Imperial Valley Press

Smoke from wildfire blackens prehistori­c Greek city walls

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ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Monuments at Greece’s archaeolog­ical site of Mycenae have not been damaged by a wildfire that swept through the area, despite the blackening from smoke on the iconic entrance to the ancient citadel, Greece’s culture minister said Monday.

Four water- dropping planes and two helicopter­s helped dozens of firefighte­rs contain the blaze Sunday after it reached the fringes of one of Greece’s most important archaeolog­ical sites, 120 kilometers (75 miles) southwest of Athens.

The Bronze Age fortified city, whose rulers were key figures in ancient Greek legend, including the Trojan War, flourished centuries before the major Acropolis temples were built in Athens and was a major center of Mediterran­ean civilizati­on.

Smoke from the flames blackened the 3,250-yearold Lion Gate, named after the monumental relief sculpture of two heraldic lions flanking a pillar that crowns the entrance to the ancient citadel.

“The damage caused by yesterday’s fire was the least possible,” Culture Minister Lina Mendoni said during a visit to the site Monday, adding that none of the site’s monuments or the Mycenae museum had suffered any damage.

Photos released by the ministry Monday showed no traces of burning inside the site.

“Smoke blackened some walls,” Mendoni added. “The problem is (only) aesthetic.”

“The Fire Service acted swiftly ... and prevention measures worked: Dry vegetation had all been cleared away,” Mendoni said. “That’s what saved the monuments,.”

A spokesman for Greece’s main political opposition, the left-wing Syriza party, questioned the speed of the response by the Fire Service, noting that the fire had entered the site. The party said it was carrying out a separate inspection Monday and called on the minister to apologize for downplayin­g the damage.

Mycenae has been closed to visitors but the Culture Ministry said it will reopen Tuesday.

 ?? CULTURE MINISTRY VIA AP
GREEK ?? In this photo provided by the Greek Culture Ministry a man enters the archaeolog­ical site of Mycenae with the 3,250-year-old Lion Gate, one day after the fire, on Monday. Monuments at the archaeolog­ical site of Mycenae have not been damaged by a wildfire that swept through the area, despite blackening from smoke on the iconic entrance to the ancient citadel, Greece’s culture minister said Monday.
CULTURE MINISTRY VIA AP GREEK In this photo provided by the Greek Culture Ministry a man enters the archaeolog­ical site of Mycenae with the 3,250-year-old Lion Gate, one day after the fire, on Monday. Monuments at the archaeolog­ical site of Mycenae have not been damaged by a wildfire that swept through the area, despite blackening from smoke on the iconic entrance to the ancient citadel, Greece’s culture minister said Monday.

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