The Most Famous

ARCHAEOLOGISTS from Greece

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This page contains a list of the greatest Greek Archaeologists. The pantheon dataset contains 151 Archaeologists, 1 of which were born in Greece. This makes Greece the birth place of the 21st most number of Archaeologists behind Argentina, and Spain.

Top 1

The following people are considered by Pantheon to be the most legendary Greek Archaeologists of all time. This list of famous Greek Archaeologists is sorted by HPI (Historical Popularity Index), a metric that aggregates information on a biography's online popularity.

Photo of Spyridon Marinatos

1. Spyridon Marinatos (1901 - 1974)

With an HPI of 60.61, Spyridon Marinatos is the most famous Greek Archaeologist.  His biography has been translated into 23 different languages on wikipedia.

Spyridon Marinatos (Greek: Σπυρίδων Μαρινάτος; 17 November [O.S. 4 November] 1901 – 1 October 1974) was a Greek archaeologist who specialised in the Minoan and Mycenaean civilizations of the Aegean Bronze Age. He is best known for the excavation of the Minoan site of Akrotiri on Thera, which he conducted between 1967 and 1974. He received many honours in Greece and abroad, and was considered one of the most important Greek archaeologists of his day. A native of Kephallonia, Marinatos was educated at the University of Athens, the Friedrich Wilhelms University of Berlin, and the University of Halle. His early teachers included noted archaeologists such as Panagiotis Kavvadias, Christos Tsountas and Georg Karo. He joined the Greek Archaeological Service in 1919, and spent much of his early career on the island of Crete, where he excavated several Minoan sites, served as director of the Heraklion Museum, and formulated his theory that the collapse of Neopalatial Minoan society had been the result of the eruption of the volcanic island of Thera around 1600 BCE. In the 1940s and 1950s, Marinatos surveyed and excavated widely in the region of Messenia in south-west Greece, collaborating with Carl Blegen, who was engaged in the simultaneous excavation of the Palace of Nestor at Pylos. He also discovered the battlefield of Thermopylae and excavated the Mycenaean cemeteries at Tsepi and Vranas near Marathon in Attica. Marinatos was head of the Greek Archaeological Service from 1937 to 1939, from 1955 to 1958, and lastly from 1967 to 1974, under the Greek military junta. He was an enthusiastic supporter of the junta; in the late 1930s, he had been close to the quasi-fascist dictatorship of Ioannis Metaxas, under whom he initiated legislation to restrict the roles of women in Greek archaeology. His leadership of the Archaeological Service has been criticised for its cronyism and for promoting the pursuit of grand discoveries at the expense of good scholarship. Marinatos died while excavating at Akrotiri in 1974, and is buried at the site.

People

Pantheon has 1 people classified as Greek archaeologists born between 1901 and 1901. Of these 1, none of them are still alive today. The most famous deceased Greek archaeologists include Spyridon Marinatos.

Deceased Greek Archaeologists

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