Page:Modern Greek folklore and ancient Greek religion - a study in survivals.djvu/112

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much reverenced by the dwellers in the Argive plain is certain; small idols believed to represent Demeter Kourotrophos have been found at Mycenae[1]; others, of which the identification is more certain, at Tiryns[2]; and at Argos, in later times, Demeter continued to be worshipped under the title Pelasgian[3]. Was a mere cavern then her only home? Or did Mycenae lavish some of its gold on building her a more worthy temple? May not the famous bee-hive structures which have passed successively for treasuries and for tombs of princes prove to be [Greek: megara], temples of Chthonian deities such as Demeter?

It is true that in some humbler structures of the same type, such as those at Menídi and Thoricus, clear evidences of inhumation have been found; but I question whether it is permissible to draw from this fact the inference that those magnificent structures also, the so-called Treasuries of Atreus and of Minyas, were in reality tombs. It would seem reasonable to suppose that dwelling-*places for the dead beneath the earth and for earth-deities may have been constructed on the same plan, but that the abodes dedicated to immortals were more imposing than those destined for dead men. This hypothesis appears to me more consistent with the evidence of the actual sites at Mycenae and Orchomenos than the commonly accepted view that the inner chamber of the 'Treasury of Atreus' was a place of burial. 'In the centre of the Mycenaean chamber,' says Schuchhardt[4], 'there is an almost circular depression three feet in diameter and two feet in depth, cut into the rocky ground. In spite of its unusual shape, we must recognise in it the actual site of the grave.' Was it a royal posture to lie curled up like a cat? And if so, what of a similar depression in the floor of the 'Treasury of Minyas' at Orchomenos? 'Almost in the centre of the treasure-room'—I again quote Schuchhardt[5]—'was a long hole in the level rock, nine inches deep, fifteen inches broad and nineteen inches long, which'—must be recognised as the sepulchre of a royal baby? No, our faith is not to be so severely taxed;—'which must have served to secure some monument.' May we not, with more consistency, extend the same explanation to Mycenae? And what then were

  1. Schuchhardt, Schliemann's Excavations (tr. Sellers), p. 296.
  2. Ibid.
  3. Paus. II. 22. 1.
  4. op. cit. p. 147.
  5. op. cit. p. 302.