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| ==Discovery Sites== | | ==Discovery Sites== |
| <tabber> | | <tabber> |
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|
| |
| |-|The Ram: The First Naval Weapon=
| |
| 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.
| |
|
| |
| 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.
| |
|
| |
| 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.
| |
| |-|Miltos and the Protective Eye=
| |
| 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.
| |
|
| |
| 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.
| |
|
| |
| 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.
| |
| |-|Types of Boats and Organization of Shipyards=
| |
| 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.
| |
|
| |
| 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.
| |
|
| |
| 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.
| |
|
| |
| 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.
| |
| |-|Achaian Banner=
| |
| The Achaian banner appropriately depicts a trireme, since the
| |
| region includes Patrai, which served as naval base for the
| |
| Spartans during the Peloponnesian War.
| |
|
| |
| 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.
| |
|
| |
| 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.
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
| |-|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.
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
| |-|Aphrodite, Adonis and Persephone= | | |-|Aphrodite, Adonis and Persephone= |
| According to the myth told by Ovid, when Aphrodite met the | | According to the myth told by Ovid, when Aphrodite met the |
| Line 695: |
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| (Under the scenes) | | (Under the scenes) |
|
| |
|
| "To produce our Merchant Boar, we were really pleased to be | | "To produce our Merchant Boat, we were really pleased to be |
| able to use as reference the remains of the very well | | able to use as reference the remains of the very well |
| preserved “Kyrenia Ship” found in 1965. Having this boat | | preserved “Kyrenia Ship” found in 1965. Having this boat |
| Line 703: |
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| Therrien | | Therrien |
|
| |
|
| |-|Extraction=
| |
| To extract oil, olives were soaked and fermented in baskets or
| |
| vats for ten days. This softened their skin and made their oil
| |
| more fluid, but also more bitter, An alternative was to wash
| |
| the olives in boiling water before crushing them.
| |
|
| |
| The olives were then squashed and ground. Small amounts
| |
| could be ground in a stone mortar, but larger quantities had
| |
| to be trod on in vats by men wearing wooden clogs, or in a
| |
| rotary mill - a stone bowl in which one or two rotating
| |
| millstones were activated by human or animal power.
| |
|
| |
| The usual press featured a heavy wooden beam anchored at
| |
| one end, and stone weights attached at the other end. The
| |
| beam acted as a lever to increase the pressure exerted on the
| |
| fruits.
| |
|
| |
| The crushed olives were placed in fiber or cloth containers,
| |
| which were stacked on top of each other on the press bed.
| |
| After a first pressing, boiling water was poured to ease the
| |
| flow of oil, and the olives were pressed again. This process
| |
| was repeated for a third pressing.
| |
|
| |
| The resulting product was a mixture of water, olive juice, and
| |
| oil collected at the press bed. After it had settled in a
| |
| container, the oil floated on the surface and was separated
| |
| from the water. This had to be done swiftly to prevent dregs
| |
| from fermenting and altering the taste of the oil.
| |
| |-|The Harvest= | | |-|The Harvest= |
| Four methods were used to harvest olives. Picking the fallen | | Four methods were used to harvest olives. Picking the fallen |
| Line 775: |
Line 525: |
| planted olives on his land, it was his children and | | planted olives on his land, it was his children and |
| grandchildren that would harvest the fruit. | | grandchildren that would harvest the fruit. |
| |-|Phokis Banner=
| |
| In the Phokis region was Delphi, the site of the Panhellenic
| |
| oracle of Apollo.
| |
|
| |
| A prophecy would be given by the Pythia who sat on the
| |
| Delphic tripod, a three-legged piece of furniture. This tripod,
| |
| one attribute of Apollo, is depicted on the banner with two
| |
| dolphins on either side. Dolphins were also dedicated to
| |
| Apollo, and their name in Greek (delphis) recalled the name of
| |
| Delphi.
| |
|
| |
| Tripods and dolphins appeared on some of the coins of Delphi,
| |
| but this composition derived from the coinage of Megaris.
| |
| |-|Olive Groves=
| |
| (Under the scenes)
| |
|
| |
|
| “What would be Greece without the typical olive groves? Early
| |
| on, some key nature elements were chosen in order to feel
| |
| the Greek landscape.” - Vincent Lamontagne.
| |
| |-|Ancient Structures= | | |-|Ancient Structures= |
| Greece is known for its monuments, temples, and statues, | | Greece is known for its monuments, temples, and statues, |
| Line 806: |
Line 538: |
| monuments from nothing but myth, and to give life to these | | monuments from nothing but myth, and to give life to these |
| magnificent structures. | | magnificent structures. |
| | |
| |-|Points of Interest= | | |-|Points of Interest= |
| Greek Mythology is a fascinating and enduring collection of | | Greek Mythology is a fascinating and enduring collection of |
| Line 820: |
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| eaten each day by two vultures, only to regrow overnight to | | eaten each day by two vultures, only to regrow overnight to |
| begin the torment again. | | begin the torment again. |
| |-|Theater of Delphi=
| |
| The theater of Delphi was situated above the Temple of Apollo.
| |
| It offered an expansive view of sanctuary and the valley below,
| |
| and could accommodate around 5000 spectators in its seats.
| |
|
| |
| The theater hosted different artistic contests, especially
| |
| during competitions like the Pythian Games. These contests
| |
| included plays, poetry readings, and musical performances,
| |
| and were held not only for the audience, but also for Apollo,
| |
| the god of arts - among other things.
| |
| |-|Lesche of Knidians=
| |
| Built by the Knidians between 475-450 BCE, the Lesche was a
| |
| clubhouse renowned for displaying two paintings by
| |
| Polygnotos of Thasos, one of ancient Greece's most famous
| |
| artists. According to Pausanias, the paintings depicted the
| |
| Capture of Troy and a Nekyia [necromantic ritual),
| |
| respectively.
| |
|
| |
| The Lesche was most likely constructed after the battle of
| |
| Eurymedon in 467 BCE, which resulted in Knidos's liberation
| |
| from the Persians.
| |
| |-|Tripod of Plataia and Palm Tree of Eurymedon=
| |
| Tripods were pieces of furniture used during offerings and
| |
| rituals. They were most associated with the god Apollo, and
| |
| the Pythia sat on a sacred Delphic Tripod when delivering her
| |
| prophecies
| |
|
| |
| The golden Tripod of Plataia was dedicated after a victory over
| |
| the Persians at Plataia in 479 BCE. The tripod rested atop a
| |
| twisted 8-meter tall bronze column that ended in snake
| |
| heads. The column stood in Delphi until 324 CE, when the
| |
| Roman Emperor Constantine relocated it to what is now
| |
| known as Istanbul.
| |
|
| |
|
| Next to the tripod was the bronze Palm Tree of Eurymedon,
| |
| which was dedicated by Athenians after Kimon's defeat of the
| |
| Persians at the Eurymedon river.
| |
| |-|Apollo Salamina=
| |
| The Apollo of Salamis stood in front of the Temple of Apollo,
| |
| and was dedicated to Delphi after Themistokles's famous
| |
| naval victory at Salamis in 480 BCE. The bronze statue was
| |
| 6 meters tall, and held an aphlaston (a ship's stern ornament)
| |
| in its hand as a symbol of the battle.
| |
| |-|Sphinx and Oedipus= | | |-|Sphinx and Oedipus= |
| Oedipus was son of Laius and lokasta of Thebes. His father | | Oedipus was son of Laius and lokasta of Thebes. His father |
| Line 891: |
Line 582: |
| prophecy and became one of the most tragic figures in Greek | | prophecy and became one of the most tragic figures in Greek |
| mythology. | | mythology. |
| |-|Sybil Rock=
| |
| A sybil was a prophetess.
| |
|
| |
| Legends say there were ten sibyls in the ancient world, with
| |
| each one located at different sacred sites. One sybil even
| |
| called Delphi her home long before the appearance of the
| |
| Pythia, and allegedly delivered her prophecies from atop a
| |
| stone.
