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| Therefore, only members of the elite could afford the entire | | Therefore, only members of the elite could afford the entire |
| set. | | set. |
| |-|C= | | |-|Honey Offerings= |
| |-|C= | | The ancients often made bees and honey into symbols related |
| |-|C= | | to the deities. Honey was considered heavenly since it never |
| |-|C= | | expired, and was a typical offering placed on altars for the |
| |-|C= | | gods. These offerings were given to rustic deities such as Pan |
| |-|C= | | and Priape, who were protectors of beekeepers, but also to |
| |-|C= | | Chthonian deities worshiped in mystery cults such as Hermes, |
| |-|C= | | Dionysos, and Demeter. Honey and bees were also a symbol of |
| |-|C= | | resurrection. |
| |-|C= | | |
| | Honey was considered a gift - a remnant of the Golden Age - |
| | that the gods kindly gave to men. It guaranteed long life and |
| | good health. In this way, it was connected to nectar and |
| | ambrosia - drinks of the immortal gods. In childhood, Zeus |
| | was nourished with honey and milk. Mead was seen as a |
| | substitute for these divine drinks. Honey's religious |
| | symbolism was all the more important since it could be food |
| | for newborns - a young Plato was said to be fed with honey - |
| | but also for the dead. |
| | |-|Naxos Banner= |
| | Naxos was the largest island in the Kyklades. lts protective |
| | deity was Dionysos, god of wine, who was born on the island |
| | according to mythology. The money of Naxos served as model |
| | for the banner, and is linked with the god as the coins show a |
| | kantharos - a wine cup. |
| | |
| | Naxos produced wine, but was more famous for its marble. It |
| | was exported and widely used. For example, it was used in |
| | Olympia and on the Akropolis in Athens. Its craftsmen were |
| | pioneers in the development of monumental marble |
| | sculptures and architecture. |
| | |-|Marble= |
| | Greek soil contains great geological diversity. Since the |
| | beginning of the Early Cycladic period, the Greeks used |
| | marble in architecture, sculpture, figurines, and more. The |
| | word marble, from the Greek term marmaros, means |
| | “resplendent stone”. It quickly became a luxury furniture in |
| | Greek cities, and it played a big part in the Greek economy. |
| | Some regions stand out for their marble-related wealth, |
| | including Naxos, Paros, Thasos, Attika, the Peloponnese, and |
| | Euboea Island. |
| | |
| | Marble is made up of different colors (red, pink, yellow), and |
| | each has a different texture (translucent, wavy, streaked, |
| | swirly, etc.). For example, Peloponnesian marble was red with |
| | touches of black. Pentelic marble, found near Athens, was |
| | greenish with a grainy pattern. The most prestigious marble |
| | of the time came from Paros, and was greyish white. |
| | |-|Extraction= |
| | In Naxos, ancient quarries were located on the Ágios loannis |
| | hill on the north side of the island, with another one in the |
| | central region, Melanes. |
| | |
| | In general, the quarrymen exploited natural fissures and |
| | applied pressure to extract massive blocks. They then drilled |
| | holes into the marble, drove wooden shafts into the holes, and |
| | poured water over the wood so it swelled and split off the |
| | desired blocks of stone. |
| | |
| | In Naxos, whiter parts of the stone were preferred during the |
| | quarrying process, which had a direct impact on the price of |
| | this marble. Around 5000 m<sup>3</sup> of the most prestigious Naxian |
| | marble was exported annually. |
| | |
| | The workers carried the marble with cranes and rails. They |
| | moved it around with pullies, cranes, levers, rails, and |
| | inclined planes. |
| | |-|The Fate of Old Ships= |
| | It is archeologically attested that systematic reuse of wood |
| | from old ships was practiced throughout antiquity. When |
| | triremes were sunk during a sea battle, combatants went to |
| | great lengths and took heavy risks to recover the wreck. |
| | Sometimes, vessels were towed home as prizes, and after |
| | being repaired, equipped, and renamed, they became part of |
| | the enemy navy. |
| | |
| | In addition, older triremes were used as service vessels. One |
| | was the “soldier-vessel”, a troop transport. There was also |
| | the “horse-transport”, made out of old triremes by removing |
| | the two lower levels of seats and converting the space into |
| | stalls for thirty horses. |
| | |-|Choosing the Right Materials for Shipbuilding= |
| | Pitch and timber were the main materials used to create |
| | triremes. The pitch was produced from various trees and was |
| | extracted by heat. The pitch and wax were customarily |
| | applied, either successively or as a mixture, to the wetted |
| | surface of the ship's hull, giving the vessel its speed potential |
| | as well as its watertightness and protection from sea |
| | microorganisms. The seams of newly built warships - as well |
