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Description
Knossos is the site of the most important and better known palace of Minoan civilization. According to tradition, it was the seat of the legendary king Minos. The Palace is also connected with thrilling legends, such as the myth of the Labyrinth with the Minotaur, and the story of Daidalos and Icaros.
The site was continuously inhabited from the Neolithic period (7000-3000 B.C.) until Roman times. The Linear B tablets (Mycenaean script) of the 14th century B.C. mention the city as ko-no-so.
Intensive habitation occured mostly in the Minoan period, when the so-called first (19th-17th centuries B.C.) and second palaces (16th-14th centuries B.C.) were built along with luxurious houses, a hospice and various other structures. After its partial destruction in 1450 B.C., Knossos was settled by Mycenaeans from the Greek Mainland.
The most important monuments of the site are:
The Palace of Knossos. It is the largest of the preserved Minoan palatial centres. Four wings are arranged around a central courtyard, containing the royal quarters, workshops, shrines, storerooms, repositories, the throne room and banquet halls. Dated to 2000-1350 B.C.
The Little Palace. It lies to the west of the main palace and has all the features of palatial architecture: scraped wall masonry, reception rooms, a pristyle hall, a double megaron with polythyra (pi er-and-door partitions) and a lustral basin-shrine. Dated to the 17th-15th centuries B.C.
The Royal Villa. It lies to the NE of the palace and its architectural form is distinguished by the polythyra, the pillar crypt and the double staircase, with two flights of stairs. It is strongly religious in character and might have been the residence of an aristocrat or a high priest. Dated to the 14th century B.C.
House of the Frescoes. It is located to the NW of the palace and is a small urban mansion with rich decoration on the walls. Dated to the 15th, 14th-12th centuries B.C.
Administrative Information:
Ephorate of Antiquities of the Prefecture of Heraklion
Τ.Κ. 71409, Knosos (Prefecture of Iraklio)
Telephone: +30 2810 231940
Fax: +30 2810 322570
Email: efahra@culture.gr
Tickets:
Full: €15, Reduced: €8
In order to purchase tickets online for the archeological site of
Knossos visit the official e-ticketing service of the Hellenic
Ministry of Culture and Sports at www.etickets.tap.gr
Special ticket package: Full: €20
Valid for: Heraklion Archaeological Museum
Access:
Bus NO.2 “Knossos” from Herakleion.
Source: http://odysseus.culture.gr
Ephorate of Antiquities of the Prefecture of Heraklion
Location / Contacts
- Address : KNOSSOS
- Phone : +302810231940
- Mail : efahra@culture.gr
- Website : http://odysseus.culture.gr