| |
| |-|Bouleuterion of Delphi=
| |
| Built between 600-550 BCE, the Bouleuterion of Delphi is one
| |
| of the oldest monuments in the sanctuary. The building was
| |
| the seat of the boule, a council that handled judicial and
| |
| financial matters.
| |
|
| |
| The council was composed of randomly appointed citizens, all
| |
| of whom usually served a one-year term. In Delphi, a total of
| |
| thirty bouleutes were appointed during a year, with fifteen
| |
| chosen every six months.
| |
|
| |
| Today, the building is in poor condition, but has been
| |
| identified based on texts and inscriptions discovered in its
| |
| proximity, including two accounts from the council itself.
| |
| |-|Athenian Treasury=
| |
| The Athenians dedicated this treasury to Apollo between 490-
| |
| 485 BCE, following their victory over the Persians at
| |
| Marathon.
| |
|
| |
| Built with marble from Paros, the treasury was ornamented
| |
| with thirty metopes depicting the exploits of Herakles and
| |
| Theseus.
| |
|
| |
| Today it is the best-preserved monument in Delphi, thanks to
| |
| restoration efforts by French archaeologists between the
| |
| years 1903 and 1906.
| |
| |-| Sikyonian Treasury=
| |
| Ancient Greek treasuries were small temple-like buildings
| |
| that housed offerings to the gods. They resembled a vestibule
| |
| with two columns in front.
| |
|
| |
| The Sikyonian Treasury dates back to the end of the óth
| |
| century BCE. It was constructed upon the remains of an older
| |
| structure, and incorporated pieces from buildings erected
| |
| during the reign of the tyrant Kleisthenes. The Sikyonians
| |
| dismantled said buildings after Kleisthenes's death, and
| |
| reused their pieces in the treasury to mark the beginning of a
| |
| new era in Sikyonian politics.
| |
| |-|Monument of Epigones=
| |
| The city of Argos dedicated several monuments to Delphi,
| |
| including the Monument of Epigones. The statues depicted the
| |
| leaders of the mythological expedition against Thebes.
| |
|
| |
| This expedition, further explored in one of Aiskhylos's
| |
| tragedies, revolved around the sons of Oedipus: Eteokles and
| |
| Polynices. Originally, the two had agreed to rule Thebes on
| |
| alternating years, but conflict arose when Eteokles refused to
| |
| give up power to his brother. With the help of Adrastos, the
| |
| king of Argos, Polynices put together a group of seven
| |
| attackers to reclaim the city.
| |
|
| |
| The Monument of Epigones served as a tribute to Greek
| |
| soldiers willing to fight and die for what was theirs.
| |
|
| |
| |-|Cerberos=
| |
| The twelfth and final labor of Herakles was the capture of
| |
| Cerberos, the three-headed hound protecting the entrance to
| |
| the underworld.
| |
|
| |
| Herakles first visited Eleusis and participated in the
| |
| Eleusinian Mysteries to prepare himself for the descent. The
| |
| entrance was believed to be in Cape Tenaron, at the far end of
| |
| Lakonia.
| |
|
| |
| Hades agreed to give Cerberos to Herakles, but only if he
| |
| managed to subdue the hound without any weapons. Herakles
| |
| was successful in his task.
| |
|
| |
| When Herakles brought Cerberos to Eurystheas, Eurystheas
| |
| begged him to return the beast to the underworld, then
| |
| released Herakles from any future labors.
| |
| |-|Burial and Pollution=
| |
| Giving a proper funeral to the dead was considered one of the
| |
| most important gestures in a person's life. It was believed
| |
| that the soul left the body upon death, and if not properly
| |
| buried, the soul wouldn't find peace in the underworld. Burial
| |
| therefore had a spiritual purpose, but also a practical one in
| |
| minimizing the festering of decaying bodies.
| |
|
| |
| This pollution of decay and the impiety of leaving the bodies
| |
| without burial was a key explanation for the widespread
| |
| practice of allowing defeated enemies to collect their dead
| |
| after battle.
| |
| |-|The Augean Stables=
| |
| The fifth labor of Herakles consisted of cleaning the stables of
| |
| Augeas, king of Elis. This was a rather humiliating task, since
| |
| the cattle that lived in the stables were immortal. Not only
| |
| that, but they were more than one thousand in number, and
| |
| produced an enormous amount of dung. The stables had been
| |
| filthy for thirty years, which made the task nearly impossible.
| |
|
| |
| In this case, Herakles used his brain instead of this brawn. He
| |
| redirected the rivers Alpheus in the Peloponnese and Pineios
| |
| in Thessaly to the site. The water went through the stables
| |
| and thoroughly cleaned them.
| |
|
| |
| Untike the other labors, it appears that Herakles was paid for
| |
| the task. He asked for one tenth of the cattle if he managed to
| |
| clean the stables in one day. However, he killed Augeas when
| |
| the king didn't honor the deal, and gave the kingdom to
| |
| Phyleas, Augeas's son.
| |
| |-| The Erymanthian Boar=
| |
| The fourth labor of Herakles was considered very dangerous.
| |
| Eurystheas asked Herakles to bring to him the boar that lived
| |
| on the mountain Eurymantos. Centaurs, half horses and half-
| |
| men renowned for being wise, lived on the same mountain. It
| |
| was the famous centaur Chiron - who later became the tutor
| |
| of Achilles - who advised Herakles on how to catch the boar.
| |
|
| |
| Herakles drove the boar into the snow, captured it, and
| |
| carried it back to Eurystheas, who was so afraid of the animal
| |
| that he hid himself inside a pithos [container].
| |
| |-|Kronos=
| |
| The site of Olympia is dominated on the northern side by the
| |
| Hill of Kronos. This Titan, who was the father of Zeus and the
| |
| Olympians, was worshipped on the top of the hill.
| |
|
| |
| Prophecy told that Kronos would be dethroned by one of his
| |
| children. Because of this, he devoured the children he had
| |
| with Rhea as soon as they were born. But when Zeus was
| |
| born, Rhea fooled Kronos by hiding Zeus in Krete and
| |
| replacing him with a stone wrapped in clothes.
| |
|
| |
| Once he had grown up, Zeus managed to free his brothers and
| |
| sisters and make them his allies. The following war between
| |
| Olympians and Titans for the supremacy of the universe is
| |
| called the Titanomachy. Zeus also freed the Cyclopes who
| |
| created the thunderbolt for him.
| |
|
| |
| Zeus and his allies won the war and imprisoned the Titans in
| |
| Tartaros. The Titan Atlas received another punishment as he
| |
| was ordered to hold up the sky. Zeus became king of the gods,
| |
| and thus began the age of the Olympians.
| |
| |-|Forts=
| |
| (Behind the scenes)
| |
|
| |
| Hilltop forts formed the main line of defense against the
| |
| invading armies. They are built of stone packed around
| |
| wooden frames as demonstrated in the fort at the bottom of
| |
| the page, created by Michael Guimont. It's up to the Hero to
| |
| infiltrate these to bring them down from the inside, allowing
| |
| the army to advance, as shown in concept art by Caroline
| |
| Soucy (far right). But these are not simple structures, as
| |
| Benjamin Hall explains, “Forts are some of the most complex
| |
| challenges design wise. These locations need to offer
| |
| something different for the player from both a visual and
| |
| gameplay point of view."
| |
| |-|The Bouleuterion of Olympia=
| |
| The Bouleuterion of Olympia was one of the first buildings
| |
| constructed in the site.
| |
|
| |
| The council of Olympia met in the Bouleuterion to discuss
| |
| matters regarding the sanctuary. They appointed priests,
| |
| arbitrated conflicts between athletes and hellanodikai
| |
| (judges), and decided which victors to erect statues for, as
| |
| well as where to put them.
| |
|
| |
| The Bouleuterion also housed archives of records from
| |
| previous Olympiads, in addition to the statue of Zeus Horkios,
| |
| in front of which athletes and trainers swore their Olympic
| |
| oath.
