Orchomenos, a Boeotian town on a promontory…
1341 BCE to 1198 BCE
Orchomenos, a Boeotian town on a promontory on the north of the Copiac plain, is the northernmost Mycenaean fortified town.
A seat of the Minyae dynastic family, it controls a large part of Boeotia and has become in the fourteenth and thirteenth centuries a rich and important center of civilization in Mycenaean Greece, the rival to Thebes, which claims Heracles for its champion.
According to the founding myth of Orchomenos, its royal dynasty had been established by the Minyans, who had followed their eponymous leader Minyas from coastal Thessaly to settle the site.
The palace, which had frescoed walls, and the great tholos tombs, show the power of Orchomenos in Mycenaean times.
A massive hydraulic undertaking drains the marshes of Lake Copaïs.
Orchomenos is mentioned among the Achaean cities sending ships to engage in the Trojan War in Homer's "Catalogue of Ships" in Iliad: together with Aspledon they contributed thirty ships and their complement of men.
Like many sites around the Aegean, Orchomenos is burned and its palace destroyed around 1200 BCE.