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| ==Discovery Sites==
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| ===Abantis Islands===
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| <tabber>
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| |-|The Keryneian Hind=
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| The third labor of [[Herakles]] was to capture the [[Hind of Keryneia|Keryneian Hind]], a beast notoriously faster than an arrow.
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| This particular labor was not about strength, but about speed and patience. Herakles chased the hind on foot for over a year - in [[Thrace]], and as far as {{Wiki|Istria}} in the {{Wiki|Adriatic Sea}}. However, there's more than one legend that tells of its capture. In one version, Herakles caught the hind when it was asleep with a trap-net or a thrown arrow. In another, it was [[Artemis]] - whose sacred animal was the hind - who helped Herakles after he told the goddess that he didn't intend on desecrating the animal.
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| |-|Ships=
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| The Greeks have long been known as a naval powerhouse. The development team created multiple ship models, covering the [[Trireme]] (with three rows of oars], the [[bireme]] (with two), merchant ships and other smaller boats. Historical pop culture sources, including a visit to a life-size replica of a trireme, 3rd century BCE graffiti, depictions on vases and stone relief, and movies like {{Wiki|Hercules (1958 film)|Hercules [1958]}}, {{Wiki|Jason and the Argonauts (1963 film)|Jason and the Argonauts (1963)}} and many others, all served to inform the design team to create realistic and functional digital replicas of these classic ships.
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| The color and animal based designs of the ships are also significant. To the far right, the Athenian ship is clear, not just from its blue coloring but also the owl adorning its sail - the owl being the symbol of wisdom, associated with Athena, the protector goddess of Athens. In the center is a darker colored ship common among pirates, to the left a Spartan ship, and in the far left, the smaller and less streamlined ship is a fishing boat.
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| 3D renders of the figureheads featured in Odyssey range from the proud griffin and Pegasos to the terrible hydra and medusa.
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|
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| |-|Euboean Banner=
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| [[Euboea]] was an important source of grain and cattle - its name even means “rich in cattle”. Knowing this, it isn't that surprising to find depictions of bulls on their coins.
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| The banner was inspired by the head of a bull, taken from the silver drachmae of the Euboean league. Bulls are sometimes presented in full on other Euboean coinages, like those of [[Eretria]], [[Karystos Dock|Karystos]], or {{Wiki|Oreus|Histiaia}}.
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| Because of its resources, Euboea was a strategic region to control, and Athens invaded in 506 BCE. The Athenians defeated [[Chalkis]], confiscated the land, and gave it to 4,000 settlers [clerouch] who could retain their Athenian citizenship.
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| |-|Workshops and Metal Workers=
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| Metal workshops of different sizes coexisted in ancient Greece. By the second half of the óth century BCE, the development of armament workshops [ergasteria] employing a few craftsmen or up to a few dozen slaves is quite noticeable. Larger production units soon appeared, making metalworking one of the most lucrative crafts in Classical Greece - at least, it is assumed so by historians. As with many other crafts, metalworking was exclusively practiced by men.
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| The smallest workshops for local supply might have been comprised of only three workers: one smith, and two slaves to assist him. On the other hand, the largest workshops resembled factories. They could be very large and employ more than fifty slaves. For example, in Athens, on the slopes of the Akropolis, four giant 40-meter-long workshops dating back from 470-440 BCE have been excavated. The Athenian metic Kephalos might have possessed such a weapons workshop, since it was said that he had 120 slaves working for him. By contrast, the metal workshops found in the sanctuary of Nemea are smaller, but they are not necessarily the more common scale.
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| The overall trend was super-specialization; the sword makers, for example, were not the same as helmet or shield makers. There were doryksoi [lance makers) and machairopoioi, who crafted swords or knives. Helmets workshops could also produce greaves, but the cuirasses, especially the “muscle armors”, were manufactured by specific craftsmen. Moreover, in the large workshops, one could assume that all the workers were assigned very narrowly-defined tasks.
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|
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| |-|Statue of Poseidon=
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| The Bronze Statue of Poseidon at the Archaeological Museum of Athens [National Museum of Athens) depicts either Zeus or Poseidon. It is one of the few remaining original bronze statues from Greece's Classical period, but it is also one of the most impressive.
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| The statue depicts a thick-bearded, curly-haired god with a muscular, well-detailed anatomy. It is missing its eyes, which were made of a different material - perhaps semi-precious stone or glass. The statue's right hand clutched either a lightning bolt, if it depicted Zeus, or a trident, if it depicted
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| Poseidon. For the purposes of the game, we decided it was Poseidon.