| |
| |-|The Foundations and Origins of the Sanctuary=
| |
| The sanctuary is very ancient. Its use goes back to the third
| |
| millennium BCE. At first, it was only a sacred forest. From
| |
| about 1000 BCE onward, a cult of Zeus developed on the site
| |
| of Olympia.
| |
|
| |
| The traditional date of the first Olympic festival is 776 BCE,
| |
| which is also the date of the first recorded winner of the
| |
| Games: Koroibos of Elis, who won the stadion race.
| |
|
| |
| The Olympic Games have their origins in ritual funeral games.
| |
| Funeral games were held to honor the deceased, and might
| |
| have celebrated civic heroes or private individuals.
| |
|
| |
| In “The Iliad”, Homer related that Achilles held games for his
| |
| friend Patroklos who died in the Trojan War. It is the most
| |
| ancient mention of this ritual, but they are attested to well into
| |
| the Hellenistic period.
| |
|
| |
| Brasidas, the Spartan general, died in the battle of Amphipolis
| |
| during the Peloponnesian War. He was honored as the new
| |
| founder of the city, and funeral games were organized and
| |
| became an annual event.
| |
| |-|The Olympic Heritage=
| |
| The modern Olympics were inspired by the ancient Games of
| |
| Olympia. A French nobleman, Baron Pierre de Coubertin, was
| |
| convinced of the parallel importance of the development of
| |
| mind and body, and he saw this ideal in ancient Greek culture.
| |
| He had the idea to revive the Games, and started to promote
| |
| this notion. At this time, excavations had begun at the original
| |
| site of Olympia. The ancient site was rediscovered in 1766 by
| |
| Richard Chandler, an English antiquarian, but the first
| |
| excavation was carried out in 1829.
| |
|
| |
| The excavation reports inspired de Coubertin, who became
| |
| obsessed with the athletic ideal of Olympia, which he thought
| |
| would inspire competitiveness and team spirit amongst
| |
| nations.
| |
|
| |
| The first modern games were held in 1896 in Athens.
| |
| |-|Alkibiades at Olympia=
| |
| Athletes were primarily from the upper class. They had to be
| |
| rich to afford the expenses of training and their participation
| |
| in the Games. Alkibiades, an aristocrat from an eminent
| |
| family, was one of these very wealthy athletes.
| |
|
| |
| His preference was for horse races - these events were
| |
| reserved for the wealthiest participants. A good illustration of
| |
| his financial power was during the Olympic Games of 416 BCE.
| |
| He participated with a whopping seven chariots in the
| |
| quadriga race, and won first, second, and fourth place.
| |
|
| |
| He was the first to ever enroll this many chariots in one race,
| |
| and in the context of the Peloponnesian War, this was a
| |
| demonstration that Athens was still powerful. Alkibiades
| |
| increased that impression with a magnificent feast, and even
| |
| used official Athenian gold and silver plates for the occasion.
| |
| |-|Orating Contests=
| |
| Though not part of the official competition, the first day ofthe
| |
| Olympic festival featured recitals and teachings from poets
| |
| and philosophers.
| |
|
| |
| Because Olympia was a public space, it provided these orators
| |
| an excellent opportunity to earn the ear of wealthy aristocrats
| |
| with the goal of turning them into future patrons.
| |
|
| |
| Oral tradition was so important in ancient Greece that some
| |
| Panhellenic festivals - like the Pythian Games in Delphi -
| |
| included orating contests as part of the official program.
| |
| |-|Elis Coinage and Banner=
| |
| Elis is most famous for its sanctuary of Olympia where the
| |
| Olympics were held. The main divinity of the sanctuary was
| |
| Zeus; its main temple was dedicated to him, and housed the
| |
| famous gold and ivory statue of Zeus made by Phidias.
| |
|
| |
| Zeus was known as the king of gods and god of thunder. One
| |
| of his attributes was the thunderbolt, which was given to him
| |
| by the Cyclopes.
| |
|
| |
| The coinage of Elis is associated with Olympia, and Zeus is
| |
| often depicted on the coins. They sometimes feature a head of
| |
| Zeus, but he's also commonly represented by his thunderbolt
| |
| - which served as the model for the region's banner - or his
| |
| signifying animal, the eagle.
| |
| |-|Organization=
| |
| Until up to 584 - 580 BCE, the Olympic Games were organized
| |
| by the Oxylides, an aristocratic family from the city of Elis.
| |
|
| |
| Over time, however, the family seemingly died out, and the
| |
| responsibility of organizing the Games passed on to other
| |
| members of the Elaian aristocracy who were chosen
| |
| randomtly by lot.
| |
|
| |
| The first organizers of the games were originally called
| |
| agonothetai - literally “those who held the games” - but their
| |
| name was eventually changed to hellanodikai.
| |
| |-|Heroic Cults=
| |
| Ancient Greek heroes were viewed as intermediates between
| |
| gods and men. Consequently, hero-cults were a distinctive
| |
| feature of Greek religion.
| |
|
| |
| Most heroes originated from heroic epics, such as Pelops in
| |
| Olympia, but this quality was not always necessary. For
| |
| example, Erechtheus of Athens had a local hero-cult without
| |
| ties to an epic. On some occasions, extraordinary humans -
| |
| such as the founders of cities - could also become the objects
| |
| of a cult, like Brasidas in Amphipolis.
| |
|
| |
| Hero-shrines, or heroons, were often constructed around the
| |
| hero's real for suspected) tombs.
| |
|
| |
| One exception amongst hero-cults was the cult of Herakles.
| |
| Herakles was considered as much as god as hero, and his cult
| |
| was widespread. There were many large sanctuaries
| |
| dedicated to the demigod, such as the Herakleion in Thasos,
| |
| where he was viewed as one of the city's protectors.
| |
| |-|Legendary Victors=
| |
| Some athtetes achieved a level of fame that bordered on
| |
| mythical. The wrestler Milon of Kroton was one of them. In the
| |
| éth century BCE, he won events in every Panhellenic Game,
| |
| granting him the rare privilege of the title of periodonikes. He
| |
| won six victories in Olympia, in addition to several other titles
| |
| in the Panhellenic Games of Delphi, Nemea, and Isthmos.
| |
|
| |
| He was appointed general by his city, and led an army during
| |
| the war between Kroton and Sybaris. In the battle that Led to
| |
| the destruction of Sybaris, Milon dressed like Herakles,
| |
| wearing a lion-skin and carrying a club.
| |
|
| |
| Milon's strength was Legendary. He is reported to have carried
| |
| his own bronze statue to its place in Olympia. However, he
| |
| was not invincible. When he participated in his seventh
| |
| Otympiad, he competed against a fellow from Kroton in the
| |
| final. Before combat started, the opponent bowed as a sign of
| |
| respect, then managed to defeat Milon. Even so, it is Milon's
| |
| name that history remembers.
| |
| |-|Women Victors=
| |
| Although women were not allowed to compete in the Olympic
| |
| Games, it was still possible for them to win the equestrian
| |
| events. This is because horse and chariot races awarded not
| |
| the jockeys or chariot drivers, but the owner of the horses.
| |
|
| |
| The first woman to participate in (and win) one of these races
| |
| was the Spartan princess Kyniska. She won events both in 396
| |
| BCE, and in the following Olympiad, and her victories made
| |
| her world-famous. She even erected a statue of herself and
| |
| her horses in Olympia. After her death, she was made a hero
| |
| in Sparta, and a shrine was builtin her honor.
| |
|
| |
| Following Kyniska, other women like Euryleonis of Sparta,
| |
| Berenike, queen of Egypt, Belistiche of Makedonia, and
| |
| Timareta of Elis also went on to win equestrian events.
| |
| |-|Modern Olympic Flame=
| |
| The modern concept of lighting of the Olympic Flame - a
| |
| practice started during the 1936 Games in Berlin - has its
| |
| roots in antiquity.
| |
|
| |
| The carrying of the torch was at least partially inspired by the
| |
| lampadedromia, a relay-race that required runners to reach
| |
| the finish line while holding a still-burning torch.
