Friday, February 19, 2010

Athens

Another day in Athens, every thing going great. I'm actually off to see the new film Agora in a few hours, better be good. Anywaym here's some shots from earlier today.


The odeon of Herodes Atticus, previously presented here.


The Propylaea, dated to the 430's BC, (gate) leading in to the Athenian acropolis. It was actually more famous than the Parthenon itself during antiquity.


A shot from the inside of the Propylaea.


The Athenian Agora, you can see several buildings in this view that have been presented earlier on, such as the temple of Hephaestus (2 versions here and here), some tombs, the small Byzantine church, a bust of Hadrianus, several statues, the odeon of Agrippa, the great drains and a capital from the odeon. I feel, seeing these pictures, that getting a new camera was a good idea.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Some finds from Nemea and Isthmia

It's been a long day, I've been climbing Acrocorinth (which is nothing like climbing the acropolis in Athens), seen Nemea, had a quick look at the Diolkos (ship road over the Isthmus) and visited the ancient Poseidon sanctuary at Isthmia.


Continuing my fish theme from yesterday, this is a truly unique find from the museum at Isthmia, made out of glass (and stone?). Here we see an fish swimming in the sea. The piece is dated to the Roman period (which is very long in Greek archaeology), but I'm quite sure that it's as earliest from the 2nd century AD, probably 4th.


Another scene from the same piece, here an octopus.


There are also some scenes not directly related to the sea, here a villa (?) with a colonnade.


And at last, the temple of Zeus at Nemea (where Heracles slew a lion). You can see that it's rather late (being doric) on the tall, rather thin, columns.

Corinth

Well, I've been on a two day tour to Corinth (it was amazing), which I would like to use as and excuse for not updating yesterday. Anyway, here's some shots from the first day.


The Chorinth channel, built in the 19th century, but both planned and begun several times in antiquity.


This is a late 1st or early 2nd century AD fresco from the Fountain of Peirene in the Corinthian Agora. Compare it to this fresco and mosaic in Rome.


Fish from the same location as the picture above, the fountain is absolutely amazing.


A Roman man in armour, ca 125-150 AD.


The temple of Apollo at the Corinthian Agora.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Athens by night

I thought that it was about time that I posted some pictures taken here at night and some neo-classical ones seems fitting.


The parliament, once home to the king (who was imported from Germany).


The National Academy at Athens.


A statue next to the old parliament.

Monday, February 15, 2010

The national kite holiday

Life never seize to surprise me, I knew that today was some sort of holiday here in Greece, but I would never imagine seeing hundreds of kites floating over the city!


A boy trying to get his kite in the air.


The new Acropolis museum.

Sunday, February 14, 2010

A votive column

Here's another impressive find from Delphi, a votive column, once 13 meters high (and perhaps with the Omphalos placed on top of it).


Shaft.


Base.

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Two more finds from Delphi

I'm still tired after Delphi last night and this will thus be a short post. Even so, it's two great pieces!


This white base kylix (drinking vessel) depicts Apollo seated with his lyre. The vessel is of exceptional quality.


Nike, the goddess of victory, here in painted terracotta.

The identification of a scene

It is unusual that I write posts longer than a few lines. This is as I want to make it possible to read it without spending very much time here every day and to let the pictures be in focus. However, a very good question came up yesterday and I feel that I might just as well use a full post to answer it in detail. The daily post will be presented below this one.

The question was on how the warriors in this fries could be identified:


Now, this is a perfectly legitimate inquiry, one of the most important traits of anyone who want to study any subject is to question “known facts” – and it seems as if I were wrong in trusting my own source without questioning. My argument on the scene can be read in detail below, but the main point was that I identified the warrior with the gorgon head shield as Achilles (based on a reliable source, even as my memory might not serve me correctly at this point). In the end I went back to the sources to investigate the matter further.

There is one important thing to do whenever you want to identify a scene - you need to begin the most general features and work yourself inwards to the details.

Here we see a frieze depicting a dead warrior surrounded by four others fighting over him, and horses being led away at each side. Out of the four warriors, three have crested helmets and one a shield decorated with a gorgon. The scene also (not seen here) depict several gods in two groups facing each other.

There's also a context to take consider: a pediment depicts the Delphic competition and the other two preserved friezes a gigantomachy and (most likely) the judgment of Paris.

The setting is therefore, as should be expected, from myths and legends. The reasoning should thus be something like this:

The two groups of gods staring at each other are probably representing two factions of some kind. On one side we see Ares, Apollo, Aphrodite and two other gods while we have Athena, Hera (?) and another god at the other side. The two groups are unfortunately broken off by a lost section. We can thus be sure that this part of the frieze depicts the gods during the Trojan war (The former group helped Troy, the later the Greeks).

I would argue that the front frieze should be considered one unit and the depicted battle would in that case be one of the many fights for the body and armor of a fallen hero. But who?

There is only one thing that can help us in the identification (remember, I am very much not an expert on the Iliad) and that is the gorgon shield. This figure is normally identified as Achilles, as everyone want him to be represented in any frieze, but (and this is what brought up the question to begin with) Achilles shield is described in detail in book 18, lines 478-608 of the Iliad and there is not a word about any gorgon. Rather the opposite, the shield is described as depicting the whole world.

My first thought was that this then was the shield he used to have before the death of Patroclus, but that can't be correct as the warriors are supposed to fight over Antilochus body - and he is killed after Patroclus (not even in the Iliad itself)

So it's not Achilles. Who then? I only remember one warrior who owns a shield decorated with a gorgons head and that is Agamemnon himself. This is unfortunately as far as I can come right now as I can't remember all the fights that Agamemnon took part in during the epic, I'll be back on that later on.

In the end, my interpretation of the scene is still one of the Trojan war, but the only identified warrior is Agamemnon, not Achilles. Then again, there might very well be evidence that I am unaware of (such as inscriptions, literary accounts or written names).

Friday, February 12, 2010

Delphi

I could, in theory, upload a few hundred pictures after today - Delphi is an amazing site. Anyway, I won't bore you with that kind of mass posting so here's 4 selected shots (and the Charioteer will not be one of them, as I find it rather useless to only post shots of the absolutely most famous pieces).


The temple of Apollon is however impossible to skip when talking about Delphi.


The Athenian treasure house at Delphi, notice that the walls used to be incised with inscriptions covering a great deal of subjects (there is actually one paian, hymn, remaining with notes!).


Heracles (the man with the lions pelt) and Dionysus (the man who is dressed in a panthers skin and who is standing on a chariot drawn by a lion) in a Gigantomachy (fight between gods and giants). From the treasury of the Siphnians at Delphi.


[Edit 022010: please read this post on the subject, not the one below]
A battle under the walls of Troy. Here we see the dead warrior Antilochus, who's body the heroes fight about. On the Greek side we find Achilles (the man with the gorgon shield on the right side) and another Greek - the Trojans are probably represented by Hector and some other warrior, but I'm not quite sure on who and we do have good evidence for the identification. From the same building as the frieze above.

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Brauron and two absolutely unique finds

Another day, another trip to the country side - the Artemis sanctuary at Brauron this time, a site famous in antiquity for it's cult, which involved girls acting like bears.


One of the very many child statues found in the sanctuary.


The site itself in all of it's glory. The colonnade belonged to the Stoas, not the temple itself.


A wooden image of girl in peplos, a truly amazing find.


And as if the site wasn't yielding enough high class artefacts - a wooden herm!
Two of a more common shape can be found here and here.