Taphoi wrote:
amyntoros wrote:Am I missing something?
The mound is early Hellenistic because the precisely circular peribolos wall is early Hellenistic and the mound must be later than the wall. Therefore the earlier burials are all part of the pre-existing cemetery in the soil beneath the mound. Nothing says that earlier burials were embedded within the mound.
Best wishes,
Andrew
It is Taphoi rather than Amyntoros who is missing something, obviously!!
But see below. According to Efstathios the earlier burials were indeed embedded in the mound, some 13-14 m down ( 7m or so above the base or peribolos level). That, and the fact that the mound is apparently in stratified layers strengthens the case for there being a pre-existing mound or mounds, with each successive layer larger. Thus the mound as we know it would have come about over time from the 8 C BC to the 3 C BC.
However the 'natural' that Lazarides dug down to below the graves need not have been 'base/peribolos level', if there was undulating terrain beneath with perhaps some natural mounds and lumps. Nevertheless, the fact that 'in situ' graves exist
above the 'natural' level would be conclusive that the mound was pre-existing, at least in part.
Agesilaos wrote:
The walls are there to retain the fill which was there to preclude further collapse; no sinister motives other than in 'creative modern interpretation.'
The graves were complete not scattered; and a natural mound is still a mound.
Taphoi is wrong, and Agesilaos right – the Hellenistic retaining wall must have been built to contain the mound and hence after the mound, not before. Indeed this is plausibly needed precisely because the mound could have been enlarged....
Agesilaos wrote:
I am not sure that the fill is uniform rather than part silt and part sand, like the mound, otherwise I think the difference will be some now lost organic material.
Which raises an important point. If the ‘sand fill’ is the same material as the mound that suggests it might have got there by the known seismic activity over the centuries rather than by human action....
Efstathios wrote:
I agree with Agesilaos here. There possibly was a smaller mound and Deinocrates included it in a larger one. Lazaridis dug from the top of mound Kasta and after he found the base of what is now believed to be the base of the lion he continued down to a depth of 13-14m and found archaic burials from the iron age. The height of the mound when Lazaridis began excavating was 21m, and at 14 m down he found the burials. Furthermore, he continued digging down until he reached the natural hill formation.
This would seem to settle the question of whether the mound was pre-existing. Parts of it at least seemingly were, going back to the 8 C BC. If graves came from different ‘layers/strata’, then that would imply that burials were an on-going process over centuries, with the mound growing as new layers were put down. Of course the evidence for the present tomb excavation and final layer ( if that be correct) being built by Deinocrates appears to be wishful thinking with scant or no evidence at present....
Taphoi wrote:
The biggest problem with the Alexander cenotaph/heroon theory is that it fails to explain why anyone (let alone Cassander in 316BC) put in two vertical sealing walls and one horizontal sealing floor plus thousands of tonnes of riverbed sand to prevent entry to an empty monument. It would be madness. The walls and the fill are signposting very clearly that there is something of "radioactive" potency sitting in there. It is hard to imagine given the tomb context that that could be anything but the bones of somebody with a politically threatening cult following.
All this is somewhat fanciful , and rests on the unwarranted assumption that the ‘thousands of tonnes’ of fill were put there by human means, a herculean task given that access could only be by a few people at a time, with buckets. ( anyone care to make an estimate of how long and how many man-hours would be involved ?

)
In fact it is possible, and perhaps more likely that the ‘thousands of tonnes’ were deposited naturally by seismic activity, perhaps over centuries, especially if the composition of the fill turns out to be the same as the mound.
... There is no engineering sense whatsoever in 3/4 filling a tomb with sand to hold it up. The critical load was taken by the arched roof and that was totally unsupported by the sand. Nor would sand have offered any support to the walls. Sand flows just like water. Who would use sand to shore up a building? You would use cement and stone pillars. It is a complete engineering absurdity (I think invented by the PhDiva) that the sand fill was for shoring up the construction. Anyway, the sealing activities prevented access to the building, so there was no point in preserving it.
A good point, Taphoi ! The fill certainly didn’t shore up anything. The fact that no significant artifacts seem to have been found ( or at least none reported) means that the gargantuan task of filling it was probably not an 'anti robber' measure either, since it amounted to "locking the stable door after the horse had bolted."So if men would have been unlikely to have filled it up for some logical reason, then that strengthens the possibility that it occurred naturally. Any actual 'sealing' activities were probably restricted to the walls etc