| | as older ships under maintenance - were caulked with flax |
| | soaked in pitch. It seems likely that a new coat of pitch was |
| | put on before each new sailing. Although pitch was used |
| | generously on the triremes' hulls, they seem to have leaked |
| | water into the bilges fairly quickly. This is why ships had to be |
| | beached and dried out. |
| | |
| | The emphasis of lightness for the hull timber was obviously a |
| | prime consideration in its overall design. For lightness |
| | combined with strength, a trireme's timber was mostly made |
| | of soft wood such as pine and fir, but the keel was made of |
| | oak for extra strength. Masts were made of fir - one of the |
| | tallest and straightest trees - while carefully prepared rough, |
| | young fir trees ensured that the grain of the wood was aligned |
| | along the shafts, making the oars strong for their weight. For |
| | the inner part of the ships, larch (pitys) or plane (platanos) |
| | were also used because of their Light weight, while the stem- |
| | posts adjoining the breastwork and the bow timbers were |
| | made of ash, mulberry, and elm. |
| | |
| | One result of using softwoods was that the trireme hull |
| | tended to soak up water. The hulls not onty became |
| | waterlogged and leaky, but they also suffered from the |
| | scourge of wooden ships: the marine borer (teredo navalis). |
| | Consequently, alltriremes were beached and carried out of |
| | the water as often as possible to dry and clean their hulls. |
| | |-|Bellerophon, Pegasos and Chimera= |
| | Pegasos was the mythical winged-horse bred by the dead |
| | Medusa after Perseus killed her. Bellerophon captured the |
| | animal while it drank water from a well. |
| | |
| | Pegasos helped Beilerophon in fighting and killing Chimera in |
| | Lycia. Chimera was a monster that had the body of a goat, the |
| | head of a lion, and the tail of a snake. Bellerophon attacked |
| | her from the sky, and thought of placing a block of lead on the |
| | tip of his spear. He threw the spear - aiming for the neck of |
| | the fire-breathing monster - and the heat of the fire made the |
| | lead melt, asphyxiating her. Bellerophon returned victorious, |
| | but several quests followed that would leave him blind and |
| | miserable. |
| | |-|Odysseus and Polyphemos= |
| | On his way back home, Odysseus found himself on the island |
| | of the Cyclops - giants that have one single eye in the center |
| | of their forehead. |
| | |
| | Odysseus reached the island and entered a cave with his |
| | companions. They were so hungry, they began to drink and eat |
| | everything in sight. When a Cyclops named Polyphemos |
| | returned to the cave with his flock, he blocked the entrance |
| | with an enormous rock, and began to eat the men. Trapped, |
| | Odysseus introduced himself as simply “nobody”, and offered |
| | wine to the confused Cyclops. Once the giant was drunkenly |
| | asleep, Odysseus blinded him with a burning wooden stake. |
| | The next day, Odysseus and his men escaped the cave hidden |
| | under the bellies of animals, while the blinded Polyphemos |
| | shouted to his fellow Cyclopes that he was blinded by |
| | "nobody". |
| | |-|Jason and the Golden Fleece= |
| | Jason was the rightful king of lolkos in Thessaly, though the |
| | position was occupied by King Pelias. When Jason appeared in |
| | front of Pelias and asked to return to the throne, Pelias told |
| | him that he should bring him the Golden Fleece. This was the |
| | fleece of the golden ram held in Kolchis. Jason set out on this |
| | quest with his crew, the Argonauts. |
| | |
| | After several adventures, they arrived in Kolchis to claim the |
| | fleece. While there, Jason felLin love with the witch Medea, |
| | daughter of Aietes, the king of Kolchis. Medea helped Jason in |
| | the quests her father required, and her potion lulled the giant |
| | snake that was protecting the Golden Fleece to sleep. Once he |
| | held the fleece tightly in hand, Jason began his journey back |
| | home, with Medea at his side. |
| | |-|Zeus and Typhon= |
| | Typhon was an extremely dangerous monster in Greek |
| | mythology. À giant serpent-like creature with “a hundred |
| | heads, fearful eyes, and terrible voices”, Typhon was either |
| | the son of Gaia (goddess of the earth] and Tartaros [one of the |
| | primordial deities), or of Hera, or of Kronos. |
| | |
| | At some point, Typhon chalienged Zeus in order to overthrow |
| | him and take his place. The battle between them was |
| | desperate, but Zeus managed to win with the aid of his |
| | powerful thunderbolts. |
| | |
| | After losing to Zeus, what happened to Typhon differs |
| | depending on the account. He was either thrown to Tartaros, |
| | the deep abyss, or buried under either Mount Etna, or under |
| | the volcanic island Ischia. Zeus, on the other hand, became |
| | the legitimate ruler of the gods. |
| | |-|Skylla= |
