The Ancients - The Minoan Eruption: Bronze Age Cataclysm
Episode Date: September 7, 2025More than 3,500 years ago, a massive volcanic eruption devastated Thera - modern day Santorini - engulfing the Bronze Age world in ash and fire. Entire landscapes were buried, ash darkened the skies, ...and the shockwaves rippled across the eastern Mediterranean.In this episode of The Ancients, the first in our new special series on Great Disasters, Tristan Hughes is joined by Dr Steve Kershaw to uncover what really happened. Did this disaster spark the decline of the Minoans? Could it even lie behind Plato’s legend of Atlantis? Join us this month to step into the chaos and witness how catastrophe reshaped some of the most famous ancient civilisations.MOREBronze Age Collapse:https://open.spotify.com/episode/4dEddIFS5yfamKqVZd6xAE?si=7f45c994dd5f4e82Hephaestus: God of Fire:https://open.spotify.com/episode/2DLYVCLmrHxXZxQ7rMBREv?si=5b950d9c22ee4448Presented by Tristan Hughes. Audio editor is Aidan Lonergan and the producer is Joseph Knight. The senior producer is Anne-Marie Luff.All music courtesy of Epidemic SoundsThe Ancients is a History Hit podcast.Sign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week and ad-free podcasts. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe. You can take part in our listener survey here: https://insights.historyhit.com/history-hit-podcast-always-on Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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The dozen different sources from the period say something very strange.
They say basically that the sun disappeared.
Witness a world where nature reigns supreme and catastrophe rewrote the story of civilization.
Huge volcanic bombs are coming out of the sky, these great rocks, about three feet across, crashing through the material.
In the ancient world, disaster was always lurking.
Earthquakes and volcanoes flattened and buried mighty cities in an instant.
Drought and plague wiped out civilizations without mercy.
So if you've got an empire, that too becomes immensely vulnerable and prone to collapse.
Life in the ancient world often hung by a thread.
Over the next four episodes, we'll discover that survival was never guaranteed.
It's like playing Russian roulette with five bullets in the six holes.
It's time to step into the chaos and witness the catastrophe
to uncover how disaster reshaped civilizations and the world itself.
This is great disasters.
More than 3,500 years ago, at the height of the Bronze Age, a devastating volcanic eruption
engulfed the island of Thera, present-day Santorini, in the Aegean.
A great cloud of ash and rock rose more than 30 kilometres into the sky, blotting out
the sun and covering the Mediterranean world in a veil of darkness. Surging hot gases and volcanic
rock then descended from the volcano, burying local Bronze Age settlements, like Akrit
theory for more than three millennia. But the consequences of this eruption spread far beyond
Santorini and the Central Mediterranean. Many Bronze Age civilizations were strongly affected by it,
including the Minoans. This enigmatic and prosperous civilization centered on Crete,
but boasting connections that stretched to Egypt and far beyond. In this episode we are going
to explore what we know about this Minoan eruption and its consequences for this.
Bronze Age world? Did it cause the decline of the Minoans? Could it have inspired Plato's famous
story of Atlantis? This is the story of the Minoan eruption with our guest, Dr Stephen Kershaw.
Steve, it is such a pleasure to have you back on the podcast. It's a great pleasure to be
back. No, thanks for having me. I'm looking forward to a nice chat about this extraordinary
civilization and its trajectory from perhaps start to finish.
And an explosive topic as well, the Minoan eruption.
First and foremost, can we say that this is one of the greatest natural disasters from ancient
history?
I think it probably is.
There's a volcanic eruption that happens in the late Bronze Age that is possibly the biggest
one that's, I don't know, it's possibly there isn't a bigger one that's happened since.
It's an absolutely extraordinary event with potentially enormous consequences, as you can imagine.
First of all, no such thing is a silly question. What was the Minoan eruption? Where are we talking about? And when?
That's a great question to start with. This Minoan eruption happened on what is now the island of Santorini.
And to be honest, the date of this is something that's hotly disputed amongst volcanologists and
archaeologists, but the most likely, I think, is a date of somewhere in the region of 1625
BC. So you're at the end of the 17th century BC on the island of Santorini, where you have
an absolutely humongous volcanic eruption that has defined what the island looks like today
as this beautiful sort of tourist destination. It's been said that you kind of sit in the box seat
of creation when you go there. So there was this mighty eruption in the Bronze Age.
that has cataclysmic consequences, potentially.
And what types of source material do we have to learn more about this eruption?
You mentioned the disagreements around the date,
but it still seems like quite a pinpoint date you can talk about with this story.
What types of material is available for us?
Lots of stuff.
It's the, on the sort of volcanology side, you can go to the island
and you can pretty much trace the course of the eruption throughout the volcanic material that's still there.
The cliffs of the island almost contain like a, it's like a cake with slices.
And it's almost gives you a sort of timeline of what was happening on the,
on the, throughout the eruption period.
So what it seems to have happened is that initially this, I mean,
the area is very volcanic anyway.
