The civilization which blossomed in Greece during the
bronze age, we call it, Mykenaean.
In the period (1660 - 1400 BC), Mykenaeans amassed great prosperity and
became the dominant power in the Aegean. Adventurous, daring, master
seafarers, the Mykenaeans colonized Crete, Cyclades, Cyprus and
Dodecannese, Sicily and northern Greece. Their goods replaced the
Minoans and could be found at the markets of Egypt and
Syria.
According to the tradition, the city of Mykenae, the main
representative of this civilization, was founded by
Perseus
(1400 - 1350 BC), the son of Zeus and Danae, the daughter
of king Akrisios of Argos. Mykenae was build by the mythical Cyclops,
the same ones who constructed the enormous walls of the nearby city of Tyrinths,
which was governed by his brother Proetos.
Perseus was succeeded by his son Sthenelos, the father of Eurystheus,
who captured Argos and according to the myth, he assigned Herakles to
perform the twelve labors.
After the death of Eurystheus, the city was governed by Atreus
of Elis (1250 BC), the brother of Eurystheus wife and son of Pelops and
Hippodameia.
There are many and
various myths about the tragic fate of the Atreides family. The rivalry
between Atreus and his brother Thyestes for the throne of
Mykenae and the illicit love affair between Thyestes and the wife of
Atreus, Aerope, ended in the tragic "Thyestian dinner",
in which Thyestes ate his sons, who had been killed by Atreus. For this
horrible action of Atreus, his family was cursed.The city under Atreus
expanded its boundaries and amassed great wealth and under the
leadership of his son Agamemnon (1200 BC), who led the
famous campaign against Troy, the city reached its greatest
wealth and power.

We do not know the reasons for the war, if we don't
accept as credible, the abduction of Helen by Paris. Many suggestions
have been given, from fishing rights to the textile trade. We also don't
know the exact date of the war. Dates, as high as 1270 BC, had been
given, though the Greek traditional date was 1184 BC.
When
Agamemnon, the "king of men", returned victorious from
the Trojan war, he was assassinated by Aegisthos, the son
of Thyestes and lover of his wife Klytaemnestra.
Soon after, the son of Agamemnon, Orestes,
took revenge by killing them both.
Eighty years after the fall of Troy and during the reign of the son of
Orestes, Tisamenos, the city of Mykenae was captured and
destroyed by the Dorians. The city with the walls intact, though lost
its power continued to exist for many centuries.
The outer city was not deserted, as the many tombs, which have been
found, indicate. A fine relief has survived from a temple that was
erected in the early sixth century. When the Persian army invaded
Greece, Mykenae send army both in Thermopylae and Plataea.
The city was destroyed once more by Argos (468 BC), after a long
besiege.
In the Hellenistic times, Mykenae revived, the walls were repaired and a
temple was build at the acropolis, where the Argive tyrant Aristippos
was killed (235 BC).