| |
|
| |
| However, although the lLampadedromia was held at many
| |
| religious festivals and sporting events, it was not an event in
| |
| the ancient Olympic Games.
| |
|
| |
| Instead, the most important flame in Olympia was the sacred
| |
| Fire of Hestia, which was used to light the sanctuary's altars
| |
| during the festival.
| |
| |-|Kladeos=
| |
| The Kladeos river borders the western side of Olympia. lts
| |
| name comes from the river-god Kladeos, who according to
| |
| Pausanias shared an altar with Demeter behind the
| |
| sanctuary's temple of Hera.
| |
|
| |
| Originally, Olympia's gymnasion and baths were erected along
| |
| the river's banks, but part of the gymnasion was destroyed
| |
| when the river changed course in the 4th century CE.
| |
|
| |
| The river's new trajectory - along with flooding from the
| |
| Alpheios river in the Middle Ages - buried Olympia in
| |
| approximately four meters of silt, and the site was only
| |
| rediscovered in the 19th century.
| |
| |-|Cult Personnel=
| |
| The cult personnel of Olympia was made up of priests who
| |
| fulfilled different sacred purposes.
| |
|
| |
| Theêkoloi were responsible for the general organization of the
| |
| cult, and performed sacrifices every month. They burned
| |
| incense mixed with grain kneaded in honey on the site's
| |
| different altars, and poured libations of wine.
| |
|
| |
| Two soothsayers fulfilled the divining role previously hetd by
| |
| Olympia's Oracle of Zeus, and four spondophoroi worked as
| |
| libation bearers.
| |
|
| |
|
| Meanwhile, exegetes were in charge of explaining Olympia's
| |
| rituals to foreigners who came to the sanctuary to sacrifice.
| |
| There was also a mageiros, who was something of a butcher
| |
| and cook. The mageiros killed the animal being sacrificed, cut
| |
| it, and cooked it so it could be served at a later banquet. The
| |
| very first Olympic winner, Koroibos of Elis, was a mageiros.
| |
| |-|The Gymnasion= | | |-|The Gymnasion= |
| The main buildings where athletes trained were the | | The main buildings where athletes trained were the |
| Line 1,285: |
Line 607: |
| 720 BCE. He supposedly did this believing that nudity would | | 720 BCE. He supposedly did this believing that nudity would |
| help him run faster. | | help him run faster. |
| |-|Sounion Festivals=
| |
| Sounion held a festival every four years. While not much is
| |
| known about the specifics of the festival, it probably occurred
| |
| during the 5th century BCE, and was important enough for
| |
| officials to commandeer a ship specifically to travel to
| |
| Sounion for the occasion.
| |
|
| |
| Sounion hosted sacrifices as well, as evidenced by a ramp
| |
| leading through the central door meant to Lead animals to the
| |
| sanctuary. Fragments of Kouroi statues have also been found,
| |
| suggesting dedications were occasionally offered to the
| |
| sanctuary. However, when the first version of the temple was
| |
| destroyed by Persians, these dedications were probably
| |
| wrecked or stolen.
| |
|
| |
| Fortunately, one large Kouros statue, probably from the 7th
| |
| century BCE, has remained mostly intact. It's possible the
| |
| statue - which depicts a naked young man with long hair -
| |
| survived the destruction of the temple by being hidden from
| |
| the Persians during their invasion.
| |
| |-|Poseidon=
| |
| Poseidon was the god of horses, earthquakes, and most
| |
| famously, the sea. Not to be confused with Pontos, the ancient
| |
| Greek personification of the sea, Poseidon's name means
| |
| “Lord of the earth” or “husband of the earth”.
| |
|
| |
| Poseidon's family tree includes his father Kronos, his mother
| |
| Rhea, and his brothers, Zeus and Hades. Together, Poseidon
| |
| and his brothers deposed Kronos, after which Poseidon was
| |
| granted the kingdom of the sea.
| |
|
| |
| His weapon and symbol was the trident. According to Hesiod,
| |
| much like Zeus's thunderbolts, Poseidon's trident was made
| |
| for him by three Cyclopes.
| |
| |-|Sounion=
| |
| Sounion is located approximately 70 kilometers south of
| |
| Athens, at the southern tip of the Attika region. Prehistoric
| |
| tombs in the area suggest that Sounion was first inhabited
| |
| around 3000 BCE.
| |
|
| |
| The sanctuary of Poseidon stood at Sounion's highest point. It
| |
| was an imposing structure that overlooked the sea from steep
| |
| cliffs - Appropriate, for a place dedicated to the powerful god
| |
| of the ocean.
| |
| |-|Athenians=
| |
| (Behind the scenes)
| |
|
| |
| Concept artwork on this spread by Gabrield Blain and Fred
| |
| Rambaud showcases the variety of opponents to be found in
| |
| Athens, Attika, and all over Greece. The Athenian army is
| |
| similar to the Spartans', but does have key differences. The
| |
| Athenian breastplates are smooth, favoring motifs and
| |
| symbols over representation of muscles. And there is of
| |
| course the color: Athenians are always represented in blue so
| |
| they are recognizable to the player.
| |
| |-| Philipiddes =
| |
| Philipiddes was a “hemerodrome”, a professional runner who
| |
| served Athens as a herald.
| |
|
| |
| According to Herodotos, Athens sent Philipiddes to ask Sparta
| |
| for aid at Marathon. During his journey, he encountered the
| |
| god Pan in the mountains. Pan - who was half-man, half-goat
| |
| = complained that the Athenians did not honor him as much as
| |
| they should have - especially since he could render helpful
| |
| services like sowing panic and terror in the ranks of their
| |
| enemies. Following the Battle of Marathon, the Athenians
| |
| corrected their neglectful attitude towards Pan, and thanked
| |
| him for his help in their victory.
| |
| |-|Tumulus=
| |
| A tumulus was a special tomb in which the ashes of cremated
| |
| bodies were collected in purple cloth - purple being the mark
| |
| of royalty. The ashy remains were then placed in a bronze urn.
| |
|
| |
| There is a large tumulus in the Kerameikos that was used
| |
| from the 560's BCE to the end of the 5th century BCE.
| |
| |-|Hoplites=
| |
| In Greece, hoplites were heavy infantrymen. They carried
| |
| round shields large enough to protect both themselves and
| |
| anyone to their left, and wore helmets, cuirasses, and
| |
| leggings.
| |
|
| |
| Hoplites normally advanced in a phalanx formation of five to
| |
| seven lines deep. The phalanx allowed them to attack with
| |
| spears, and simultaneously defend themselves from any
| |
| cavalry and archers attacking from the front.
| |
| |-|Big Battles=
| |
| (Behind the scenes)
| |
|
| |
| “Realizing an enormous battle on the scale of ancient Greek
| |
| warfare was quite a technical and design challenge. We
| |
| wanted to remain as true as possible to the tactics and
| |
| warfare of the time, but plenty of compromises were made for
| |
| gameplay, excitement, and technical constraints.” - Scott
| |
| Phillips
| |
|
| |
| “Even making the Discovery Tour was a challenge as we
| |
| needed to show battlefields without explicitly showing a
| |
| battlefield. We opted for flags instead of violence to
| |
| communicate the events.” - Paul Green, Assistant Level
| |
| Design Director on Discovery Tour: Ancient Greece
| |
| |-| Hippias =
| |
| Hippias was the son of Peisistratos, the tyrant of Athens. He
| |
| succeeded his father in 528 BCE, ruled with absolute power,
| |
| and brutally disposed of his enemies.
| |
|
| |
| In spite of this, Athens was surprisingly peaceful and
| |
| prosperous under Hippias's rule. His reign ended in 510 BCE,
| |
| when a Spartan invasion of Attika led to his downfall.
| |
|
| |
| Hippias fled to Asia Minor, where he came in contact with the
| |
| Persian king Darius. The disgraced tyrant would eventually
| |
| convince the Persians to land their forces at Marathon.