And there are earthquakes that happen.
My Greek friends say that earthquakes in Greece are like rain in London.
And there's a particular archaeological site that we might want to talk about called Akrateri on the island of Santorini that shows evidence of earthquake damage.
It was a huge earthquake that there's great big staircases.
And it's like they snapped in two like a kit cap bar.
So it was a big earthquake.
But they're used to this and they were tidying up their city, sort of putting it back together.
And they didn't know there was a connection.
but then the volcano started to blow.
And what we see in the ash deposits is sort of four very brief events that put down
about maybe between them 10 to 15 centimetres of different kinds of volcanic ash.
And it looks like the people on the island at that particular point have said,
well, it's time to go.
You know, whether they were successful in that is very hard to tell.
but on the Akrateri site, there is no evidence of human remains there,
and everything that's precious and portable seems to have been taken away.
What they haven't found is the harbour facilities there,
and if they do find those, they might find a very different picture.
But at the moment, the town that's been excavated has no people in it, which is interesting.
So there's possibly an exodus.
But then the eruption column goes up, and the blasts,
the actual eruption column is 30 to 40 kilometers high. Wow. So, you know, when you fly into
Santorini on a plane, you're at 10 kilometers. This is 30 to 40. And stuff falls out of the sky,
about six meters of volcanic material, which on the island of Santorini fills the sort of
ground floor levels of the houses and preserves them because of this material in a way like
happened at Pompeii, Perculaneum as well. So this stuff is falling out of the
sky and is being blown in an arc largely to the east of the island. So towards what's now
Turkey, slightly hitting the eastern end of Crete and creating possibly climate change on a short-term
basis because all of this stuff goes up into the atmosphere and the earth cools because the
sun can't go through. But what goes up must come down. And the next phase is that you get
the eruption column collapses and it sort of blasts out sideways, very high velocity. And
And it destroys everything that's sticking out of the ash to start with.
So it's kind of scours the rest of it off.
Huge volcanic bombs are coming out of the sky, these great rocks about three feet across,
crashing through the material.
And in the layers, you can see there's a particular area on the island in a quarry
where the island has been sort of sliced down.
Four more enormous explosions with these what they call pyroclastic flows of hot gas
and pumice and lithics that are dropping and blasting away.
on top of all of that they put down somewhere in the region of 55 metres of material and then there's more right it kind of happens again and the same again happens pretty much so you're looking at kind of over 100 metres of material pours down out of the sky that's the scale of it and underneath all of that there's a beautiful town other beautiful towns and obviously impact throughout the the region so that's what and kind of everybody
much agrees on that. The when is the one that is controversial. The minotan civilisation
on Crete flourishes at its peak between about 1,900 and 1450 BC thereabouts. So it's sometime
in that time frame. And when they first made these excavations, the thing that the archaeologists
used was pottery. So you can you can use and trace
the development of pottery styles,
plug those into things that are exported to other cultures.
So, you know, these people are in contact with Egypt and so on,
and we can have pretty secure dates of things in Egypt.
So if you find sort of Cretan or Santorini-Etheran material in Egypt,
in datable context, you can start to piece together the dates.
And originally, the great archaeologist who explored Akrateri and discovered it, really, was Spirit on Marinatos.
And he thought, initially, that the, from his pottery finds, that the date was about 1450 BC, which would coincide with what was felt to be the end of the Minoan civilization on Crete.
So it was a good solution here to that.
a bit later he had to sort of revise his dates on the pottery, push him back about 50 years
or so to about 1,500, but at the end of the day, that was kind of cool for him as well.
You know, cause and effect could still probably apply at that stage if the sort of power
of this eruption had been so disruptive that it could weaken a culture and a civilization.
And that's pretty much what happened until the 1980s.
He was working in the 60s and early 70s.
in the 1980s though carbon 14 dating came on the scene and at that point the the carbon 14 dates came back with something in the sort of last quarter of the 17th century so about 1628 20 something like to 1606 so it then starts to become a little bit too far away from the from the end of the minoan civilization for many people's like it.
at this point. Other things that went into the potential dating of this was, as I said,
is that the eruption was so big that it blotted out the sun on a planetary scale. Wow.
So you get what they call frost events in the Earth's surface, and that manifests itself
primarily in the growth rings of trees. So the trees don't grow as much. And trees have a kind of,
their growth is like a barcode and you can use it for dating all sorts of different things you can
piece them all together and that was coming back with i mean you can see the scale of this event it was
coming back with there was sort of bristlecone pines in the united states and there were bog oaks in
ireland that weren't growing very much at that same particular point between 1628 1626 so thereabouts
no evidence of frost damage of 1450, 1,500, really.
And that was interesting, I think.
So they call that dendrochronology, the putting together of those dates.
And also going into the mix is the stuff that comes out of the volcano is very rich in sulfur dioxide.
And when it goes up into the atmosphere, it falls back in the form of acid rain.
And you get a similar kind of barcode in the polar ice caps with each year there's a new level of ice.
