”

Nonetheless, it is far from definite that the skeletons belong to Cylon’s disciples. Killgrove explains to Ghose that one of the issues is that there aren’t many historical records from that century; as a result, “we really have no history” and “it might be a stretch for them to connect these shackled skeletons with this coup.” “There are any number of possibilities for why a mᴀss grave — really, many mᴀss graves — of shackled skeletons were uncovered in Athens,” says Killgrove in Forbes.

Less archeological sites from the time period do, however, depict people from lower socioeconomic levels. According to Killgrove, these skeletons could provide researchers with information about the working-class Athenians of the time.

Related Posts

The Eternal Queen: The Mummy of Pharaoh’s Daughter and the Golden Sandals of Egypt

In the soft, golden light of the Cairo Museum, a glᴀss case cradles the face of a woman who once ruled the living world and now reigns…

Whispers from the Earth: The 8,000-Year-Old Child of Siberia

In the silent depths of Siberia’s frozen soil, archaeologists have unearthed a secret that slept for millennia — the mummified remains of a child, preserved by time…

The Well of Barhout: Where Legend Meets the Abyss

In the desolate, sun-scorched expanse of Yemen’s Al-Mahra desert, the earth opens its mouth. This is the Well of Barhout, a colossal sinkhole plunging into profound darkness,…

The Monumento a la Patria: A Stone Chronicle of a Nation’s Soul

On the elegant, tree-lined Paseo de Montejo in Mérida, a symphony of stone rises from the earth, a modern monument that speaks in an ancient tongue. The…

The Timeless Geometry of the Inca Walls

Hidden high in the Andes Mountains of Peru, the ancient city of Cusco—once the capital of the Inca Empire—holds within its stones a mystery that has fascinated…

The Feathered Serpent Altar at Chichén Itzá – A Legacy of the Ancient Maya Civilization

General Introduction In the early 20th century, deep within the tropical forests of Mexico’s Yucatán Peninsula, archaeologists from the Carnegie Insтιтution of Washington (USA) uncovered a finely…