| |
| |-| The Telesterion =
| |
| The Telesterion was the most important building of the
| |
| sanctuary at the far end of the Sacred Way. This was the
| |
| temple that was dedicated to Demeter, and the place where
| |
| the cults and mysteries took place. It was here that the climax
| |
| of the Eleusinian ceremonies happened, and it was in the
| |
| Telesterion that the priestesses revealed their visions, and the
| |
| initiates were prohibited from discussing the events that took
| |
| place.
| |
|
| |
| The Telesterion was a square or rectangular building of
| |
| approximately fifty meters across with two entrances on each
| |
| side, with an exception on the western side that was built on
| |
| the rock. Inside there were eight rows of seats, and forty
| |
| columns supported the roof. In the center of the roof there
| |
| was a hole from where the light would enter the temple.
| |
|
| |
| In the center of the Telesterion was a rectangular room called
| |
| the anaktoron, where all the sacred objects of the cult were
| |
| kept, and where only the Hierophant could enter.
| |
|
| |
| Today the architectural remains visible on the site are those
| |
| of the Classical building.
| |
| |-|Fortification=
| |
| Following the Greco-Persian Wars, Themistokles
| |
| recommended that Athens fortify both the city and the port of
| |
| Piraeus.
| |
|
| |
| The fortifications started under Themistokles and were
| |
| further strengthened by Perikles and Kimon. Their efforts
| |
| contributed to the creation of the so-called "Long Walls” that
| |
| ensured Athens always had access to its port, even in times of
| |
| war.
| |
| |-|Shipsheds=
| |
| Shipsheds were used to store ancient vessels called triremes.
| |
| The sheds were essential, as triremes required methodical
| |
| overhauling during the winter months when there was little to
| |
| no naval navigation.
| |
|
| |
| The earliest shipsheds were built in the time of Themistokles,
| |
| and Perikles later built more sheds for the sum of 1000
| |
| talents. The sheds were originally made of wood before
| |
| transitioning to stone in the 4th century BCE.
| |
| |-|Weapon Making=
| |
| In addition to being a trading center, Piraeus also functioned
| |
| as an industrial center that contained several factories -
| |
| many of which manufactured weapons during the
| |
| Peloponnesian War.
| |
|
| |
| The former slave Pasion owned a shield factory, as did the
| |
| brothers Lysias and Polemarchos. The orator Demosthenes,
| |
| meanwhile, owned a factory that produced swords. These
| |
| factories all employed a large number of slaves, and were
| |
| extremely lucrative for their owners.
| |
| |-|Kyrenia=
| |
| Maritime trade was a risky business, and not every ship
| |
| reached its destination.
| |
|
| |
| For example, a merchant ship was wrecked near Kyrenia in
| |
| the 4th century BCE, and underwater excavations of its
| |
| remains have revealed much information about ancient Greek
| |
| shipbuilding.
| |
|
| |
| The wreck's wooden hull was made of pine, and suggests the
| |
| ship was made using the “shell-first” technique, wherein the
| |
| shell of the boat was constructed before the rest of its parts.
| |
| The ship's cargo included jars filled with almonds, and over
| |
| 400 wine amphoras. It also carried 29 milltstones that were
| |
| used as ballast to stabilize the vessel, and 300 lead net
| |
| weights that were likely used for fishing.
| |
| |-|Lighthouses=
| |
| Originally, ports used fire to help guide ship navigators to
| |
| land. The innovation of placing fire on top of a platform led to
| |
| the development of the Lighthouse.
| |
|
| |
| Ancient lighthouses started appearing in the archaic period,
| |
| around the 6th-5th centuries BCE. The island of Thasos had
| |
| three marble lighthouses that took the shape of small circular
| |
| towers placed on promontories.
| |
|
| |
| One of the most famous lighthouses was the Pharos of
| |
| Alexandria, which stood at a height of over 100 meters.
| |
|
| |
| |-|Merchant Ships=
| |
| Maritime trade was essential for Greek cities, and certain
| |
| products could only be acquired from overseas.
| |
|
| |
| Large-scale trade occurred in the emporion. Greeks
| |
| conducted business amongst themselves, but also with other
| |
| places like Egypt.
| |
|
| |
| Traded goods included grapes, olives, wine amphoras, grain,
| |
| wood, metal ore, textiles, and slaves.
| |
| |-|Athenian Banner=
| |
| The Athenian banner is inspired by the coinage of Athens in
| |
| the 5th century BCE. These coins show the main goddess of
| |
| the city, Athena, on one side, and an owl on the reverse.
| |
| Athena had several known attributes, but was mainly
| |
| associated with warfare, handicraft, and wisdom. She was the
| |
| patron of Athens - to which she gave her name.
| |
|
| |
| The owl of Athena symbolized the goddess's wisdom and
| |
| protection, and was often depicted beside her in iconography.
| |
| These Athenian coins were so emblematic that they were
| |
| called the glaukes (owls) in antiquity.
| |
| |-|The Long Walls=
| |
| The Themistoklean Walls were built out of slabs of stone
| |
| connected by iron bolts and fixed with molded lead.
| |
| Thucydides noted that it was easy to see that they were built in
| |
| a hurry in the face of Spartan opposition.
| |
|
| |
| The Long Walls were meant to protect Athens in a different
| |
| manner than a regular wall of the time. Since they connected
| |
| the city with its two main harbors, they isolated Athens from
| |
| the mainland and, as long as she had a navy - the most
| |
| powerful one in the entire Greek world - it was technically
| |
| impossible to starve Athens into submission.
| |
|
| |
| The very existence of these walls made possible the whole
| |
| strategy of Perikles during the Peloponnesian War, which was
| |
| to endure the Spartan invasions in the territory and to launch
| |
| counter-attacks by landing troops wherever Sparta and her
| |
| allies were vulnerable, gradually weakening them.
| |
|
| |
| The walls were about six kilometers long, and they were
| |
| enforced with towers and ditches.
| |
| |-|Plague=
| |
| During the Peloponnesian War, Perikles's strategy was to
| |
| avoid land combat with the Spartans in favor of taking
| |
| advantage of Athens's naval supremacy. He also
| |
| recommended that the population of Attika leave their houses
| |
| and take refuge within Athens's walls.
| |
|
| |
| The latter action ended up vastly increasing the city's
| |
| population. Many of the refugees ended up camping in
| |
| Piraeus, which became crowded as a result.
| |
|
| |
| Within the same year, a plague began spreading through
| |
| Piraeus. Due to the dense population, the epidemic quickly
| |
| spread to Athens, killing approximately twenty-five percent of
| |
| the population - including Perikles himself.
| |
| |-|Workshops in Piraeus=
| |
| In the 5th century BCE, the great statesman Perikles invited
| |
| Kephalos of Syracuse - father of the orator Lysias - to Athens,
| |
| where he wished him to open a weapons workshop. Kephalos
| |
| accepted, and settled in the Piraeus, the city's harbor. His
| |
| workshop revolved around the production of shields, and was
| |
| particularly extensive; it's is said that as many as 120 slaves
| |
| “worked” there.
| |
|
| |
| In comparison, the father of Demosthenes, another Athenian
| |
| orator, owned a sword-making workshop that employed thirty
| |
| or so slaves, but brought in 3,000 drachmae a year - with the
| |
| wages of a skilled worker being one drachma a day.
| |
|
| |
| Yet another illustrious Athenian, Sophokles, was born to a
| |
| wealthy manufacturer of armor. Unfortunately, we have little
| |
| information on these large or small workshops, which where
| |
| probably numerous in ancient Greece.
| |
| |-|Tools=
| |
| Miners used a variety of tools in their work.
| |
|
| |
| To cut galleries, they mostly used an iron chisel with a
| |
| hammer, along with levels and wedges. Ore and sterile rocks
| |
| were later removed from these galleries with either leather
| |
| sacks or baskets of woven grass.
| |
|
| |
| Oil lamps and torches, meanwhile, provided lighting for the
| |
| miners. The lights were designed to last for an entire work
| |
| shift.
| |
|
| |
| Finally, mine maps were drawn on plates and stones to depict
| |
| topography.
