This blog is dedicated to one of the greatest mysteries of the ancient world, Homer’s Ithaca. Τhese last years, significant excavations are in progress in the area of Southeastern Kefalonia, which bring to the surface important discoveries of the era of Ulysses (Mycenaean period). Here you will read more about the searching of Homeric Ithaca and the center of Odysseus’ kingdom.
Friday, 3 October 2014
Friday, 8 August 2014
Where on Earth is Homer's Ithaca? Που τελικά είναι η Ομηρική Ιθάκη;
The most important theories and studies on the location of Homeric Ithaca from the Renaissance to the present day
Οι κυριότερες θεωρίες και μελέτες για την θέση της Ομηρικής Ιθάκης από την εποχή της Αναγέννησης μέχρι σήμερα.
Text & Copyright: Hettie Putman Cramer & Makis Metaxas
Thursday, 6 March 2014
All what the wind brings "όσα φέρνει ο άνεμος"
and the immortal deity who guards and protects you will send you a following breeze.
(Od. 15.34-35)
The coming offprint entitled "ASTERIS: The island of the suitors" is one of several self-contained, popularized excerpts from a much longer work on the Homeric geography and topography of Western Greece.
Bearing in mind the particular readership for which this paper is chiefly intended, we have deliberately eschewed analysis of specialized issues and excessive use of citations and footnotes, which are mainly of
Saturday, 1 March 2014
The excellent communication between Homeric Ithaca and the mainland of Elis (Northwestern Peloponnese) .
(excerpt from the book: Homeric Ithaca, H. Putman Cramer / G. Metaxas Text & Copyright: Hettie Putman Cramer & Makis Metaxas )
The excellent communication between Homeric Ithaca and the mainland of Elis at Kyllene as a pointer to the age-old interaction and communication between southeastern Kephallenia and Kyllene and the western Peloponnese
The excellent communication between Homeric Ithaca and the mainland of Elis at Kyllene as a pointer to the age-old interaction and communication between southeastern Kephallenia and Kyllene and the western Peloponnese
We have intentionally left till last the matter of the excellent communication and close relationship between Homeric Ithaca and the Kyllene region of Elis. Homer makes it clear that this relationship applied to the ordinary people of Ithaca as well as the nobles when he tells us (Od. 4.632-637) that Noemon wanted his ship back to cross over to the plains of Elis, where he had some mares and young mules, and bring one of them back to be broken in.
Thursday, 12 December 2013
like a sea-gull that roams the waves.....(σαν γλάρος των κυμάτων δρομέας....)
Text & Copyright: Hettie Putman Cramer & Makis Metaxas
This following excerpt from 'Alexandra' of Lycophron (4th century BC) is 'puzzling' and highly prophetic. It is one of the 'darker' and yet most famous poems of Greek antiquity. It locates Odysseus' palace, where all
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Odysseus as a "sea-gull" that roams the waves |
This following excerpt from 'Alexandra' of Lycophron (4th century BC) is 'puzzling' and highly prophetic. It is one of the 'darker' and yet most famous poems of Greek antiquity. It locates Odysseus' palace, where all
Tuesday, 19 November 2013
The Lost Kingdom of Homer's Doulichion
By Hettie Putman Cramer & Makis Metaxas
"Graecia Antiqua" Johannes Laurenmberg Collection of Fotis Kremmydas. |
It is well known that the epic poem of the ‘Odyssey’ and the special importance of the name Odysseus have triggered the search for the location of Homer’s Ithaca and for the palaces of the ‘anax’ (king) of the Kephallenes. This has always been an important issue at all levels of research.
However, the identification of the position of Homeric Doulichion - the Mycenaean Kingdom at the border of the Kingdom of Odysseus from where as many as forty ships were sent to the Trojan War as well as the largest amount of suitors to claim the throne of Homer's Ithaca - was actually the biggest mystery of the Homeric topography since ancient times.
After reading carefully where and how Homer describes the location and geomorphology of Doulichion, it is very important to realize that from the 5th century B.C. the ancient Greek historians and geographers have
Monday, 11 November 2013
Odysseus Kingdom and the location of Homer's Ithaca
Text & Copyright: Hettie Putman Cramer & Makis Metaxas
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Myceanaean Greece 1250 B.C |
The search for
Homer’s Ithaca and the controversy over whether it could be definitely
identified with the Ithaki of historical times appears to date back to very
early in the historical era. Of the ancient writers, Strabo (C 454) is the
one who tells us most about the doubt in the minds of the geographers and
historians
Friday, 25 October 2013
Ithaca and Homer : Towards a Solution of an Old Mystery.