And what you see is acid spikes in the polar ice caps and in Greenland taking place roughly that same time, you know, that last quarter of the 17th century.
And then the final bit was that they also buried in the pumice in an upright position in the eruption material.
they found an olive tree and were able to then do dating and analysis on that, coming back
with very similar results about, so, you know, within that 25-year period of 1625 to the end
of the thing, you know, but there's a lot of people will still argue with a toss about this,
but it seems very likely, I think, that that is the date of this event.
So an amazingly rich record for us to delve into.
Am I correct also, given that this is before the Bronze Age collapse, you've also got writing
at this time, these thriving civilizations in the Near East, Ancient Egypt and so on,
do we have some written texts surviving as well that document this event?
Very much. This is a tricky one. It's unlikely, I think, if we want this event to be 16, 25-ish,
then there probably isn't. If we want it to be later, there have been theories that
things like the biblical plagues are something that.
do with this or the Parting of the Red Sea.
But as far as dates-wise, that's kind of not adding up for us.
So there's nothing really in the Egyptian records, say, or Babylonian or anything else.
Our slight problem here is that when the eruption happened, the culture, the Minoan culture,
was, there's a number of things about it.
It's an extraordinarily rich culture, fantastic art,
wondrous pottery, great architecture,
a very thriving and dynamic and wealthy culture.
However, a number of things,
we don't know what they called themselves, right?
We call them Minoans.
We have no idea what they called themselves.
It may be that the Egyptians called them Keftiou,
the Hebrews call them
Kaftor
the Babylonians in Akkadium
called Kataru
so that might be other people talking about them
but we don't know what they talk
but they talk about themselves as
neither do we know what language they spoke
we have their own script
which is a script called Linear A
which is written in sort of syllables
and numbers
that largely records lists of stuff
but it as yet hasn't been deciphered.
So we don't know what that language is.
Later on, we'll see another language coming into their world,
which is linear B, which we can decipher and we know is Greek.
But before that, so what language these people were speaking
when the eruption went off, we don't know.
And there's no specific records that they keep disappointing, really.
But that's the way it is.
Well, Steve, you mentioned the Minoans there, this extraordinary Bronze Age civilization, of course, the civilization based on Crete, but stretches far beyond that island, that gives its name to this eruption.
Can you give us a sense of just how, I guess, successful, prosperous this civilisation was
before the eruption on Thera, on Santorini, and just how distinctive this Bronze Age culture was?
Yeah, it is a very distinctive culture, I think it's, there are those who like to see it as perhaps
the first European civilization that sometimes said.
but it is thriving and dynamic and highly connected, I think, to the world around it as well.
So the culture is based on Crete, and there are a number of what are called palaces,
whether they are palaces or not is another question.
But the palaces, there's at Knossos and at Feistos and elsewhere on the island,
which are great sort of centres of administration and trade and exchange and religion.
and so on.
And they're the focus of a very thriving society
that produces art of the highest quality,
wondrous ceramics that are beautifully decorated
and exported widely.
They're very desirable.
We find them on Egyptian frescoes and so on
of people taking minoan materials to Egypt and vice versa.
There are frescoes that show us little windows
into the life of these people, their dress, their activities, their artifacts, their ships,
their religion, which is hard to interpret, but religious activity is taking place.
And they have a mythical reputation as being powerful and successful.
King Minos of Crete, who is doubtless a mythical character, but he is supposed to be the first person to have a sea
born empire in anywhere. That's what the myth tells about his. And he was, and he's focused on this
myth of the Minotaur, so he was able to exact tribute from Athens. So he's powerful enough to
interact with the Greek mainland, at least in myth. So these are, these are powerful, dynamic
people trading very widely across the region and prosperous as a result of it. So can we imagine a place
like Acrateri, is it one of many Minoan, I mean, dare I say, colonies or trade posts established
across the Aegean, that helps the Minoans kind of extend their trade routes to this thriving
Bronze Age world?
Very much so, I think.
I mean, it seems that Acrateri is like a trade hub.
You know, it's so, and of the archaeological material that's been found there, about 15%
of it is important.
So there's, you know, a lot of it.
And it's imported from north, south, east and west, from the Greek mainland, the islands, from Crete, from Cyprus, even as far away as Syria and Egypt.
So they're highly connected in a trade network that's, yeah, sort of region-wide, if you like.
So Acrateri, whether it's a Minoan colony or an independent place on its own, hard to tell.
But nevertheless, it seems to be a very important, if you like, trading hub on routes that go.
right across the Aegean region.
And can we also imagine, I'm kind of drawing on,
having done a lot of work on Pompeii over the years and the eruption,
given the similarities with this eruption that we're covering,
the slopes of Pompeii, well, of Mount Vesuvius being very rich agricultural soil,
can we also imagine that aquituary, as well as being a place looking outward
into the Mediterranean world as a trading hub, also having a rich agricultural landscape too?
I think that's likely.
It's also mineral rich as well.