| |
| |-|The Mine Today=
| |
| The remnants of the Laurion mines remain impressive today.
| |
| Around 2,000 shafts and 140km of galleries have been
| |
| discovered, and some ancient cisterns and washeries are still
| |
| visible.
| |
| |-|Striking Coins=
| |
| Much of the silver mined in Laurion was later transformed
| |
| into coins for Athens.
| |
|
| |
| Coin production was a two-step process. The first step was
| |
| producing small disks of metal called "flans”, and the second
| |
| was striking the flans into coins.
| |
|
| |
| Every coin produced had a specific weight that corresponded
| |
| to its value. To achieve this precision, ancient Greeks used
| |
| small pellets of silver to calculate the exact weight, then put
| |
| the pellets into a mold. While smelting, the pellets melded
| |
| together to form flans of a specific weight.
| |
|
| |
| The striking process involved hammering images onto the
| |
| flans to turn them into coins. It is estimated that up to a few
| |
| thousand coins could be produced in a single day.
| |
| |-|Other Minerals=
| |
| Copper and tin were very important to the ancient Greeks, as
| |
| they were used to make the bronze from which objects like
| |
| statues, tripods, and weapons were formed.
| |
|
| |
| Lead was an important mineral as well, and was used in the
| |
| construction of water pipes and other features of architecture,
| |
| such as tenons and column drums. It was also used as a stain
| |
| in ornamental painting.
| |
|
| |
| Iron, meanwhile, was the most widely available metal in
| |
| ancient Greece, and served to make arms and tools.
| |
|
| |
| Mercury - or liquid silver - was used as an ointment
| |
| ingredient, as well as a pigment of the color red.
| |
| |-|Weather=
| |
| (Behind the scenes)
| |
|
| |
| Greece is known for blistering hot sun, crystal clear seas, and
| |
| sandy beaches, but there is much more to the weather in
| |
| Odyssey than that. The weather system is huge and systemic,
| |
| the density of the clouds change to allow for storms and rain
| |
| to rollin off the sea. As art director Thierry Dansereau jokes,
| |
| “Since Syndicate, the team knows a lot about the rain!"
| |
|
| |
| The weather also changes between biomes, complementing
| |
| the different topographies and creating a dynamic,
| |
| unpredictable environment. In these images, adverse weather
| |
| highlights very different atmospheres for the player to
| |
| navigate, giving the game a more immersive and realistic feel.
| |
|
| |
| “To Enter the city of Athens, you had to walk through a
| |
| cemetery and pass near numerous corpses of criminals
| |
| sentenced to death...Nothing there to make you smile.
| |
| Imagine when it was raining...” - Caroline Soucy.
| |
| |-|Funeral Rites=
| |
| Honoring the dead was a duty expected by the gods.
| |
| Desecrating their bodies, allowing the bodies to be
| |
| desecrated, or forgetting them in the open air was a heinous
| |
| crime. It was expected to give the dead a proper funeral -
| |
| especially for fallen soldiers.
| |
|
| |
| Bodies were commontly buried or consumed in the flames of a
| |
| funeral pyre. The pyre was especially common for dead
| |
| soldiers, as the heat and light of the fire were considered
| |
| appropriate send-offs.
| |
|
| |
| Greek monuments were always painted, including the steles
| |
| erected to commemorate the dead. Some extensive traces of
| |
| red and black pigments can be seen even today.
| |
|
| |
| The steles usually showed the deceased person in different
| |
| positions - one of the most common images being a hand-
| |
| shake with a family member.
| |
| |-|Motifs and Scenes=
| |
| Whether it was monsters battling gods, famous (or infamous)
| |
| lovers, or heartbreaking tragedies, artists used their clay as a
| |
| canvas to depict whatever they desired.
| |
|
| |
| Vases made in the Kerameikos told many stories, ranging
| |
| from scenes from everyday life, such as two young Athenians
| |
| flirting with each other, to phenomenal cosmic battles, like
| |
| Perseus slaying Medusa. By the 5th century BCE, painters and
| |
| potters drew on a wide variety of inspirations for their work.
| |
| |-|Production and Price=
| |
| Although some Athenian vases are lauded today as
| |
| masterpieces, their exact value in ancient Greece is often a
| |
| matter of debate. Workers in the Kerameikos were craftsmen,
| |
| and operated largely outside the elite social spheres they
| |
| often depicted on their pottery. This fact, combined with
| |
| surprisingly low price indications on even the largest and
| |
| most elaborate Athenian vases, suggest that vases were not
| |
| exorbitantly expensive. However, certain dedications made by
| |
| craftsmen like Euphronios hint that some workshops were
| |
| very successful.
| |
| |-|Vases Throughout History=
| |
| Most vases made in Athens ended up far away from the
| |
| Kerameikos, traveiling as far France, the Near East, and
| |
| Egypt. Boatloads of Athenian pottery were also shipped across
| |
| the Mediterranean Sea to be sold in Italy, where they made
| |
| their way into homes, religious sanctuaries, and graves.
| |
|
| |
| One of the richest export markets for pottery was Etruria in
| |
| central Italy. As a result, Etruria is the source of some of the
| |
| best-preserved Athenian vases. Some of these vases have
| |
| even been marked with Etruscan graffiti that allows
| |
| archaeologists to learn more about their functions.
| |
| |-|The Pioneers=
| |
| Sometime at the end of the óth century BCE, the Kerameikos
| |
| hosted a group of artists now known as the Pioneers. The
| |
| Pioneers were colleagues who worked in the at-the-time new
| |
| red-figure style, exploring its artistic potential in
| |
| revolutionary ways. Artists like Euthymides, Euphronios,
| |
| Phintias, and Smikros - identified by signatures on their work
| |
| almost 2500 years later - brought new innovations to
| |
| portrayals of everything from aristocratic parties to
| |
| mythological duels. The members of the Pioneers even
| |
| playfully painted each other into different scenes.
| |
|
| |
| Among the Pioneers, Euphronios is one of the most famous.
| |
| He is recognized for his skillful rendering of the human body,
| |
| as well as the experimental perspectives he employed to
| |
| bring scenes to life.
| |
| |-|Types of Vases=
| |
| Ancient Greek pottery came in all shapes, sizes, and colors,
| |
| and served a multitude of different purposes. Unfortunately,
| |
| there are few clues as to what different kinds of vases were
| |
| called. However, modern scholars have assigned certain
| |
| Greek words to different vases based on their size and
| |
| possible function.
| |
|
| |
| Pottery vessels were ubiquitous in the ancient world, and
| |
| were used for everyday activities Like eating and drinking.
| |
| They were also used in religious functions and athletic
| |
| competitions, and some even served as baby rattles.
| |
|
| |
| The types of vases associated with symposia - the all-male
| |
| drinking parties of the Athenian elite - are some of the most
| |
| well-known examples of Athenian pottery. For example,
| |
| amphoras held wine, while mixing bowls called kraters were
| |
| used to dilute the wine with water. Meanwhile, oinochoe
| |
| functioned as pitchers, and kylixes were used as shallow wine
| |
| cups.
| |
| |-|Klepsydra=
| |
| In the 5th century BCE, all citizens could theoretically attend
| |
| the Athenian assembly, which governed not only civic affairs
| |
| but also the affairs of an entire empire. Needless to say,
| |
| managing the assembly was complex, and one of the main
| |
| challenges was ensuring the meetings were conducted in a
| |
| timely fashion.
| |
|
| |
| It was especially important that every citizen was given the
| |
| same amount of time to speak. For this reason, a water clock
| |
| known as a klepsydra was set up at the Pnyx to ensure every
| |
| orator spoke for the same allotted time.
| |
|
| |
| A klepsydra was made up of two large vases, one above the
| |
| other, and a small tube. The tube poured water into the
| |
| bottom vase over the course of six minutes, then the vases
| |
| were switched and the process repeated itself.
| |
|
| |
| In addition to keeping time at assembly meetings, klepsydrae
| |
| were also important in courts of law, where they ensured both
| |
| the prosecution and the defense had equal time to speak.