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| The sculpture was made by an artist of great skill. It's possible it was created by the renowned sculptor Kalamis.
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| </tabber>
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|
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| ===Achaia===
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| <tabber>
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| |-|Achaian Banner=
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| The Achaian banner appropriately depicts a trireme, since the region includes Patrai, which served as naval base for the Spartans during the Peloponnesian War.
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| The trireme was the most famous Greek ship. It was first built in Korinth in the 7th century BCE and became an important war ship for centuries - a fleet of triremes defeated the Persians in Salamis.
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| Ships are a common image in iconography. They're present on vases and also on coins, with most of them depicting only the prow, like this bronze coin from Megaris.
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| |-|Miltos and the Protective Eye=
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| Miltos is a type of red fine-grained ochre made up of red iron- oxides often mixed with earth, sand, clay, wax, resin or other impurities, creating a reddish pitch. It played a vital role in waterproofing and ship maintenance due to its astringent, binding, and drying properties.
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|
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| lts use is attested to in Mycenaean clay tablets, inscribed in the script known as "Linear Bº and dating from the 2nd millennium BCE. Specifically, by the Classical period, miltos from Kea was prized in Athens due to its effectiveness in the maintenance of ships, protecting the hull from rot and infestation. The high lead levels meant that the powder, once mixed into an organic medium, would make a very effective anti-fouling agent, preventing the growth of bacterial colonies on vessel hulls that could slow the ship down. In this way, applying lead-rich miltos paint mixed with pitch to the hull of a ship could inhibit biotic growth and prevent fouling.
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| The prow of a trireme was often decorated to look like the head of an animal, with the ram as its snout. Aischytos called the triremes "the dark-eyed ships”. The eye was a regular decoration for the triremes. It was made from a piece of polished marble, then shaped and painted to resemble an eye. Sometimes oculi could be rather large and, if not painted, were an inlaid decoration occasionally made of expensive materials. Seafarers attached oculi to their ship because they looked upon their vessel as a living entity that needed eyes to find its way. Black warships with red or purple painted bows and large dark-blue enamel oculi seen sailing on the dark seas would have had a powerful effect on any observer - especially enemy forces.
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|
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| |-|The Ram: The First Naval Weapon=
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| The offensive weapon of triremes was the ram [embolos). The objective of all naval tactics was to bring the ram to bear on the enemy's flank or quarter. The ram was made of bronze and attached to a protruding plank at the front of the ship. The ram was a warship's most expensive piece of equipment, but luckily, it could be salvaged and reused when a ship was broken up.
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| The ram was located at the forward tip of the keel. This area was heavily-armored and built up to a sharp point with three chisel-like blades just above water level. Building a ram required a high level of metallurgical expertise and complicated foundry facilities, as they were cast in one single huge piece. The ram's tip flared into fins rather than coming to a pointin order to prevent it from getting wedged into the hull of its opponent, and the timbers that the bronze casing covered were carefully designed to distribute the shock of impact over the entire length of the Light hull. The ram could smash a hole in an enemy vessel and therefore cripple it, but could not literally sink it. The shape of the ram was designed to cause maximum damage without penetrating the hull too far, and make it difficult for the attacking vessels to back off.
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|
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| The prow, with its ram and heavy buildup of timbers, was both the offensive weapon and the best-protected area of the ship. The stern and sides were its vulnerable quarters. As long as a warship kept its prow toward the enemy, it was poised for both offensive and defensive action. Its role was to disable other ships in battle. The Athenians in particular were very adept at maneuvering their ships to utilize this weapon effectively.
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|
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| |-|Types of Boasts and Organization of Shipyards=
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| The various kinds of ships used by the Greeks could be divided into two main types: ships of war, and ships of burden. The latter were not designed for quick movement or rapid sailing, but to carry the greatest possible quantity of goods. Their structure was therefore bulky, their bottom round, and although they were not without rowers, the chief means by which they were propelled were their sails.
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|
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| The most common ships of war were triremes. This warship was an example of ancient engineering at its highest level. The trireme derives its name from its three rows of oars, with one man per oar. They were very fast and maneuverable, which gave them a critical advantage in the close-quarter battles that were typical of ancient naval engagements. The triremes could move fast under sail, reaching maximum speeds of perhaps fourteen knots under the most favorable weather conditions, while their speed without the sails was probably around eight knots.
