Knossos Presents Dueling Ideas of Greek History
The world's most glorious monument to fakery is Knossos, the Greek site containing the legendary Palace of Minos.

The world's most glorious monument to fakery, outshining even Las Vegas and the Disney archipelago, is Knossos, the Greek site containing the legendary Palace of Minos. There are real ruins at this place—remnants of a time, more than 3,000 years ago, when Crete was a center of art, trade, and technology. But when Arthur Evans started his excavations there in 1899, things got complicated.
Evans "restored" much of the architecture with concrete, making irreversible changes that owed as much to his creative speculations as they did to the archeological evidence. He had painters decorate the walls, extrapolating whole frescoes from small fragments. Their art was beautiful, lively, and as authentic as a stuffed minotaur.
Evans also unleashed the idea that the island had been a matriarchal pacifist utopia. As Cathy Gere shows in her 2009 book Knossos and the Prophets of Modernism, this vision seized a lot of intellectuals' imaginations, with many people projecting their ideals onto Minoan Crete. The libertarian writer Albert Jay Nock declared that the Cretans enjoyed a thousand-year "period of unexampled peace and prosperity."
Rather than remove Evans' additions, today's keepers of Knossos offer two layers of commentary. Tour the grounds, and the signs will fill you in on modern scholars' best guesses about the realities of ancient life there. But they'll discuss Evans' Knossos as well. After all, his notions are part of the place's history too.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Crete is one of the travel destinations for the rapefugees; think I’d avoid it. Often see stories and videos come across the wire showing beachgoers relaxing in the sun until suddenly a swam of invading rapefugees pounce.
https://www.euronews.com/2025/07/21/hundreds-of-migrants-reach-greek-island-of-crete-amid-rising-smuggling
Cretans are one of the most heavily armed people in the world. They made the Nazis pay a heavy price for their occupation in WWII, let’s see how the rapefugees do.
Sounds like the Germans had con Crete evidence of this.
Yes, we also need to discus the Stolen Erections, the Reasons and Treasons Justifying the Hanging of Mike Pence, and fencing OUT the Lizard People, too!
After all, TRUMP'S notions are part of the Spamerican place's history, too.
Just you wait to see twat Trump will do to American history books and museums!
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/trump-administration-orders-sweeping-review-of-smithsonian-museums-citing-new-history-standards/ar-AA1KtrYF?ocid=BingNewsSerp Trump Administration orders sweeping review of Smithsonian museums, citing new history standards
Also the Gulf of America (formerly the Gulf of Mexican Inferior Illegal Sub-humans) is now NEWLY the Gulf of Trump! ALL must use the new name... Or else!
You mean “libertarian” writers were always easily duped and shills for the trendy narrative?
Mr Nock work for the Edwardian version of Reason?
What are you reviewing here, Jesse? Is this a book? TV Series? Would be helpful if you tell us and link to it.
It's from the spread of mini-reviews in the print magazine, but it's not really a review of anything besides Knossos itself. (We expanded the definition of "review" for the special travel issue.) I'm not sure it actually makes sense to have "Review" in the headline; I'll ask about changing it.
Its all Greek to me.
Reason will be denied access to archaeology until Jesse stops binge watching Krapolopolis an believing in Zahi Hawass.
There is lot of this, what I call Disney history, all over the U.S.! Many famous building from the past aren’t originals but “restored” replicas of guesses of what the originals looked like!
I have visited Knossos, and I am a student of ancient history.
It is of interest to note the complete lack of battle scenes in Minoan art.
The lack of fortifications around their “palaces”
Weapons are found in digs, but armories seem to be missing.
Conceivably there are reasons for this but they do seem most unwarlike for any ancient civilization.
Especially if you only look at their successors, the Mycenaeans, with their massive walls and warlike art.