| |
| |-|Ostracism=
| |
| One of the Athenian democracy's unique features was the
| |
| practice of ostracism. Originally implemented to prevent the
| |
| rise of another tyrant, ostracism involved the temporary
| |
| exiling of an Athenian by his fellow citizens.
| |
|
| |
| Every year, citizens would vote in the assembly over whether
| |
| or not an ostracism would take place. If they voted yes,
| |
| another vote would later be held in the agora to determine
| |
| which citizen would be ostracized. Each citizen wrote the
| |
| name of a potential candidate on a fragment of pottery called
| |
| an ostraka. If more than 6,000 votes were cast, the person
| |
| who was named most frequently had 10 days to leave the city,
| |
| after which he would remain in exile for 10 years.
| |
|
| |
| From 487 BCE to 415 BCE, a number of prominent Athenians
| |
| were ostracized for a variety of reasons. Relatives of Hippias,
| |
| the last tyrant of Athens, were exiled after they were
| |
| suspected of wanting to overthrow the city's democracy. The
| |
| general Kimon, meanwhile, was ostracized for pursuing an
| |
| unsuccessful policy of friendship with Sparta. But perhaps the
| |
| most famous ostracism was that of Themistokles, a general
| |
| renowned for his exemplary service in the Greco-Persian
| |
| Wars.
| |
| |-|Street Cleaning=
| |
| Despite the luxuriousness of public buildings, the streets of
| |
| Athens were, for the most part, narrow and tortuous.
| |
| Nevertheless, efforts were made to improve urban planning,
| |
| such as in the Sth century BCE, when architect Hippodamos of
| |
| Miletos created a grid plan of the city with parallel streets and
| |
| rectangular intersections.
| |
|
| |
| Greek cities in the 5th century BCE also became more sanitary
| |
| thanks to innovations like clean running water and sewers for
| |
| waste removal.
| |
|
| |
| In Athens, streets and public places were placed in the care of
| |
| special magistrates known as astynomoi, or “police officers”.
| |
| The principal duty of these officials was to keep streets and
| |
| sanctuaries clean, and to organize the efficient disposal of
| |
| garbage outside the city walls.
| |
| |-|Perikles’s Home=
| |
| Perikles was one of the most influential men in Athenian
| |
| politics during the second half of the 5th century BCE.
| |
| Historians even refer to the period he was in power as “The
| |
| Age of Perikles”.
| |
|
| |
| Athens flourished under Perikles's leadership. With his
| |
| guiding hand, the Delian League transformed into the
| |
| Athenian empire, and all the League's members were made to
| |
| regularly pay tribute to the city. Because of this new income,
| |
| Athens was able to erect extravagant monuments on the
| |
| Akropolis, such as the famous Parthenon.
| |
|
| |
| During the Peloponnesian War, Perikles's strategy was to
| |
| conduct a naval war, preferring to keep himself within the
| |
| walls of Athens. However, as a consequence of the city's
| |
| overpopulation, a plague spread through the population and
| |
| killed many people, including Perikles himself.
| |
| |-|Gods of the Household=
| |
| The Greek household was protected by many gods.
| |
|
| |
| Zeus Herkeios - or “Zeus of the Fence” -- was worshipped at a
| |
| courtyard altar, and supposedly protected the house from
| |
| outside aggressors.
| |
|
| |
| Zeus Ktesios - "Zeus of the Property” - was linked to a
| |
| house's family and their wealth. He was represented by a two-
| |
| handled jar wrapped in a white woolen fillet and filled with
| |
| various seeds, water, and olive oil.
| |
|
| |
| Other gods include Hestia, who was the eponymous goddess
| |
| of the domestic hearth, as well as Hermes and Apollo, who
| |
| are both mentioned as being guardians of the front door.
| |
| Representations of Herakles were also known to stand near
| |
| houses, possibly to protect them from crime and the forces of
| |
| evil.
| |
| |-|Master Bedroom=
| |
| Bedrooms in antiquity were generally small and sparsely
| |
| furnished. Greek bedrooms usually contained a Kline (couch],
| |
| tables, klismoi [chairs], stools, incense burners, and chests to
| |
| store clothes and other objects. In general, the amount of
| |
| furniture corresponded to the wealth of the family, with richer
| |
| people able to afford more furniture.
| |
|
| |
| According to ancient architects, the ideal place for bedrooms
| |
| was on the western side of the courtyard to catch the morning
| |
| sun. This explains why most bedroom windows had shutters
| |
| to keep the light out.
| |
| |-|Windows=
| |
| While Greek houses had windows, they usually looked out
| |
| onto the central courtyard, as opposed to the outside streets.
| |
| They were placed either on the first floor, or on a high wall so
| |
| passers-by couldn't peek inside.
| |
|
| |
| The windows were small and without glass. They were often
| |
| made of wood, but could also be simple holes in the wall.
| |
| Some windows also had massive stone lintels and
| |
| embrasures.
| |
|
| |
| The windows were probably closed by means of wooden
| |
| shutters, large grilles of wood or metal, or stone slabs.
| |
| |-|Deus Ex Machina=
| |
| The geranos (cranel, or mechane [machine], was located on
| |
| the right end of the stage, and could suspend and carry actors
| |
| through the air. This was especially useful for portraying
| |
| characters like gods or heroes.
| |
|
| |
| On top of the skene, there was also a roof called the
| |
| theologeion ("where the gods speak”) that was reserved for
| |
| the appearance of divine beings.
| |
|
| |
| Greek dramatists would often employ gods to resolve difficult
| |
| and complicated conflicts. The god would first be lifted
| |
| through the air by the geranos, then land on the theologeion
| |
| before resolving the drama with a neat solution.
| |
|
| |
| This process inspired the expression “deus ex machina” - or
| |
| “theos apo mechanes” in Greek. The expressing refers to the
| |
| sudden resolution of a seemingly unresolvable situation.
| |
| |-|Altar of Dionysos=
| |
| An altar consecrated to Dionysos is believed to have stood in
| |
| the center of the theater's orchestra. This central altar would
| |
| have been the focal point of the choral dance. However, some
| |
| archaeologists have suggested the altar was actually on the
| |
| side of the orchestra, and there has also been debate about
| |
| whether or not it was a permanent fixture in the theater.
| |
|
| |
| The altar was used in religious ceremonies before and after
| |
| performances. Dionysos was worshipped with food offerings
| |
| and the sacrificing of animals like cattle, sheep, pigs, and
| |
| goats. He was also offered wine libations, befitting his title as
| |
| the god of wine.
| |
|
| |
| In addition to its sacred uses, the altar could also function as a
| |
| stage property in various plays, like Agamemnon's tomb in
| |
| “Choephoroi”, and the omphalos of Delphi in “The
| |
| Eumenides”.
| |
| |-|Skene Structure=
| |
| The skene was a backstage area where costumes and
| |
| accessories were stored. It was also where actors went for
| |
| costume and mask changes.
| |
|
| |
| The word “skene” means “tent” or “hut”, suggesting that
| |
| older versions of the structure were made of perishable
| |
| material and were only meant to be temporary. Over time,
| |
| however, the skene underwent many changes.
| |
|
| |
| The first permanent stage-house was built in Athens in 330
| |
| BCE. It had projecting structures called paraskenia at each
| |
| end, and a forestage called a proskenion was added sometime
| |
| later.
| |
|
| |
| Together with the proskenion came elevated Logeion, and an
| |
| upper façade known as the episkenion which had large
| |
| openings called thyromata.
| |
|
| |
| Together, all these structures provided actors with several
| |
| different ways of entering and exiting the stage.
| |
| |-|Temple of Dionysos=
| |
| During the Classical period, Dionysos was the most important
| |
| Athenian deity after Athena herself. He was worshipped both
| |
| inside and outside the city, and the festival dedicated to him -
| |
| the Great Dionysia - integrated not only citizens, but also
| |
| metics and foreigners from the colonies.