So it has the, certainly the soil is fertile.
You can grow great things in it.
They still do.
Santorim wine is excellent, allow me to recommend.
And I imagine it was in antiquity as well.
But yeah, and also there, if you like, their mineral wealth is interesting.
The volcanic material that's on the island is valuable in its own right.
This has been analysed chemically and what have you to.
with the frescoes that they produce so we know what pigments they're using here so that they can
provide pigments for artists and what have you and generally sort of sit at the yeah at the heart
of a nice trading network themselves and some of the frescoes from the island from santa rini
do sort of present us with these scenes of prosperity you know you can look those little
harbour towns with full of ships towing and froing, and then there's hinterlands showing you,
you know, scenes of pastoral peace really, sort of the guys herding their flocks, their goats,
their cows, their sheep to fountains and what have you. So I guess as a place to live in the
Bronze Age, Santorini's got to be a good one. And you mentioned also earlier how there would
have been earthquakes before this eruption and seeming like greater in their scale as they got
closer to the eruption. But do we think that the Minoans or the Aquiterians, whatever they
called themselves, did they have any idea that they were living next to a volcano or just that
it was a special place maybe favoured by the gods or something like that? Yeah, I don't think
they knew what was coming. I really don't think they knew what was coming. Again, there are all sorts of
reconstruction about what shape the island had before it went off. Certainly that eruption
removed most of it. But quite exactly what shape it was, we don't know. But it was, we don't really
hear about it in sources pertinent to the Bronze Age, but we have a mythical account of the creation
of the island, which is really rather wonderful. It's one of the Argonauts as the Argonaut, Jason and the
Argonauts are returning. The Argonaut Euphemus is given a sort of magic clod of earth.
that he throws into the sea
and when he does, the island of Santorini
appears. So it seems to be
a sort of, it has a sort of blessed
atmosphere to it in later
times. But it seems
again, from these frescoes
that are on the, we're on the walls of
this town, you're looking at
this particular one that showed, they call it
the flotilla fresco, which is
full of ships playing their way
between different harbours and ports and going
to exotic locations
and sort of seemingly returning home.
to a happy welcome and it's really quite extraordinary. These people are thriving and dynamic and
pretty prosperous, it seems. Well, Steve, let's get to that art now. So kind of a recap, as you mentioned
earlier. So the eruption happens. And it sounds pretty similar to the eruption of Mount Vesuvius.
Is it the Plinian eruption, a great kind of pine tree up into the atmosphere? Is it 30 or 40
kilometers, did you say? Yeah, absolutely. Wow. Just extraordinary. So yeah, you've got to imagine
a, yes, like we'd call it a mushroom cloud, Pliny the Elder,
the younger, I beg a pod, call it, it was like a pine tree,
those umbrella pines that you see all over Italy.
So, yeah, so it would have been like that, yes,
you'd have had this vast, yes,
I'd say pliny and eruption, this pine tree-like eruption
that was up in the sky, dispersing its ash, planet-wide,
and then collapsing in on itself.
So that's the next big stage, is it?
So you have all that pumice high into the air,
it starts falling on places like Akrateri taken by the wind.
And then the second stage is when that big cloud into the sky collapses on itself.
And is this the next devastating part of the eruption?
It is, absolutely.
And that's the most devastating part of it.
It's volcanic eruptions that release lava and so on
are by that standard relatively safe.
You know, these pyroclastic flows that come when an eruption column collapses on
itself are, you get these sort of avalanches of gas and rock and ash that travel at speeds
of, you know, 70 miles an hour or so at temperatures of up to 400 degrees centigrade. That's,
you know, this is just utterly terrifyingly dangerous. So, you know, so that's what happened.
This all sort of collapses back on itself with catastrophically fagged. And it covers acrateri.
Also a factoid there that you highlighted straight away, isn't it, Steve? No lava. Is this idea that
We shouldn't be thinking of lava flows with this volcanic eruption.
No, no, and neither at Pompeii either.
This is ash and gas and pumice and this is stuff essentially falling out of the sky.
Obviously there's lava underneath, if you like, and magma that creates the eruption to start with.
But yes, fundamentally this is gas, rock, ash that comes down superheated, a lot of it.
Because that criteria is now names like the Pompeii of the Aegean, because of the extraordinary
preservation of this Bronze Age settlement, I feel like we should explore a few particular
examples of art and archaeology from there. Steve, can you talk us through some examples
that particularly fascinate you and really epitomise the amazing story of this site,
the amazing preservation here that I think it's fair to say many people might not have heard
of as much as Pompeii today. Quite. On the walls of the town were preserved a number of
really extraordinary frescoes that are of the highest artistic quality, really.
There's this full of energy, depth, imagination, movement showing you much of what these people
were doing on a daily basis.
And a lot of it's a bit mysterious, you know, because there's no text to go with it.
No one tells you what these people are doing.
