In
Greece, the vaulted
tholoi are a monumental Late
Bronze Age development. Their origin is a matter of considerable debate; they were either inspired by the tholoi of
Crete, which were first used in the
Early Minoan period, or they were a natural development of
tumulus burials dating to the Middle Bronze Age. In concept, they are similar to the much more numerous
Mycenaean chamber tombs which seem to have emerged at about the same time. Both have chamber, doorway
stomion, and entrance passage
dromos, but tholoi are largely built, while chamber tombs are rock-cut. A few early examples of tholoi have been found in
Messenia in the SW Peloponnese Greece (for example at
Voidhokoilia), and recently near
Troezen in the NE Peloponnese. These tholoi are built on level ground and then enclosed by a mound of earth. A pair of tumuli at
Marathon, Greece indicate how a built rectangular (but without a vault) central chamber was extended with an entrance passage. After about
1500 BCE, beehive
tombs became more widespread and are found in every part of the Mycenaean heartland. In contrast, however, to the early examples these are almost always cut into the slope of a hillside so that only the upper third of the vaulted chamber was above ground level. This masonry was then concealed with a relatively small mound of earth. The tombs usually contain more than one
burial, in various places in the tomb either on the floor, in pits and cists or on stone-built or rock-cut benches, and with various
grave goods. After a burial, the entrance to the tomb was filled in with
soil, leaving a small mound with most of the tomb underground. The chamber is always built in
masonry, even in the earliest examples, as is the stomion or entrance-way. The dromos in early examples was usually just cut from the
bedrock, as in the Panagia Tomb at
Mycenae itself. In later examples such as the
Treasury of Atreus and
Tomb of Clytemnestra (both at
Mycenae), all three parts were constructed of fine
ashlar masonry. The chambers were built as
corbelled vaults, with layers of stone placed closer together as the vault tapers toward the top of the tomb. These stone layers were trimmed from inside the tomb, creating a smooth dome. The entrances provided an opportunity for conspicuous demonstration of wealth. That of the Treasury of Atreus, for example, was decorated with columns of red and green “Lapis Lacedaimonius” brought from quarries over 100 km away. The abundance of such tombs, often with more than one being associated with a settlement during one specific time period, may indicate that their use was not confined to the ruling
monarchy only, although the sheer size and therefore the outlay required for the larger tombs (ranging in diameter and height) would argue in favour of royal commissions. The larger tombs contained amongst the richest finds to have come from the Late Bronze Age of Mainland Greece, despite the tombs having been
pillaged both in
antiquity and more recently. Although the
Vapheio tholos, south of Sparta, had been robbed, two cists in the floor had escaped notice. These contained, among other valuable items, the two gold "
Vapheio cups" decorated with scenes of bull taming which are among the best known of Mycenaean treasures. ==Levant and Cyprus==