Page:History of Art in Primitive Greece - Mycenian Art Vol 2.djvu/553

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496 Index, Masks, in shaft-graves, Mycenae, ii. 241-243. Megalithism, exceptional in primitive construction, i. 461. Megaron, men's, i. 280-283, 336 ; women's, i. 286, 287. Melicertes (Melkarth), i. 76. Melos, necropoles of, i. 451. Menidi, tomb at, i. 352, 399-402. Metal, in decoration, i. 535 ; ii. 49. Middleton, restoration of Tirynthian palace, i. 283«. Mideia, fortified enclosure, i. 454, 455, 467. Milchofer, researches on Mycenian period, i. 444«. ; ii. 31 1»., 316;/. Minos, i. 87. Minyas, treasury of, i. 422-429. Minyi, i. 88-90. Mirror, handles of, ii. 262, 263. Montelius, ii. 422;/. Mortars, i. 128. Muller (Ottfried), i. 96. Musicians, marble figures of, ii. 204, 205. Mycenae, history, situation, i. 294-303 : enclosure, i. 304-311 ; royal necro- polis, i. 312-344 ; palace, i. 335-339 ; houses, i. 336 ; domed-tombs, i. 347-359 ; rock-cut tombs, i. 359-366 ; detached forts, causeways, i. 365- '369 ; not visited by Attic historians, i. 370; are tombs discovered by Schliemann those mentioned by Pausanias, i. 370-381. Mylitta, ii. 92. N. Nails, in metal- work, i. 536 ; ii. 449. Nana, ii. 92. Nauplia, i. 385. Needles, ii. 419. Neolithic age, i. 114. Nestor, cup of, ii. 436. Newton brings fonvard the lalysos collection, i. 444'/. Niemann, mission at Troy, i. 252. O. Obsidian, i. 132. Ocha, temple at, ii. 95. Octopus, ii. 386. Ohnefalsch Richter, discoveries in Cyprus, i. 447 ; ii. 88//. Oliaros, necropolis, i. 451. Orchomenos, i. 95, 418-429; ceiling of, ii. 519, 520. Orsi (P.), Cretan ossuaries, i. 434«. ; Mycenian vases in Sicily, ii. 410//. P. Pagas^., necropolis of, i. 429-431. Palace, at Troy, i. 195-197 ; Tiryns, i. 274-292; Mycenae, i. 335-342; Athens, i. 411; Crete, i. 439-441: restoration, ii. 122-145. Palafits, on Lake Prasias, i. 116;/. Palamides, i. 75. Palamidi, i. 385-388. Paleolithic age, i. 114. Palm, stem of, handle of mirror, ii. 264 ; on intaglios, ii. 298. Panthers, on dagger, ii. 225. Paton, discovers Mycenian vases in the Cyclades, ii. 410W. Pausanias, description of Tiryns, i. 263, 264 ; domed-tombs, i. 348;/., 350 : the only writer who visited Mycense, i. 370 ; his description analyzed, i. 370-S3 ; reality of his travels, i. 377, 378. Pavements, lime and pebbles, i. 277 ; patterns on, i. 533. Pectoral, gold, i. 323. Pedasa, i. 60. Pelasgi, i. 57. Pelasgicon, i. 406. Pelopidae, i. 85 ; ii. 41, 42. Pendants, ii. 439. Penrose, relating to Tirynthian palace, i. 292. Pent-house, over tomb entrances, ii. 72. Ilcpi^oXof, meaning of, with Pausanias, i. 373- Perseia, fountain, i. 298. Pharis, i. 394. Phocis, traces of Mycenian civilization in, i. 429. Phoenicia, Mycenian vases in, i. 447. Phoenicians in Grecian waters, i. 72- 75 ; not the builders of Cyclopaean walls in Greece, ii. 116, 117 ; marble idols, bronze ditto, not of Phoenician origin, ii. 176, 200. Piracy in Archipelago, i. 85, 86. Pitane, necropolis, ii. 390. UiOoi, i. 208, 209, 248, 442 ; ii. i. Pits, offering, 1. 278, 279, 316, 317; hollowed in the floor of cui)ola on rock-cut tombs, i. 388; pit graves, ii. 20-30.