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| They'd also become waterlogged if left in the sea for too long. To prevent this fromm happening, ships would have to be pulled from the water, and kept and maintained in shipsheds, These were buildings built on limestone bedrock. They incorporated an inclined slipway which the triremes were normally hauled up on when not at sea. The remains of the Zea shipsheds at the Athenian port of Piraeus offer useful archaeological evidence about triremes' maximum dimensions: about 115- 120 feet long, 16 feet wide and about 8% feet tall above the waterline. As for the order of the rowers and their positioning, valuable information could be extracted by the famous Lenormant relief, which shows the middle of a trireme, with three clear levels of oars coming out at different angles.
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| The trireme was first used in Greece during the óth century BCE by the tyrant of Korinth, Periander, and then by Polykrates, the tyrant of Samos. It became the dominant warship type of the eastern Mediterranean, playing a vital role in the Greco-Persian Wars, the creation of the Athenian maritime empire, and its downfall in the Peloponnesian War.
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| </tabber>
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|
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| ===Andros===
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| <tabber>
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| Cyclops=
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| [[File:Discovery_Tour_Ancient_Greece_-_Cyclops_Artwork.png|right|250px]]
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| (Behind the Scenes)
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|
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| In Greek myth, the [[Cyclops]] is a member of a race of one-eyed primordial giants. They would hunt and kill humans, most notably Odysseus and his crew, so it is only fitting that our Hero should run into one. A huge humanoid with unparalleled strength, the Cyclops wields a mighty axe and is adorned with the bones, skulls, and claws of those he has slain. Artwork exploring the variations of this beastly foe is shown here, by artist [[Gabriel Blain]], including a moss-covered, forest-dwelling version, and one painted with blue eyes, his shoulders and arms bristling with enemy arrows. The team had fun creating these, as [[Thierry Dansereau]] explains, "The first villain you meet is called the [[Cyclops of Kephallonia|Cyclops]] but he is only a one-eyed man. Then you meet a real Cyclops. Surprises!"
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| </tabber>
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|
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| ===Argolis===
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| <tabber>
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| |-|Agamemnon's Tomb=
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| In the 2nd century BCE, Pausanias wrote that the ruins of Mycenae hid underground chambers where {{Wiki|Atreus}}—[[Agamemnon]]'s father—and the other kings of Mycenae stored their treasure. He also reported the existence of several graves, Agamemnon's included.
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| When archaeologist {{Wiki|Heinrich Schliemann}} started excavating at Mycenae in the 1870s, he assumed that the huge buried monuments outside the citadel's walls were the treasuries Pausanias mentioned, dubbing the largest monument the "{{Wiki|Treasury of Atreus}}". He also believed he found Agamenmnon's [[Agamemnon's Tomb|tomb]] in Grave Circle A.
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| Schliemann was later discovered to be incorrect in his assumptions, and for a while after, historians believed the so-called "Treasury of Atreus" was the real tomb of Agamemnon. Unfortunately, this was also proven false when the monument was dated to around 1350-1250 BCE, years before Agamemnon was suspected to have lived.
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| IMAGE DESCRIPTION: Entrance corridor of the so-called "Tomb of Agamemnon"
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|
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| |-|Architecture=
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| (Behind the Scenes)
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|
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| The architecture of each city, town, and village reflects both its location's biome and the building materials readily available. For example, [[Argos]], capital of [[Argolis]] and known as the 'White City' is constructed from marble. Shown is a variety of concept art by [[Hugo Puzzuoli]], [[Miguel Bouchard]], and [[Caroline Soucy]] depicting the types of buildings and structures the Hero will encounter in the game. The variety of heights, sizes, and spacing is important to keep the locations navigable during gameplay. Like most Greek cities there is a clear distinction between rich and poor, with muddy streets and low, ramshackle houses, leading into stone structure, clean roadways and plenty of vegetation.
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| Black and white line sketches by Miguel Bouchard of multiple temples amd residential villas show the raised steps and intricate walkaways between buildings, as well as the ruins of an older temple.
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|
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| |-|Argolis Banner=
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| The region of Argolis was a major center of civilization beginning in the Mycenaean period. In the archaic and Classical period, the entire region was under the control of Argos.
