Vergina – Tombs of Philip

The ancient city of Aigai was the capital of the kingdom of Macedonia. The first settlement on the site dates back to the Early Bronze Age in 3000 BC and was densely populated during the Early Iron Age (11th-8th c. BC). In the following centuries, during the Archaic and Classical periods (7th – 5th c. BC), Aigai was developed to a prosperous city, and became the capital of the Macedonian kingdom until the end of the 5th c. BC, when the seat of the Macedonian kings was transferred to Pella. Aigai remains the historic centre of the kingdom, where the kings are buried in the royal necropolis, the traditional cult is practised in the sanctuaries and the official and ritual ceremonies take place.
The first excavations on the site were carried out in the mid-19th c. by the French archaeologist L. Heuzey, bringing to light the first Macedonian tomb. In 1976 Prof. Manolis Andronikos revealed the royal tombs of the Great Mound and one year later came to light the tomb of king Philip II (359-336 BC). The excavation of the palace and the theatre followed, while excavations during the last decade, were conducted by the University of Thessaloniki and has focused on the the civic quarters of the ancient city and its extensive cemeteries.

Among the most important monuments of the site are:

– The royal tombs of the Great Mound (Toumba). This group includes:
– The tomb of Philip II, a monumental Macedonian type tomb, with two chambers and a temple-like facade which combines elements of both the Doric and Ionic order. A typical feature of the Ionic frieze of the tomb, is a wall painting that depicts a scene of royal hunting, a rare example of the ancient Greek painting. Among the central figures is recognized that of Alexander the Great. As this grave remained intact from destructions and plundering, it yielded a wealth of artifacts, among them the two gold larnakes, which contained the bones of the king and its wife.
– The tomb of Persephone. This is one of the largest cist graves found so far in Greece. It dates to 350 BC and it probably belonged to Nikesipolis, king Philip’s wife and Thessaloniki’s mother. The tomb was conventionally named after the theme of its wall painting, which depicts the abduction of Persephone by Plouto. The murals of the tombs of Philip and of Persephone comprise the most important specimens of ancient Greek wall painting preserved today. Unfortunately the tomb was looted probably during the invasion of the Gauls, who plundered the royal necropolis of Aigai in the 3rd century BC.
– The “tomb of the Prince” (tomb of Alexander IV) was built near that of Philip, about 30 years later. It contained the bones of a young adolescent, maybe the son of Alexander the Great and Roxane, Alexander IV, both murdered by Kassandros, usurper of the throne after the death of Alexander the Great.
– The tomb of the free-standing columns is the third tomb of the Macedonian type in the Great Tumulus. It dates to the 3rd c. BC and probably belonged to Antigonos Gonatas. The monument was heavily damaged due to repeated plundering of its building material and deprived from its most wealthy artefacts. The monument had an impressive entrance with four Doric columns, which are partly preserved today.

– The cemetery of the tumuli.
This is the necropolis of the Iron Age (11th-8th c. BC), which includes more than 300 small earthen tumuli, constructed over clusters of burials which contained rich offerings.

– The Palace and the Theatre
These two important monuments consist part of a wider building complex of the ancient city that dates to the late 4th c. BC. Built on a higher location, the palace overhung the ancient city. The two-storeyed building comprised luxurius halls, clustered around a central peristyle courtyard and a shrine dedicated to Herakles Patroos. Indicative of the rich decoration is the fine mosaic floor which was preserved in one of the palace rooms. The palace of Aigai is the only example preserved today of an ancient Greek palace dated as early as in the Late Classical period, being a forerunner of its Hellenistic successors.
The theatre was constructed very close to the palace, on a downhill slope. A distinctive architectural feature is the very large orchestra with a diameter of 28 m, while the cavea exploited the natural inclination of the slope, having only one series of stone seats. It was in this theatre that king Philip II was assassinated in the summer of 336 BC and Alexander the Great was proclaimed king.

– The City and its sanctuaries
The ancient city was fortified with a massive wall, which formed a circular enclosure around the city. The architectural remains – public buildings, private houses, workshops – uncovered so far provide a rough picture of the urban planning and the development of the city, a picture that the ongoing excavations keep filling in.
The public nucleus of the city, the agora, was located at a lower level beneath the palace and the theatre. The most important feature for the identification of this part of the city with the agora, was the sanctuary of Efkleia, the deity of glory and good repute, whose sanctuaries were erected in the agora, being the heart of the ancient Greek cities. In the case of the sanctuary of Aigai, the excavation revealed the foundations of two temples, a peristyle building and a series of offerings, including two bases of votive statues dedicated by the queen Eurydice, grandmother of Alexander the Great. The majority of the architectural remains are dated to the period of Philip II (359-336 BC) and Alexander (336-323).
Of major importance is also the sanctuary of the Mother of the Gods (Metroon), the panhellenic deity Rhea, which already in the 6th c. BC was associated with the Asian goddess Cybele. The sanctuary of Aigai consists of a complex of cult and auxiliary structures, which were erected over the ruins of an earlier sanctuary and date to the beginning of the 3rd c. BC. The Hellenistic sanctuary was destroyed in 150 BC.
In 167 BC the Macedonian kingdom submitted to the Romans and, as it was the case with the rest of Greece, became a province of the Roman Empire. The Roman era for Aigai is a period of gradual decline and shrinkage until the mid-1st c. AD, when the city is finally abandoned by its inhabitants.

VERGINA is included in both the guided tours that visit Northern Greece:
1) The 5 days guided tour of Northern Greece, visiting Delphi, Thermopylae, Meteora, Thessaloniki, Edessa, Naousa, Vergina, Berea (St. Paul), Pella, and the Archaeological park of Dion (feet of Mt. Olympus), and
2) The 7 days guided Grand tour of Greece, visiting Epidaurus, Nafplion, Mycenae, Olympia, Delphi, Thermopylae, Meteora, Thessaloniki, Edessa, Naousa, Vergina, Berea (St. Paul), Pella, and the Archaeological park of Dion (feet of Mt. Olympus).