Location within Greece | |
Alternative name | Bronze Age Warrior Tomb |
---|---|
Location | Pylos |
Region | Greece |
Coordinates | 37°01′41.6″N 21°41′45.4″E / 37.028222°N 21.695944°E |
History | |
Periods | Aegean Bronze Age |
Cultures | Minoan, Mycenaean |
Site notes | |
Discovered | May 28, 2015 |
Archaeologists | Jack Davis, Sharon Stocker |
Website | www.griffinwarrior.org |
The Griffin Warrior Tomb is a Bronze Age shaft tomb dating to around 1450 BC, near the ancient city of Pylos in Greece. The grave was discovered by a research team sponsored by the University of Cincinnati and led by husband-and-wife archaeologists Jack L. Davis and Sharon Stocker.[1] The tomb site was excavated from May to October 2015.[2]
During the initial six month excavation, the research team uncovered an intact adult male skeleton and excavated 1400 objects including weapons, jewels, armour and silver and gold artifacts.[3] Since 2015, the number of artifacts recovered from the grave has reached over 3500 items, including a historically significant Minoan sealstone called the Pylos Combat Agate and four signet gold rings with detailed images from Minoan mythology.[4][5]