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| The banner depicts a [[wolf]]'s head, the main conage of Argos. The wolf, "lukos", in ancient Greek, refers to [[Apollo|Apollo Lykaios]], who had an important sanctuary in his name. In Argos, wolves were offered as sacrifices to Apollo.
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| |-|Asklepeia Festival=
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| The Asklepeia was a religious festival that included contests and athletic competitions.
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| The musical portion of the festival featured rhapsodists and citharedes (singers) competing to see who could recite the best epics. The musicians were supervised by the priests of Asklepios, who served as judges.
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| The winner was decided by a jury made up of a priest, the presiding officer of the physicians, and a specially appointed arbiter. The competition's stakes were high, and artists who
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| forgot to show up received a considerable fine.
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| The Asklepeia was not specific to Epidauros. There is evidence of the festival occurring in sanctuaries in Aegina, Gortys, Kos, Pergamon, and Trikka. Meanwhile, in Athens, the Asklepeia conincided with another festival called the Dionysia.
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|
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| |-|Cistern=
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| Somewhere between 1225 and 1200 BCE, the inhabitants of Mycenae decided to secure a constant supply of fresh water for the citadel in the event of a prolonged siege.
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| They achieved this goal by building a secret passage to an underground cistern. The water came from a spring on the nearby Mount Profitis Ilias, and travelled to the cistern through underground [[clay]] pipes.
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| As time marched on, the installation drained out. However, during the Hellenistic period, another cistern was constructed on the surface to collect rainwater.
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|
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| |-|Civic Doctors in Ancient Greece=
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| If a trip to the Sanctuary of Asklepios wasn’t possible, sick people could seek help from civic doctors. If [[Herodotos]] is to be believed, there was already a system of public doctors in place in [[Aegina]] and Athens by the late 6th century BCE.
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| Some physicians received a retaining fee to reside in the community and treat citizens. However, the doctors could still receive, or in some cases demand, compensation from their patients. While physicians probably treated the poorest citizens for free, it is unlikely they were willing to do the same for the rich, or for non-citizens.
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| </tabber>
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| <tabber>
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| |-|Cult of Asklepios=
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| Pausanias writes that Asklepios's first sanctuary was in
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| {{Wiki|Trikka}}, a [[Thessaly|Thessalia]]n city-state some mythological accounts name as the god’s birthplace. While no archaeological evidence of this temple exists, 4th century BCE coins depicting Asklepios have been found in the area.
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| The remains of the sanctuary in Epidauros, meanwhile, date back to the 6th century BCE. This makes the site the earliest evidence of the cult of Asklepios.
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| From the 5th century BCE onward, the cult slowly gained popularity, and by the 4th century BCE it had extended across the entire Mediterranean area.
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| |-|Cyclopean Wall=
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| Due to the huge stones found in the walls of places like Mycenae and [[Fort Tiryns|Tiryns]], Classical Greeks believed their ancestors' citadels were constructed by Cyclopes–giant one-eyed builders straight out of mythology.
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| Nowadays, the term "Cyclopean masonry" is used to describe a variety of walls built with enormous and unworked limestone blocks fitted together without mortar. It was extremely popular in Mycenae, and was employed multiple times in the building and extending of the citadel walls.
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| IMAGE DESCRIPTION: Cyclopean wall in Tyrins ''(sic)'', picture attributed to Athanasiou Konstantinos (1875-1905)
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| |-|Decline of Mycenae=
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| The exact causes of the decline of Mycenaean civilization remain a mystery to this day. Competing theories include a violent invasion by barbarous {{Wiki|Dorians}}, catastrophic earthquakes, drought and famine, trade disruption, internal revolts, or combinations of two or more of the above.
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| What is known for sure is that almost all important Mycenaean fortifications in mainland Greece were burned down between 1250 and 1180 BCE, just when Mycenaean civilization had reach its apex. The last clay tablets written in [[Pylos]] around 1180 BCE claim a foreign attack was imminent, so it's easy to assume that violent events played a significant role in the civilization's decline.
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| The fall of Mycenae was not immediate. Instead, it endured a slow, painful decline throughout the 12th and 11th centuries BCE until it was reduced to a rural community.
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| IMAGE DESCRIPTION: General view of Mycenae
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| |-|Foundation of the Site=
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| There are several legends regarding the founding of Mycenae. The most popular story involves [[Perseus]], the great hero and slayer of [[Medusa]]. After Perseus unintentionally killed his grandfather, he exchanged realms with his relative {{Wiki|Megapenthes of Argos|Megapenthes}}. When he arrived in his new lands, he dropped the cap of his sword scabbard—called "mycēs" in Greek. Interpreting this event as a good omen, Perseus decided to build a city.