But you have scenes of perhaps initiation of young girls into womanhood.
where there's different life stages are illustrated on these frescoes in rooms that appear to be
dedicated to rituals and initiations. So one of the things is you can distinguish people by their
hairstyles. They younger people, prepubescent people, have their heads shaved. They kind of have
like a skinhead cut, but with sort of big snake-like locks at the front and the back. It's kind of cool,
really. And then they, as they mature into sort of fully grown women, then they grow their hair
longer. They have dazzling jewelry on these frescoes, beautifully produced clothing that's very
distinctive, huge, great flouncy skirts and beautiful, very elaborately adorned bodices that
they wear fabulous jewelry, elaborate hairstyles. And engaged very much in these, what appear to be
ritual activities. I mean, I know it's a cliche of archaeology that anything that an archaeologist
doesn't understand is a ritual activity. But, I mean, these do seem to be ritual activities in
ritual places. So we have insights into their religion, their life phases, both for males and
females as well. There are males there as well. We have wondrous frescoes of them at sea and the boats
that they sail in, which are, again, gorgeous, elaborate, very elegant vessels with sails or
road or both with sort of cabins for the captain at the back and shelters for passengers
making their voyages over dolphin-filled seas and so on. So these are seafaring people.
And these frescoes are so accurately produced that they've been able to actually reproduce
these vessels as well.
There's a, there's a, there's, on, on Crete, they've, you know, they've gone out and looked
at the frescoes and built one and it works perfect.
That's amazing.
So, you know, these are great seafarers.
And in their, in their houses, they've got, yeah, again, wondrous designs sometimes with,
yeah, with maritime scenes of, of, even parts of the ships.
They have these lovely stern cabins that are beautiful in their own right.
And there's, there's frescoes with just paintings of those.
And then there's kind of a sort of.
if you like rogue frescoes as well because in amongst all of that we find quite a lot of monkeys
monkeys yeah painted blue these are not the species blue monkey they are monkeys that have been
painted blue they're probably vervets or something like that but this is fascinating because they're
not native to the region so these things have either been you know imported to the island and
and reproduced artistically,
or someone from the island has been to far inland places and seen these
and come back and produce these absolutely fantastically energetic illustrations of monkeys
that are really authentic.
Their behavior on the frescoes is like their behavior in real life.
So I think it just goes to show the, yeah,
if you like, the diversity of connections that this island had to various places.
And these monkeys also occur in what seems to be sacred scenes as well.
So there's a, if it's like, a sort of sacred element to the creatures as well.
So it's, yeah, dynamic, thriving, artistically sensitive, well-connected, fabulous place.
And do we also get like streets plans almost surviving with the remains of the buildings
and the streets and maybe trying to pinpoint, oh, that was someone's house, that was a market
building, a law court, or I'm trying to think once again like Pompeys is almost the flip side of
this terrible eruption, like this great disaster, the fact that it gives an invaluable insight
into daily life, you know, for this Minoan society, how to survive on Minoan aquateri, almost.
Yes, it does. The houses are there up to first, second story level, sometimes. So these are
actually multi-story houses. And I think the effect of walking through it would be like
walking through any little Greek village on a Greek island today in that sense.
So they have, you know, some of the houses have beautiful Ashland Masonry, you know,
really nice cut blocks of stone.
The streets are there.
You can walk the streets and the streets are paved.
They have drainage underneath the streets.
And in one of the finer houses, the guy even has a lavatory at first floor level.
So, you know, you can, so all this waste is being flushed out of this.
the town and down into the sea and the harbour. So really, really, really sophisticated.
As I say, the houses are sometimes up to three stories high, usually with kind of storage levels
on the ground floor for storage for, you know, all your essentials, living quarters at first floor
level. And you can just, yeah, you can walk the streets and there's little, little plazas.
There's a particular one that I like that they call triangle square, which is a,
little square, but it's a triangle that's surrounded by beautiful houses and so on. So you can
very much get the flavour of what it was like to walk those streets. Like a Beverly Hills equivalent
to one of those squares in London, centre of London, with all those remarkable houses surrounding
it. I love that you also mentioned the sewers there and the latrines, because that can tell you
so much about people living there, the underground part of an ancient city. And also this idea
you mentioned earlier, we've got this amazing archaeology and art surviving. Is it intriguing that we
don't have the remains of people? I don't know if they're the remains of animals there, but this
idea that you do have a lack of bones. Yeah, it is quite striking in the, at least in the area
that's been excavated thus far. It's not an easy place to excavate because of this
enormous amount of volcanic material that sits down on top of it. And the area really that
perhaps would answer so many questions, would be the harbour frontage area, which, I mean,
in essence, you just have to follow the streets down until you hit the sea, but there's such
a mass of volcanic material that it's really hard to get at. But what happened, for instance,
at Herculaneum was that initially there were very few human remains found within the site
itself until they excavated at the harbour frontage where they found hundreds of people
sheltering under the arches of the harbour by the by the water side. So there might be
macabre discoveries to come with the human remains if they weren't able to get away
from the island and had gone down to the harbour in order to try to sail away. So that's a bit of an
unknown, but in the current excavations of what we have, there is nothing of the same
ilk as those casts of the bodies at Pompeii that are so moving and what have you.
