"The walls are usually founded in extremely shallow beddings carved out of the bedrock.
'Cyclopean', the term normally applied to the masonry style characteristic of Mycenaean
fortification systems, describes walls built of huge, unworked limestone boulders which are
roughly fitted together. Between these boulders, smaller hunks of limestone fill the interstices.
The exterior faces of the large boulders may be roughly hammer-dressed, but the boulders
themselves are never carefully cut blocks. Very large boulders are typical of the Mycenaean
walls at Mycenae, Tiryns, Argos, Krisa (in Phocis), and the Athenian Acropolis. Somewhat
smaller boulders occur in the walls of Midea, whereas large limestone slabs are characteristic of
the walls at Gla. Cut stone masonry is used only in and around gateways, conglomerate at
Mycenae and Tiryns and perhaps both conglomerate and limestone at Argos."
[2]
[edit] Outdated definitions of the Cyclopean style
Harry Thurston Peck, writing in 1898, divided Cyclopean masonry into four categories or
styles:
[3]
1. The first style, which is the oldest, consists of unwrought stones of various sizes in which
the gaps are, or were, filled with small stones.
2. The second is characterized by polygonal stones, which fit against each other with
precision.
3. The third style includes structures in Phocis, Boeotia and Argolis. It is characterized by
work made in courses and by stones of unequal size, but of the same height. This
category includes the walls of Mycenae, the Lion Gate, and the Treasury of Atreus
[4]
.
4. The fourth style is characterized by horizontal courses of masonry, not always of the
same height, but of stones which are all rectangular. This style is common in Attica.
While Peck's first and possibly second and third styles conforms to what archaeologists today
would classify as cyclopean, the fourth now is referred to as ashlar and is not considered
cyclopean. There is a more detailed description of the Cyclopean styles at the Perseus Project.
[5]
[edit] Historical accounts