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| In another version of the story, Perseus picked up a mushroom—also called mycēs—and drank from the water that flowed from it. With his thirst quenched, the hero decided that the land from which the mushroom grew was a suitable place to establish his new capital.
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| IMAGE DESCRIPTION: Perseus with the head of the Medusa, copy of the marble statue from the {{Wiki|Vatican Museums|Vatican museum}} made by {{Wiki|Antonio Canova}} between 1804-1806)
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|
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| |-|Frescoes=
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| (Behind the Scenes)
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|
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| These detailed frescoes adorn the walls of residential houses, villas, gymnasiums, bath houses, boats, temples, and pretty much any other surface in the game. These sketches by Ubisoft artists show just a tiny selection of the frescoes found in Assassin's Creed ODyssey.
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|
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| |-|Greek Baths=
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| The baths of Epidauros probably had religious and curative uses, and visitors were encouraged to purify their bodies in them before visiting the abaton. However, the baths were also prescribed to treat different ailments.
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| Ancient Greeks knew the value of a good bath, and Hippokrates himself meticulously classified different bath types according to various ailments and pains. For example, he recommended hot baths to help cure things like lung and kidney disease. No matter what the problem, Hippokrates had a bath for it.
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|
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| |-|Guest House=
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| Guest houses were built to host patients during their stay at the sanctuary. One such hostel was a monument called the Katagogeion.
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| The Katagogeion also hosted theorodokoi. Theorodokoi were men of influence who liaised with the sanctuary’s ambassadors, known as theoroi. It was the theorodokoi’s duty to donate funds to maintain the sanctuary, and to make appearances at religious festivals like the Asklepeia.
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| </tabber>
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| <tabber>
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| |-|Hephaistos=
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| [[Hephaistos]] was the god of [[metal]]working, and the patron god of [[blacksmith]]s, [[gold]]smiths, carpenters, craftsmen, artisans, sculptors, and architects. His workshop was believed to be situated on either [[Mount Olympos]], or on the island of [[Lemnos]]. In the latter case, the volcano Moschilos of Lemnos was believed to spew fire from the god's subterranean workshop.
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|
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| Hephaistos' name was closely associated with fire. For example, during the [[Trojan War]], when the river {{Wiki|Scamander|Skamandros}} tried to drown the great hero [[Achilles]], Hephaistos burned the riverbanks and the entire nearby plain until the river boiled like a kettle.
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|
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| Because of his occupation as a [[copper]]smith, Hephaistos was usually depicted as having strong arms fit for wielding hammers and tongs, but weak legs due to his constant standing in front of the anvil. However, other versions of Hephaistos' story state he was born lame.
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|
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| |-|Honey=
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| According to the Ancients Greeks, honey was thought to have supernatural characteristics, since it wasn’t fully understood how it was formed. To them, it was a hidden treasure approaching the divine world, and was highly symbolic. The bee and honey were thus part of the daily life of the Greeks. Poets celebrated the sweetness of it, its purity and aroma, and naturalists like [[Aristotle]] and {{Wiki|Pliny the Elder}} described the manners of bees.
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|
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| It's known that Minoan Greece produced honey, so the knowledge of honey goes back to early Greek antiquity. It was popular for bees carrying pollen to be represented on jewelry. Hesiod and Homer mention honey, bees, and beehives in their works. [[Virgil]] consecrated an ode to beekeeping in his {{Wiki|Georgics}}, describing honey to be a sweet present from the heavens.
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|
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| Raising bees was also a job, and the products that came out of it could even be used as trading currency. For example, [[Corsica|Korsika]] paid a tribute in wax and honey to the Etruscans. With the production of honey, the Greeks developed new culinary dishes and pharmacopoeia.
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|
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| |-|The Hydra=
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| Herakles' second [[Labours of Hercules|labor]] was to kill the [[Lernaean Hydra|Lernaian Hydra]], a water monster with numerous poison heads that lived in Lake Lerna of Argolis. One of the heads was immortal, and for each head that was chopped off, two more would generate in its place. The number of the heads was reportedly between six and fifty.
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| In order to kill the Hydra, Herakles needed the help of his nephew, [[Iolaos]]. As Herakles cut off its heads, Iolaos cauterized the wounds to prevent them from growing again. To cut off the immortal head, Herakles used a golden sword given to him by [[Athena]].
