| The Palace of Nestor, on the Epano Englianos ridge in southwestern Messenia, was discovered in 1939 and excavated from 1952 to 1966 by the late Professor Carl Blegen of the University of Cincinnati. The palace, dating from ca. 1300-1200 BC, is among the best preserved of Bronze Age complexes in Greece. In addition to architecture, excavations uncovered wall and floor frescos, Linear B tablets (the first ever discovered on the mainland!), sealings, jewelry, pottery and other artifacts.
|
| Twenty-four years after the close of the original excavations, a University of Minnesota team resumed investigations in 1990. In that year, a stone-by-stone, dimensioned state of the main palace complex was drawn. From 1991 to 1998, MARWP documented the numerous ancillary buildings and other built structures. Thousands of ceramic and fresco fragments, as well as a handful of Linear B tablet fragments, were recovered. MARWP also studied, in the form of a topographical survey, the area immediately surrounding the palace. Several chamber tombs and shaft graves were rediscovered and mapped, one of which now no longer exists.
|
Pylos Digital Archive |
PDA, the Pylos Digital Archive, contains photographs and slides of MARWP's re-excavation of the palace. PDA is under construction and when finished will contain more than 4000 images of the architecture and finds recovered during the field proejct. |
Field Reports |
| MARWP's work at the palace has been regularly reported and updated at the Annual Meeting of the Archaeological Institute of America: |
| Excavations of the Bronze Age Palace of Nestor, Pylos | |
| Post-Mycenaean Occupation at the Palace of Nestor | |
| Minnesota Archaeological Researches at Pylos, 1991-1993 Seasons | |
| Minnesota Archaeological Researches at Pylos, 1994-1995 Seasons | |
| Minnesota Archaeological Researches at Pylos, 1996-1997 Seasons | |
| Project Bibliography | |