And likewise, you know, small things, precious things, not so much of that, very, very, very
little really, you know, it looks like they've tried to gather up what's valuable and
at least tried to get away, whether I'd like to be optimistic about them, but I sometimes think
I shouldn't be.
So that's the story of that criteria and that immediate impact of the eruption on ancient
Thera, on Mondei Santorini.
But Steve, what do we know about the impact of this eruption?
eruption on the wider Minoan Mediterranean world, because I've got in my notes, earthquakes and
tsunamis. Absolutely. The eruption has been, the events on Santa Rina have been linked to
events on Crete and the potential demise of the Minoan civilization on Crete. So, yes, earthquakes,
tsunamis, volcanoes is all part of the mix there.
The idea is an old one, actually,
is that very early in his excavations on Crete,
Sir Arthur Evans, who was excavating at the beginning of the 19th century,
there was a big earthquake on Crete,
and he and Marinatos, the excavator at Santorini,
were together when it happened.
And they wondered whether an earthquake had been the thing
that caused the demise of the minority.
and civilisation.
So they thought about that.
And then Marinartos decided he'd rather have the volcano.
Nobody liked his idea very much until in the 1960s,
they discovered the site at Akrateri, and then it kind of reemerged.
And so whatever happened, it must have had a big effect on the region,
maybe changing trade patterns and things like that.
The big question is, does the volcano cause the end of the civilization of the Minoans on Crete?
As I said before, I think there's possibly too much of a date gap between the one and the other.
But certainly what we see here is that there is some ashfall on Crete.
There is certainly the potential for tsunami damage on the coasts, and the Cretans are a,
you know, heavily dependent on their maritime trades and so on.
So the destruction of harbors and sort of things would be quite devastating, I think, potentially,
although not all the Crete and settlements are on the north side of the island facing Santorini, for instance.
But what you see on Crete, roughly 1450, 1425, is new things start to happen on the island.
So these are people whose language we don't know, writing their linear A and living their lovely Minoan lifestyle, all of a sudden we start to see new burial practices coming in on the island, which are very different.
They're more militaristic, if you like.
You get Boers Tusk helmets.
You get bronze weaponry that is very like that you see on the Greek mainland in the Mycenaean culture, which overlaps the minor.
and you see new burial practices, you see sort of new kinds of settlement and what have you.
You also see a new language coming in.
The language of the administration changes from linear A to linear B.
And the linear B tablets have now been deciphered with great confidence and they're great lists of stuff, but they are written in Greek.
So it looks like we have potentially a new language and certainly new cultural things are happening.
the question is, I suppose, is this new people arriving on the island? Is this a takeover by people from the mainland of Greece, the mycenaeans? Or is it, if you like, a cultural change? Is it the people on the island of Crete adopting a new, if you like, mycenaeizing culture that is perhaps associated with the elite on the island? A little bit hard to tell. It's
from my own feeling on this is that these cultures are incredibly intertwined in many ways.
You know, we tend to want to look for clear dividing lines between, you know,
Minoans and Mycenaeans and Egyptians and so on.
These people are intertwined in a very deep and highly embedded way, I think.
But what you certainly see is new culture on the island of Crete,
possibly brought by new people or possibly assimilated from other people.
you do get big changes.
The question is, is this a result of that eruption?
If the dating of the eruption is right,
it could be indirect, but it's taken quite a long time.
And the eruption would also have had an effect on the people
who would be the would-be invaders, perhaps.
So it's a tricky one.
I suppose the other thing, it's a, you know,
we all like this idea of one massive, digitally created tsunami
smashing into the coasts of northern coasts of Crete and wiping out a civilization. It's quite an
attractive idea. I think perhaps the reality is more of a process than a point in time, I think.
So, you know, certainly the eruption would have had major effects on the entire region in terms
of its, you know, we find pumice from the eruption in Egypt. Wow. And that kind of thing.
is going to effect. It might change trade patterns and align things. Well, that's what I was going
to say. I mean, if not destroying them in urban civilization, surely we can imagine this eruption
weakening it in some way, you know, with the connections that it had with the trade routes.
And also that other facts that you mentioned earlier, thanks to the science, this evidence that
that's this great decrease in climate as well. So colder, colder temperatures could lead to
famine, could lead to movements of people, you know, all of a sudden you've got almost this snowball
effect? Yeah, it is possible, but you certainly see that sort of, if you like, post-erruption,
the Manoans and Crete do quite well, nevertheless. I mean, it sort of leads one to wonder,
perhaps, whether in a strange way it was beneficial to them, if it made realignments of trade routes
that they could then exploit and step into gaps that perhaps haven't been there before,
that we don't know. And this is, I guess, what we struggle with as ancient historians in this
particular area there is no there is no history you know there's no written history we we can go
by the the archaeological material we find we can go by the climatic and and and geological material we
find but but no one at least no one that we've found as yet you know has has had anything
to say about this and the the the linear B script and tablets that we
we have. Those, they're ceramic, they're clay tablets, but they've been fired, but they're not
fired on purpose. They were fired in destructions by fire. So they represent the, if you like,
the very last set of records that there are. Because they're, because they're, because of them
clay, you can rewrite over them and they did, you can reuse them. So we don't have anything,
if you like, particularly earlier than the final, what they call event horizon or destruction horizon
of the places where they're found.