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| After his victory, he dipped his arrows in the Hydra's poisonous blood, having the instinct that they could come in handy for his upcoming labors.
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|
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| |-|The Nemean Lion=
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| Herakles, the son of Zeus and Alkmene, was both a hero and god. He was renowned for accomplishing the twelve years at the service of his cousin [[Eurystheas]], king of Mycenae.
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|
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| The first labor was to slay the [[Nemean Lion]], who terrorized the inhabitants of {{Wiki|Nemea}} and took its women as hostages.
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|
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| Herakles arrived at {{Wiki|Cleonae (Argolis)|Kleonai}}, found the lion, and tried to use his bow against. However, the lion's golden fur was impenetrable, and resisted every arrow shot at it. Herakles found a way to trap the lion in its cave, and then used his club to stun the beast. As it lay immobile, he was able to kill it with his bare hands. Thereafter, Herakles wore the lion's skin to show his victory; This was how he was normally represented in Greek art.
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|
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| |-|Offerings=
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| After their healing, patients and worshippers of Asklepios would leave an ex-voto in the sanctuary as an offering of thanks. The ex-voto could be a bandage, crutches or medical tools, a confession stele describing their experience, or a statuette.
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|
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| Some ex-voto were especially extravagant. For example, Hermodikos of {{Wiki|Lampsakos}} was instructed by Asklepios to find the largest stone he could, then leave it in the sanctuary as an offering. Hermodikos did as he was told, and the stone he offered exists to this day, his inscription still on it:
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|
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| "In recognition of your power, Asklepios, I dedicated this stone I raised, to prove your art is evident for all to see."
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|
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| |-|Pilgrim's Camp=
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| Pilgrims came to Epidauros from all over Greece. However, the influx of visitors increased dramatically after a [[Plague of Athens|plague]] devastated Athens from 430-426 BCE.
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|
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| According to [[Thucydides]], people were desperate for healthcare, and traditional physicians didn't know how to cope with the new disease. These factors led to masses of people making the journey to the sanctuary in the hopes that Asklepios would heal them.
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|
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| Later, in 421 BCE, the Athenians were able to bring Asklepios to them during a break in the Peloponnesian War. The god arrived in the form of a wooden statue. It was placed—along with a statue of Hygieia—in a sanctuary on the south side of the Akropolis
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|
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| |-|Purification=
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| Coming to Asklepios’s sanctuary was a process of purification. From a religious perspective, illness was a pollution the gods could help eliminate. Even Hippokratic authors recommended
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| visits to the sanctuary, especially when the only alternative was a bad or inexperienced healer.
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|
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| Pilgrims visiting the sanctuary at Epidauros had to purify themselves before they could enter. Fortunately, there were nearby sacred springs and baths for exactly that purpose. The springs purified the pilgrims spiritually, but they also made them clean, which was another quality needed to visit the sanctuary.
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|
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| |-|Sculpture Value=
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| The Ancient Greeks and Romans had a long history of making [[bronze]] statuary. Images of gods and heroes, victorious athletes, statesmen, philosophers were prevalent throughout antiquity, appearing everywhere from temples and sanctuaries to public spaces.
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|
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| However, bronze statues had a high material value, and it is estimated that even a small-scale bronze value would have cost around 150-200 [[drachma]]e in the 4th century BCE. As a result, only the prosperous could afford to dedicate bronze statues to sanctuaries, while poorer pilgrims could only offer clay vases and statuettes.
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| </tabber>
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| <tabber>
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| |-|Stadium=
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| The Asklepian Games occurred every four years during the Asklepeia festival. They were comprised of artistic and athletic contests, the latter of which took place in a formal stadium.
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| Probably built in the 3rd century BCE, the stadium featured stone seating from where the audience could watch footraces on the racetrack below. Further archeological excavation has
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| revealed a stone starting line called a balbis, and a starting mechanism called a hysplex, which helped prevent false starts.
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|
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| |-|Temple of Asklepios=
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| The Temple of Asklepios was the main building of the sanctuary. Built around 375 BCE, it replaced an earlier building located further southeast.
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|
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| The temple was constructed over the course of four years. According to Pausanias, the interior contained a chryselephantine [ivory and gold) statue of Asklepios. The statue was made by the sculptor {{Wiki|Thrasymedes|Thrasymedes of Paros}}, and depicted the god sitting on a throne, holding a staff in one hand and a snake's head in the other. A dog rested by Asklepios' side to keep him company.
