Poliochne
Greece /
Lesvos /
Moudros /
World
/ Greece
/ Lesvos
/ Moudros
, 8 km from center (Μούδρος)
World / Turkey / Çanakkale
temple, archaeological site, neolithic age, interesting place
Poliochne, often cited under its modern name Poliochni (Greek: Πολιόχνη), was an ancient settlement on the east coast of the island of Lemnos. It was settled in the Late Chalcolithic and earliest Aegean Bronze Age and is believed to be one of the most ancient towns in Europe, preceding Troy I. Anatolian features of the earliest layers were affected by cultural influences from Helladic Greece, about the start of Early Helladic II, ca. 2500 BC.
The site, with houses huddled together sharing party walls, was unearthed by excavations of the Italian School of Archaeology at Athens (Scuola archeologica Italiana di Athene), beginning in 1930. It is believed that Troy was its main rival commercially; a rivalry that led to the decline of Poliochne circa 2000 BC. During 1994-1997, Greek archaeologists discovered a more recent Bronze Age settlement on the tiny uninhabited island of Koukonesi situated in the Moudros harbour, west of Poliochne. This settlement was developed circa 2000-1650 BC, and the findings again prove commercial ties with Asia Minor, and with Aegean islands and mainland Greece. Mycenaean ceramics of the 13th century BC found on Koukonesi could prove that, around when the traditional era of the Trojan War took place, the Greeks had a permanent settlement there, rather than just a commercial outpost, understanding the importance of the straits connecting the Aegean and the Black Sea.
The site, with houses huddled together sharing party walls, was unearthed by excavations of the Italian School of Archaeology at Athens (Scuola archeologica Italiana di Athene), beginning in 1930. It is believed that Troy was its main rival commercially; a rivalry that led to the decline of Poliochne circa 2000 BC. During 1994-1997, Greek archaeologists discovered a more recent Bronze Age settlement on the tiny uninhabited island of Koukonesi situated in the Moudros harbour, west of Poliochne. This settlement was developed circa 2000-1650 BC, and the findings again prove commercial ties with Asia Minor, and with Aegean islands and mainland Greece. Mycenaean ceramics of the 13th century BC found on Koukonesi could prove that, around when the traditional era of the Trojan War took place, the Greeks had a permanent settlement there, rather than just a commercial outpost, understanding the importance of the straits connecting the Aegean and the Black Sea.
Wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poliochne
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 39°51'15"N 25°20'38"E
- Kaviria 14 km
- Messa Sanctuary 110 km
- Dionysus Sanctuary 115 km
- Ancient Acropolis 118 km
- Church 118 km
- Agia Sofia church 136 km
- The Ancient City of Pergamum 176 km
- Precinct of Athena 177 km
- Trajaneum 177 km
- Temenos of Demeter 178 km
- Vroskopos, Lemnos 0.3 km
- Cemetery 2.9 km
- Chortarolimni 5.1 km
- Cape Agia Eirini 7.6 km
- Lemnos 11 km
- BORES BOZCAADA WINDFARM 54 km
- Mauna island 56 km
- Ayazma Monastery 58 km
- Bozcaada District 58 km
- Çanakkale Province 111 km