LH (Mycenaean) settlement at Tzannata /Poros Kephallenia (Kefalonia) :
A strong candidate for the seat of King Ulysses
(excerpt from the book: Homeric Ithaca, H. Putman Cramer / G. Metaxas)
Photo from the central chamber of the monumental tholos tomb excavated from 1992 to 1994 by Dr Lazaros Kolonas, who became later the General Director of Antiquities of the Greek Ministry of Culture. |
Recent excavations and archaeological
research have shown that the Pronnoi (Πρόννοι) district, in the southeastern
part of Kephallenia (Kefalonia), contains a great many prehistoric sites. The
outstanding find in this area has been the monumental Mycenaean royal tholos
tomb and part of a LH. (Mycenaean) 1600-1100 BC settlement near the village of Tzannata which attests to the
existence of a major city of some
Tuesday, 15 October 2013
The "Hill of Hermes" and the springs in Homer's Ithaca
The great number of springs mentioned by Homer as one of
the notable features of Homeric Ithaca, considered in conjunction with the
innumerable springs existing in Kefalonia, -particularly in the Pronnoi district, - (in contrast to the
aridity of Ithaki in historical times).
(excerpt from the book: Homeric Ithaca, H. Putman Cramer / G. Metaxas)
It is well known that Homer lays
particular emphasis on the fact that Ithaka was noted for its numerous watering-places (Od. 13.247) and springs (Od. 17.207; 13.109, 147; 20.154). Homer's text leaves no doubt about it that one of Ithaca's main characteristics were the abundant water springs.This was one of the
Sunday, 13 October 2013
The Spring of Arethusa,the Raven’s Crag or Crow’s Crag, and the ‘the furthest point’ in Homeric Ithaca
(excerpt from the book: Homeric Ithaca, H. Putman Cramer / G. Metaxas)
The spring called "potistis" (named from the verb ποτίζω, anc.Gk = ἀρέθω,[=Arethusa]
meaning ‘irrigate’ or ‘water’), in the area Stou Lani ton Kambo of Gradou
below of the Raven’s Crag (Kορακόπετρα) at Anninata village.
The Homeric place-name Κόρακος πέτρη (Raven’s Crag or Crow’s Crag)[i], was near the southernmost point of Homeric Ithaka. According to Homer,[ii] it was there that Eumaios the swineherd kept his pigs, which he watered at the Spring of Arethusa (so named from the verb ἀρέθω, meaning ‘irrigate’ or ‘water’).
These two above mentioned locations are described in Homer's tale as laying in the southernmost area of Ithaca. Odysseas hiked - following goddess Athena's instuctions- to this area when he left the Cave of the
Wednesday, 9 October 2013
The unique ‘harbour of Rheithron’ in Homeric Ithaca
Text & Copyright: Hettie Putman Cramer & Makis Metaxas
Aerial photograph of Poros by George Avgoustiniatos
Homer locates the "harbour of Rheithron" in Homeric Ithaca in the area ‘below [or near] to the wooded Neïon’ (the ὑπονήιος area), just outside the city (Άστυ).
Today most translators agree that the Neion was a mountain on Homeric Ithaca. It is our belief that ὑπονήιος [hypo-neion] area (the area ἐπὶ, ὑπὸ (περὶ, παρὰ) τὸ νήιον), that is the area near the
Tuesday, 8 October 2013
Melissani :The famous Cave of the Nymphs in the Thirteenth Book of the Odyssey.
(excerpt from the book: Homeric Ithaca, H. Putman Cramer / G. Metaxas)
Text & Copyright: Hettie Putman Cramer & Makis Metaxas
The dramatic lake-cave of Melissani (Karavomilos- Sami, Kefalonia)
The famous Cave of the Nymphs in the Thirteenth Book of the Odyssey together with Mount Neriton are mentioned by Homer as one of the main landmarks of Ithaca.
Athena, the goddess of wisdom and knowledge, was well aware of the
importance of these landmarks
Mount Neriton of Homer’s Ithaca
Points of identification between Mount Neriton of Homer’s Ithaca and Mount Ainos on Kephallenia, which lies within the purlieus of the Pronnoi distric.
(excerpt from the book: Homeric Ithaca, H. Putman Cramer / G. Metaxas)
Mount Ainos. Photo by Rose Mande
Taking Homer’s descriptions as cardinal
points for study and analysis, we find that Mount Neriton is mentioned in every description of
Homeric Ithaca, of which it is an integral part worthy of being mentioned and
described whenever the opportunity arises. As we shall see, it is abundantly
clear that Mount Neriton
Monday, 7 October 2013
South eastern Kephallenia and the Topography of Homeric Ithaca
(excerpt from the book: Homeric Ithaca, H. Putman Cramer / G. Metaxas)
Recent excavations and archaeological
research[i]
have shown that the Pronnoi (Πρόννοι) district, in the South eastern part of Kephallenia (Kefalonia), contains a great many
prehistoric sites. The outstanding find in this area has been the monumental
Mycenaean royal tholos tomb[ii]
outside the village
of Tzannata ,
which attests to the existence of a major city of some importance beyond its
own borders, ruled by a Mycenaean prince.[iii]
Aerial photograph of the Mycenaean royal tholos tomb
at Arès near Tzannata, just outside the impressive Poros gorge, which was
excavated from 1992 to 1994 by Dr. Lazaros Kolonas, who became later the General Director of Antiquities in the
Ministry of Culture.
(Photo: Lazaros Kolonas)
It is a fact that after more than a
hundred years of excavations in the Ionian Islands – mostly on Ithaki,[iv]
where finds attesting to Mycenaean habitation have been few and far between –
it appears from the
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