So did they continue to build palaces after this event?
Yeah, they did.
Okay.
Or not build, but to inhabit.
To inhabit.
So Knossos seems to have done very well, at least for a while.
So certainly after the eruption, the palaces are still functioning pretty normally.
after the arrival of the new people or new culture,
then the culture still hangs on
in a kind of hybrid minoan-mycenaean culture that lasts for another little while
until that, again, in controversial circumstances,
fizzles out and you enter what is sometimes
conventionally called the Greek Dark Age,
although don't ever call it a dark age.
archaids to an archaeologist who operates in that region. I certainly won't. Well, before we go
on to mythology, and dare I say the word Atlantis as well, going back to the actual eruption
itself, do we have any idea for how long, you know, the direct effects of the eruption were
felt at the cooling of temperatures, the blotting out of the sun? I mean, you mentioned earlier,
like the USA records and the Irish bogs as well for that decrease in climate. Correct me if I'm
wrong if this is a mistake, but I've also got in front of me a record in the Chinese bamboo
annals. That's just that the collapse of the Shia dynasty and the rise of the Shang dynasty
was accompanied by yellow fog, a dim sun, then three suns, frost in July, famine, and the
withering of all five cereals. Fantastic. Can that also give us a sense that how long, like
the dimming of the sun? Yeah, I mean, yeah, it's, again, tough to some, but it's, you, you
You're talking, I know, you're certainly talking years, perhaps not months.
You know, so enough to, you know, to have those kind of effects, you know, without question.
Absolutely.
But let's talk about mythology.
So the Minowans, of course, with the Minotaur, there are lots of Greek myths that have become associated with this Bronze Age civilization.
Do they also potentially mythologize this seismic, natural?
disaster that surely many of them would have remembered and tolled down through the generations,
do they mythologize it as well? Yeah, it's a tricky question. The answer to that is
whether Plato's Atlantis tale can be plugged into this, which again is something
that primarily Spirit on Maranatos would have liked to have done or wanted to do. The Atlantis
tale is a new one by mythological standards. It only appears in the 4th century BC.
so it's not as old as Homer or anything like that.
It only appears in two dialogues of Plato,
which are the Timaeus and the Critias,
where Socrates and his pals are talking about the ideal state.
And Socrates says,
I'd like to see the ideal state stress test.
And this reminds one of his mates about a story
that he heard when he was 10 years old from his granddad,
who heard it from his granddad,
who heard it from a family friend who heard it from a,
an Athenian reformer called Solon, who lived about 600 BC, of this massive event where
Athens, who in this story is like an embodiment of the ideal state, is invaded from by
this huge power who live on an island out in the Atlantic Ocean that's bigger than Europe and
Africa put together. And they come in and these ideal Athenians fight them and defeat them in battle
and then Zeus sinks the island in the Atlantic Ocean for their hubris.
And this island is called Atlantic.
So that's the basic story.
And in Plato, you have these wondrous descriptions of the island.
And it's, as I say, it's this massive island.
But it has everything you could possibly want.
It has wonderful vast plains with irrigation systems.
It has a fabulous capital city that's built around a central island with concentric rings of water and land around it,
and every facility you could possibly wish, canals linking it to the sea and warships and riches beyond all imagination and two harvests a year
and every beast you could want and all the resources, everything.
But for these people, far too much is never enough, and they kind of overreach themselves.
and this is what leads them to invade the mainland of Europe and Africa
and the Athenians to destroy them.
So the question is, is that some kind of,
and also the Solon who gets the original story in Greeks,
he says that he got it from some priests in Egypt.
So the idea was that is this something that could there be some sort of vestigial remembrance
of some sort of wondrous civilization
that actually wasn't in the Atlantic
but it was in the Mediterranean
that the Egyptians were in contact with
and it was eradicated
and then they had it in their records
and they gave it to Solon
and back it came to Plato.
It's a bit of a tale of Chinese whispers, I think, on that.
But fundamentally, there have been,
yeah, many attempts, I think,
to plug in the Santorini eruption
to the Atlantis.
tale of Plato.
Personally, I'm a little bit unsure about this.
I think that the Atlantis tale that Plato tells is so seductive, so convincing,
so wondrous.
You know, he gives all the dimensions.
You can draw perfect maps of Atlantisville, you know, the main capital city and what have
you.