| | Skylla was a mythological female sea monster that was |
| | placed opposite Charybdis in a very narrow passage of water, |
| | thought to be the channel of Messina. |
| | |
| | The mention of Skylla is first seen in “The Odyssey”, when |
| | Odysseus and his companions had to travel the channel and |
| | found themselves between the two monsters. Circe advised |
| | Odysseus to sail at full speed, but closer to Skylla - Charybdis |
| | was more dangerous and could sink the entire ship. Odysseus |
| | followed this advice, and as they passed by, Skylla devoured |
| | six of his men. They quickly escaped, and managed to pass |
| | through with no further losses. |
| | |-|Odysseus and the Sirens= |
| | The sirens were beautiful but deadly creatures that lived on a |
| | rocky island. Their song was so enchanting, sailors who heard |
| | their singing fell to the rocks. Sirens were half-women, half- |
| | birds - or at least, that was how they were represented in |
| | Greek art. They were usually depicted played musical |
| | instruments, such as harps. |
| | |
| | In "The Odyssey”, Odysseus was very curious to listen to them, |
| | so Circe the witch told him how he could enjoy their song |
| | without danger. Odysseus had his sailors plug their ears with |
| | beeswax and tie him to the pole of his ship. When they passed |
| | near the sirens, Odysseus was mesmerized by the song. He |
| | begged his sailors to release him, but they couldn't hear him. |
| | This trick saved his life and the lives of his companions. |
| | |-|Kassandra= |
| | (Behind the scenes) |
| | |
| | We first meet Kassandra in her home on Kephallonia; she is a |
| | mercenary, hardened and scarred by her experiences. When |
| | designing her features, the team wanted her to look strong |
| | and vibrant. Bringing such a character to life includes the |
| | smallest of details. “We had to create a false reflection in her |
| | eyes to ensure she looked alive. She needed to Look great in |
| | every angle," explains Thierry Dansereau. |
| | |-|Alexios= |
| | (Behind the scenes) |
| | |
| | The development team kept the siblings as close as possible |
| | in look and feel, with a few distinctions. Alexios has a different |
| | body and gait, he's larger and sports dark brown dreadlocks, |
| | but they share the same coloring and variations on the same |
| | outfits. |
| | |
| | Alexios and Kassandra fight with a sword, bow, or spear. The |
| | development team wanted to show proactive combat, wielding |
| | dual weapons with a focus on attack rather than defense. |
| | |
| | Earty concept sketches of Alexios by Fred Rambaud show |
| | different outfits and weapons, from bare-chested brawler, to |
| | full Spartan warrior. |
| | |-|Orchomenos= |
| | The city of Orchomenos in Boeotia has origins going back to |
| | the Neolithic period. Discovered in the 19th century, it was |
| | excavated by Heinrich Schliemann - the same person who |
| | discovered and searched for the cities of Troy, Mycenae, and |
| | Tiryns. |
| | |
| | The excavations left few details. Remains of fortifications |
| | dated to the 4th century BCE were discovered. A tholos tomb |
| | known as the Treasury of Minyas was also uncovered. The |
| | possible remains of a Mycenaean palace on the flank of the |
| | akropolis would have been found just above the spring of the |
| | Charites. Fragments of paintings have also been found in the |
| | vast architectural complex between the 9th century church |
| | and the theater. Clues suggest that the church, one of the |
| | oldest in Greece, was built on the remnants of the Charites |
| | temple. The remains of a theater also dating back to the 4th |
| | century BCE are still visible today. |
| | |-|Gods and Fish= |
| | The main god of the sea was Poseidon. There were temples |
| | dedicated to him in many coastal cities, such as Cape Sounion |
| | south of Athens. |
| | |
| | Fish, like other animals, were offered as sacrifices for the |
| | gods. A painting described by Athenaios showed Poseidon |
| | offering a tuna to Zeus just before he gave birth to Athena. It |
| | was believed that in order to get a good tuna harvest, one |
| | needed to sacrifice eels to Poseidon. |
| | |
| | Fish were also used in divination. The Lykians, for example, |
| | practiced ichthyomancy. Meat was thrown into a special |
| | sinkhole to attract fish, and depending on which species were |
| | attracted, the response from the gods was determined. |
| | |-|Textures and Materials= |
| | (Behind the scenes) |
| | |
| | Assassin's Creed Odyssey's focus on the details is what really |
| | takes the game to the next Level in terms of immersion. The |
| | sheer variety of textures that make up the layered background |
| | to the cities and landscapes are what give the locations their |
| | character and quality. The art and development team are |
| | constantly pushing the boundaries, aiming for bigger, better, |
| | and higher quality than ever before. The textures here are a |