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|
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| |-|Theater of Epidauros=
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| The famous theater of [[Epidauros]] was built on the slope of [[Mount Kynortion]]. It is considered the most perfect theater structure in all of antiquity, due to the harmony of its proportions and its exceptional acoustics.
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|
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| The auditorium, still virtually intact, was built in the second half of the 4th century BCE. The stage building, however, is in ruins, though its basic arrangement is clear enough.
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|
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| The theater housed musical contests held during the Asklepeia, and rocrds show that Greeks used the building as far back as the late 5th century BCE.
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|
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| |-|The Mythological Significance of Honey=
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| Legend told of a beekeeper nymph, Melissa. According to myth, she was the very first to harvest honey. Along with her sister {{Wiki|Adrasteia}}, Melissa took care of a young Zeus on [[Mount Ida]]. The grateful Zeus gave unto bees a golden-bronze color, and made them resistant to the weather. Melissa was also initiated to the mysteries of Demeter by the goddess herself. Unfortunately for Melissa, she was killed for refusing to reveal their secrets. Demeter's resulting anger was so great, it provoked an epidemic that made clouds of bees from Melissa's body.
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|
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| The priestesses of the mystery cults in the Greek religion were often compared to bees, and were called Melissai. In these mystery cults, the most revered goddesses were Demeter and her daughter Persephone, Chthonian goddesses symbolizing the return of the seasons. Many honey offerings were presented to these so-called Chthonian divinities.
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|
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| The priestesses of the Artemis of {{Wiki|Ephesus}} were also called Melissai.
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|
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| |-|Tholos Tombs=
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| The so-called "Treasury of Atreus" or "Agamemnon's Tomb" is the largest of nine {{Wiki|Beehive tomb|tholos}} tombs outside the citadel walls of Mycenae.
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|
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| The name "tholos" refers to the tombs' round shape. Given their size, it's possible that members of the same family were often buried in the tombs together, along with their riches. The tombs' walls were decorated with bronze sheets attached with nails, and some of the nails are still in place today.
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|
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| Unfortunately, the precautions the people of Mycenae took to seal the tombs—such as walling in the doors and passageways—did little to protect them from ancient and modern treasure hunters, who emptied the tombs of much of their riches.
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|
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| </tabber>
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| <tabber>
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| |-|The Tholos and the Sacred Snakes=
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| Also known as the Thymele, the sanctuary’s tholos (round building) housed the cult of Asklepios. It was the most beautiful building in the sanctuary, and its size and splendor emphasized its importance.
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|
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| An opening in the center of the floor gave access to a circular pit. From there, it was possible to enter the building's foundation: a subterranean maze that may have housed
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| sacred snakes.
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|
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| Snakes were considered to be Asklepios' emblem. As such, whenever the god's cult integrated into a new city, they brought a pack of sacred snakes with them.
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|
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| One medical stele relates how a pilgrim was supposedly healed by one of the sanctuary's snakes:
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|
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| "A man’s toe was healed by a snake. He was suffering terribly from a difficult wound on his toe, and during the day was carried outside by servants and was sitting on some seat. When sleep overtook him, a snake came out of the abaton and healed his toe with its tongue; after it had done this, it returned to the abaton. When the man awoke. he was healthy and said that he had seen a vision: a handsome young man seemed to have sprinkled a drug over his toe."
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|
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| </tabber>
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|
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| ===Arkadia===
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| <tabber>
| |
| |-|Arkadian Banner=
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| Arkadia is a mountainous region of the central Peloponnese. It has plains in the valley of the Alpheios and Ladon rivers, and around the cities of Tegea and Megalopolis.
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|
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| Its banner depicts a head of Demeter, the goddess of agriculture, from the coinage of the city of Pheneos. This earthy goddess is frequently depicted on the coinage of cities. The greatest gift Demeter gave to humankind was agriculture, and this relation was always shown by the grain wreath that she wore.
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|
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| |-|Biomes=
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| (Behind the scenes)
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|
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| The player will encounter seven distinct biomes - six on land, one underwater - as they journey through Ancient Greece. Each features its own flora, fauna, weather systems, and unique topography. The challenge for the art team was to make sure the biomes each had their own individual atmosphere, vegetation, color palette, even down to the type of rocks in each location.