And it sucks you into a wondrous tale, but it's entirely disconnected from the rest of Greek
mythology, but Greek mythology is really interconnected with everything else. This isn't. It stands
alone. It's a standalone tale. And I think what is the purpose of telling the tale is, as I say,
it's about the ideal state. And it's to show fundamentally how the Atlanteans seem like
a paradise island. As I say, they've got everything they could possibly want, but they still want more.
Once you're going to get beneath the surface, it's not.
It's a nasty, dystopian imperialist nightmare.
And I think the context in which Plato wrote it,
when Athens itself was moving back into imperialist ventures,
was perhaps something that he's telling this
as a kind of like as a warning to his own people
of saying, look, stop it.
These Atlanteans, they come from the West,
they're like, just like the Persians who came in back in our history,
and got defeated by the Athenians that it's just like you Athenians when you attacked Sicily
in the Sicilian exhibition and got, you know, catastrophically hammered.
This is what happens when you, you overreach yourself and do this.
You know, so don't be like, you know, the Atlanteans, don't be like your stupid forefathers.
Don't be like the person.
Stop it.
You know, it's a moral tale.
And I think, I sort of imagine Plato being a bit disappointed if we, if we all,
go out and start looking for the island rather than taking the moral message that he's trying
to give us. I think you're right, especially when you know the context, you say the story of Atlantis
created, you know, is the villain of his story, the message that he's getting across of the ideal
city state in Athens. I think where I'm coming from with that is just it's this idea that
when he's creating this story, like could there have been this memory, you know, on Thera,
on Santorini, that there once was this massive explosion.
well, this eruption, which resulted in this island sinking into the sea.
So maybe that part of the story where Atlantis sinks into the sea,
I guess my question is, could there potentially have been an inspiration for Plater to create
that part of the story from maybe a lasting memory through the centuries that actually
there wants that very different?
It's attractive to do that.
I think the challenge is making it stick.
So we have mythical tales, as I say, of the creation of the island, which is fascinating.
but there's no mythical tale of its destruction unless you want to make Atlantis the one.
There's a lot of potential, I think, for ancient historians to talk about it,
but there is no paper trail, if you like.
You know, when Eucydides starts his history, he talks about the ancient history of Greece,
there's nothing about it there, when Diodorus of Sicily starts his,
and he's not the greatest historian in the world, but when he starts his history,
he goes back into mythical times.
nothing about it there. So trying to find those traces, I mean, it's kind of odd that there
isn't really anything of that nature that's been openly transmitted, but it's simply, I think
it's just hard to find. I think that's the bottom line. Fair enough. And Steve, given how important
you have not, you have not disappointed, I was expecting it with that answer, but also given how
important diodorus of Sicily is for the aftermath of Alexander the Great's death, I will not hear
too many bad words said against him, but I'll understand why you say in this case. My last question
in regards to this is also once again bringing back on the eruption of Mount Vesuvius, Pompei, and
what happened afterwards, which is the aftermath. We know that some Romans did return to Pompeii and
dug through the pumice layers to see what they could get from like the forum and so on. Have we
got any idea whether some Minoans did return to Akritory, to ancient Thera, to try and find
their belongings, or try and find this lost settlement? Good question. I think unlikely in this
case, Pompeii, it was in a sense doable. And as you say, people were going back to Pompeii almost
immediately to tunnel through and to go and get their stuff or loot other people's stuff.
The Acrateri site is buried under so much material that it would be simply impossible.
Fundamentally, it's just eradicated from the world until remarkably, the reason it was found
was because it's sort of in a ravine.
And whenever there were sort of torrential floods that went down that ravine to the sea,
people started to see bits of walls and pottery and and things like that and they made some
finds in the 19th century where they were using they were mining pumice to build the Suez Canal
they were using pumice in the Suez Canal and mining it from there and they were finding
bits of archaeological stuff but no one followed it through so it was like another hundred years
before, again, our friend Marinatos was told by people on the island that every time it flooded,
there were, you know, there were bits of pottery and things.
So he went out and hired a load of pumice miners and started putting trenches into
where he hoped he might find it and found the town, you know, almost instantly.
But there's no, when you go there, it's under so much material.
There is absolutely no way you would ever think there was a settlement down there.
and it's beneath metres and metres of volcanic material.
Well, that's also a very cool fact to end on
that pumice from the Mernoan eruption
was used in the building of the Suez Canal.
There you go.
The legacy of this eruption lives on.
Steve, this has been absolutely fantastic.
It just goes to me to say,
thank you so much for coming on the podcast today.
An absolute pleasure.
Thank you very much for having you.
Well, there you go.
there was Dr. Stephen Kershaw talking through the story of the Minoan eruption.
Stephen, he is such a wonderful, passionate speaker, full of joy, full of happiness.
It was wonderful to have him back on the show.
You can also listen to him talk through the story of Hephaestus,
God of the Forge, God of Blacksmiths, that we recorded with him a couple of years back too.
So thank you, Stephen, for being a wonderful guest of this new Great Disasters series
on the Ancients this September.
Thank you for listening to this.
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Thank you.