| | fraction of what appears in the game. Even the simplest white |
| | stone blocks are not plain but richly detailed with grains and |
| | imperfections. The colorful tiles and murals speak to the |
| | craftsmanship of Greece itself, giving history and life to each |
| | wall and column. |
| | |-|Boeotian Banner= |
| | The Boeotian banner naturally depicts the Boeotian shield, |
| | which was the main type of coinage of Thebes, and later of the |
| | Boeotian confederation. |
| | |
| | The shield is the most important weapon of defense. Greek |
| | soldiers usually used a round-shaped shield, the aspis, but |
| | Boeotians eventually developed an oval shield with a |
| | semicircular indentation on either side of the middle. This |
| | would have reduced its weight, and allowed the bearer to |
| | thrust and stab while staying protected. |
| | |
| | None of these shields have survived, which may suggest they |
| | were made from animal hides instead of bronze or wood like |
| | other shields. |
| | |-|Sphinx= |
| | (Behind the scenes) |
| | |
| | In Greek mythology, the Sphinx was a creature with the face of |
| | a human, the wings of a bird, and the body of a lion. The |
| | Assassin's Creed Odyssey team have melded more than one |
| | mythological creature into their Sphinx, adding elements off |
| | the mythological Chimera, like the tail ending in a snake head. |
| | The Sphinx offers a different challenge to the Hero, explains |
| | Thierry Dansereau, “You cannot defeat her by force, instead |
| | you must answer her riddle.” In traditional myth, those who |
| | cannot answer her riddle suffer a terrible fate: killed and |
| | devoured by the beast. |
| | |
| | “It was challenging to try to create a menacing creature but |
| | still have a feeling of beauty to transpire.” - Gabriel Blain |
| | |-|The Battle of Plataia= |
| | The Persians's crushing defeat at the Battle of Salamis in 480 |
| | BCE greatly discouraged King Xerxes from continuing his |
| | invasion. However, one of Xerxes's military commanders, |
| | Mardonios, convinced the king that their campaign could |
| | continue, |
| | |
| | Mardonios's hopes were dashed the following year at the |
| | Battle of Plataia. The Greeks, who were outnumbered by the |
| | Persians, held their own in the open countryside. They fought |
| | until they were victorious, killing Mardonios in the process |
| | and putting an end to the second Persian invasion of Greece. |
| | |-|Color on Greek Statues= |
| | (Behind the scenes) |
| | |
| | “What impressed me was the way historians and |
| | archaeologists found out about the color that the Greek artists |
| | would use on their creations. Before working on this project, | |
| | always thought that the artists of the Classical age would |
| | leave the marble uncolored. By using ultra-violet light, |
| | archaeologists were able to debunk what we thought to be |
| | true. The colors revealed by this process were dazzling and |
| | bright, exactly the opposite of what | would have expected |
| | them to be.” - Vincent Pamerleau |
| | |-|Samos Banner= |
| | The lion was chosen for the banner of Samos, as it is a |
| | frequent image of ancient Greek iconography. |
| | |
| | A lion scalp was the emblem of the coinage of Samos. This |
| | lion's head was specifically related to Herakles's task of |
| | killing the Nemean lion. |
| | |
| | This legendary lion ravaged the plain of Argolis, and had skin |
| | so thick that Herakles couldn't kill it with his arrows. The her |
| | chose instead to strangle it. |
| | |
| | The battle against the Nemean lion symbolized combat |
| | against savagery and barbarism, and became the model of |
| | athletic fighting - a very popular event of the Olympics. |
| | |-|Messaran Banner= |
| | The area of Messara is the largest plain of the island of Krete. |
| | The symbol of the region is inspired by the coins of Knossos, |
| | which bear a labyrinth on the reverse, referencing the famous |
| | Kretan Minotaur myth. |
| | |
| | The minotaur was half-human, half-bull. King Minos of Krete |
| | made the mistake of sacrificing a bull, and thus angered |
| | Poseidon. The god then instilled “passion” for the bull into |
| | Minos' wife, who later gave birth to the minotaur. |
| | |
| | The minotaur was kept in the labyrinth built by Daidalos. On a |
| | regular basis, fourteen young men and women were given to |
| | the beast in tribute, until the hero Theseus killed him. |
| | |-|The Kretan Bull= |
| | The seventh labor of Herakles was to kill a great bull that had |
| | destroyed crops and property in Krete. |
| | |
| | Herakles went to King Minos of Krete, who gave him |
| | permission to get rid of the bull. Herakles managed to capture |
| | the beast, suppressing it with his hands, but he ultimately |
| | didn't kill it. Instead, he shipped the bull to Eurystheas so he |
| | could confirm that the labor was successful, and then the |
| | animal was released. |
| |-|C= | | |-|C= |
| </tabber> | | </tabber> |