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|
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| “AU biomes are a joint effort of several artists, technical artists, and technical directors who work together to create those landscapes that are driven by procedural rules. In order to create believable procedural biomes, the biome team had to fully understand interaction between elements that drive nature and apply it in the game,” explains Vincent Lamontagne, assistant art director and lead biome artist. From left; cross-sections of the six land-based biomes - Spring, Summer, Arid, Paradise Islands, Volcanic, and Deciduous Forest - gave a broad spectrum of the landscape the Hero will have to navigate to survive. Artist Hugo Puzzuoli adds, “Our team had fun translating the diverse nuances of azure blue from the Mediterranean Sea. From the paradisiac white sand beaches to the arid orange volcanic coast.”
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|
| |
| |-|The Cattle of Geryon=
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| The tenth labor of Herakles required travelling to the end of the world to Erytheia to retrieve the cows of the Giant Geryon. Son of Chrysaor - who came out of Medusa's body - and Callirrhoe - daughter of two Titans = Geryon had one body, but three heads and three sets of legs.
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|
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| When Heraktes arrived to Erytheia, he first killed Orthos, the two-headed dog, and then killed Eurytion, the herdsman. He finally put down Geryon by throwing one poisonous arrow directly into the middle of the Giant's head.
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|
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| Herakles brought the cattle to Eurystheas, who then sacrificed them to Hera.
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|
| |
| |-|Geography=
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| Ancient Greece had an agrarian economy, meaning that wealth came from farming the land.
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|
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| The polis, or city-state, was made up of the astu (city) and the chora (countryside]. Citizens conducted business and politics in the city, but many made their living on farms in the country, growing olives for oil, wine for grapes, and grains.
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|
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| Due to Greece's mountainous topography and variable rainfall, it is estimated that only one-fifth of the land was arable, so control of the plains was frequently contested. For example, the Spartans conquered the neighboring Messenians and reduced them to slaves with the goal of controlling Messenia's rich and fertile plains. Even a city as powerful as Athens did not produce enough grain to feed its population, and had to rely on grain imports.
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|
| |
| |-|Legendary Animals=
| |
| Greek myth is full of stories of impressive animals that are separate from the god-like creatures of Medusa and the Minotaur, such as the Nemean Lion, the Golden Hind of Artemis, and the Stymphalian Birds. No foray into classical Greece would be complete without these Legendary creatures. These are strong, powerful animals chosen for their interesting fighting style and appearance. The Odyssey team adapted the real-world versions, embellishing them with different markings and natural weapons. They are dangerous, scarred from many previous encounters, and have an almost diseased, unnatural air to them as shown in the concept artwork by Gabriel Blain. They are not to be attacked lightty.
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|
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| “The 12 labors of Herakles were depicted many times in the game in various forms. For instance the hunt of mythical animals is inspired by many of those myths, as well as some of the stone work and paintings that can be found across the game."
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|
| |
| |-|Pan=
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| Pan was the national god of Arkadia. His name and hybrid appearance as a half-man, half-goat refer to his special role as the “guardian of the flocks”. Shepherds sacrificed goats to Pan in exchange for protection for the rest of their herd.
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|
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| Pan was believed to enjoy roaming the mountains while playing music on his pipes. The Greeks worshipped Pan - as well as Hermes and the nymphs - in sacred caves. However, in Arkadia, there was an entire sanctuary with a temple dedicated to Pan.
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|
| |
| The origins of the Athenian cult of Pan have been related by Herodotos. According to the ancient historian, the famous runner Philippides met Pan while journeying to Lakonia to ask the Spartans for aid against the Persians. Pan promised to help the Athenians, and made good on that promise at the Battle of Marathon in 490 BCE when he sowed panic in the ranks of the Persian army.
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|
| |
| |-|The Stymphalian Birds=
| |
| The sixth labor of Herakles was to kill the birds that lived in lake Stymphalia in Arkadia. These birds were sacred to the god of war, Ares. They were carnivorous with toxic dung, and were made of bronze.
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|
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| The lake where they made their dwelling was swampy, so it was difficult for Herakies to approach them. To help, Athena gave him a rattle made by Hephaistos, the god of metalworking, which scared the birds off. Herakles managed to shoot some of the birds with his poison arrows, but several flew away.
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|
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| </tabber>
| |
|
| |
| ===Attika=== | | ===Attika=== |
| <tabber> | | <tabber> |