| |
|
| |
| Dionysos was portrayed as a double-faced god: both human
| |
| and animal, male and effeminate, young and old. He dealt
| |
| with murders, madness, and violence, but was also the nicest
| |
| of the gods when it came to mortals.
| |
|
| |
| “The Bacchae”, a tragedy by Euripides, emphasizes Dionysos's
| |
| duality. In the play, the god's worshippers are sweet and
| |
| joyful, but a king named Pentheos is also murdered in his
| |
| name.
| |
| |-|Music=
| |
| (Behind the scenes)
| |
|
| |
| “Music was everywhere in Ancient Greece and we wanted to
| |
| reflect this in the game. Musicians played in the sanctuaries,
| |
| the Olympics, the villages and the cities.
| |
|
| |
| Music had many uses, including singing and playing during
| |
| ceremonies, creating rhythm during combat training and for
| |
| entertainment.
| |
|
| |
| Working closely with our musicians in the UK, Canada and
| |
| Greece, we created original songs that reflected important
| |
| moments in the story, instrumental music to provide
| |
| entertainment throughout the world, and ancient Greek
| |
| sailors songs for the boat” - Lydia Andrew
| |
| |-|Sanctuary of Pandion=
| |
| The easternmost building on the Akropolis was the open-air
| |
| walled sanctuary of Pandion, built ca. 450 BCE.
| |
|
| |
| Pandion was a mythical Athenian hero invented in order to
| |
| explain the beginnings of old rituals dedicated to certain gods
| |
| - in this case, Zeus. He was probably credited with being the
| |
| first to perform the rites of Pandia, a festival believed to have
| |
| been dedicated to Zeus. The sanctuary housed his statue and
| |
| served as a heroon, or a hero's shrine.
| |
|
| |
| Modern scholars believe this sanctuary's Pandion to be one of
| |
| the two Legendary Athenian kings: either Pandion |, son of
| |
| Erichthonius, or Pandion Il, father of Aigeus.
| |
|
| |
| When Kleisthenes established Athens's democracy in 507 BCE
| |
| and divided the population in 10 newly created tribes, Pandion
| |
| was selected to give his name to the Pandionis tribe, thus
| |
| becoming one of the eponymous protectors of the Athenian
| |
| population. Another statue of him was raised in the Agora -
| |
| Athens's marketplace and public square - as part of the
| |
| sculptural ensemble of the 10 eponymous heroes.
| |
| |-|Altar of Athena=
| |
| The most important element of ancient Greek cults was the
| |
| sacrifice to gods. Consequently, the most important
| |
| structures were the altars where the sacrifices were
| |
| slaughtered and burnt. Therefore, the Great Altar of Athena
| |
| Polias, the patron deity of Athens, was the holiest and most
| |
| significant monument on the Akropolis.
| |
|
| |
| The exact location of the altar is unknown, but it seems that it
| |
| was erected to the east of the Erechtheion, in the northern,
| |
| most sacred part of the Akropolis. While other buildings were
| |
| frequently dismantled and erected anew, the altar's position
| |
| did not change for hundreds of years.
| |
|
| |
| In Perikles's time, the altar built ca. 525 BCE by the sons of
| |
| the great tyrant Peisistratos was probably remodeled as an
| |
| impressive stepped structure, so that it could easily host
| |
| sacrifices as large as the Panathenaia festival's hecatomb,
| |
| which involved the slaughtering of 100 cattle, as implied by its
| |
| name (hekaton = “one hundred”; bous = “ox").
| |
| |-|The Erechtheion Karyatids=
| |
| A karyatid is an ancient architectural pillar or column in the
| |
| shape of a young maiden.
| |
|
| |
| Many ancient buildings had karyatids, but the most famous of
| |
| them is the Erechtheion. Its south porch was embellished with
| |
| six karyatids, which were known in ancient Athens as korai, or
| |
| “young maidens”.
| |
|
| |
| According to the Roman architect Vitruvius, the maiden-
| |
| shaped columns were inspired by the women of the Lakonian
| |
| town of Karyze, near Sparta. Karya's inhabitants betrayed the
| |
| Greeks by plotting with the Persians, and as a consequence
| |
| for this crime, the male population of the city was
| |
| slaughtered, while the women were enslaved; hence their
| |
| depiction as burden-baring piltars. Other, more positive myths
| |
| suggest that the karyatids were inspired by the tall and
| |
| beautiful maidens of Karyze, who would dance for the goddess
| |
| Artemis.
| |
|
| |
| The karyatids' usage in the Erechtheion, where they stand
| |
| above Kekrops's tomb, might be related to the king's funerary
| |
| cult, as they originally held phialai - vessels for pouring
| |
| libations to the dead.
| |
| |-|The Invasion of Attika=
| |
| In the aftermath of the Battle of Thermopylai, the Athenian
| |
| authorities announced it was up to the city's own population to
| |
| protect their families from the oncoming Persian threat.
| |
| Athens's people scattered to Salamis, Aegina, and Argolis,
| |
| and it's said that even the sacred snakes that protected the
| |
| Akropolis fled the city.
| |
|
| |
| By the time the Persian army arrived in Athens, the only
| |
| people left on the Akropolis were the sacred treasurers and
| |
| the people who had stayed behind to barricade the citadel.
| |
| The Persians killed the remaining Greeks and set fire to all of
| |
| the Akropolis, including the Olive Tree of Athena. Allegedly,
| |
| the sacred tree miraculousty grew back the following day - a
| |
| hopeful image that ties in nicely with the Greeks' victory at the
| |
| Battle of Salamis in 480 BCE.
| |
| |-|Trials=
| |
| Trials were presided over by official magistrates, and the jury
| |
| was composed of citizens, or heliasts. Any citizen could make
| |
| an accusation, and if the defendant was convicted, the
| |
| accuser received a portion of the sentenced fine. This practice
| |
| led to the eventual appearance of professional accusers
| |
| known as Sycophants.
| |
|
| |
| The accuser and defendant were given equal time to speak,
| |
| and their allotted time was measured by a water clock called
| |
| a “klepsydra”. Their speeches were often prepared by
| |
| professionals known as logographs.
| |
|
| |
| After the speeches, jurors secretly cast their votes by putting
| |
| a token in one of two urns. Interestingly, if the accusation was
| |
| unfounded, the accuser could be convicted instead.
| |
| |-|Olive Tree of Athena=
| |
| Today, an olive tree grows on the western side of the
| |
| Erechtheion. Although it was planted in 1952 by members of
| |
| the American School of Archaeology, it is conveniently
| |
| believed to be descended from a sacred olive tree planted
| |
| during the foundation of Athens.
| |
|
| |
| Myth says that when Athena and Poseidon competed to
| |
| become the patron deity of the new city, they were required to
| |
| bring gifts to its citizens. Athena struck the Akropolis with her
| |
| spear, and the sacred olive tree sprouted from the ground.
| |
| For these reasons, ancient Greeks thought that Athenian olive
| |
| trees were the holiest in all of Hellas.
| |
|
| |
| Herodotos and Pausanias both report that the Persians
| |
| burned the tree in 480 BCE, only for it to grow again from its
| |
| ashes on the very same day. This miraculous revival is the
| |
| archetype for all the other subsequent resurrections of the
| |
| tree.
| |
| |-|Chalkotheke=
| |
| The Chalkotheke, meaning “bronze storehouse”, was built in
| |
| the available space between the Parthenon, the temple of
| |
| Artemis Brauronia, and the Akropolis's southern wall.
| |
|
| |
| The building was used as a storehouse for the bronze and iro
| |
| items of Athens's treasury, either around 450 BCE, during the
| |
| reform of the first Delian League, or in the 370s BCE, when
| |
| Athenian imperial ambitions were once again on the rise after
| |
| recovering from their defeat in the Peloponnesian War.
| |
|
| |
| Most information on the Chalkotheke was preserved on four
| |
| 4th century BCE inscriptions, which were displayed nearby
| |
| and contained detailed inventories of the building's items,
| |
| including metal vases, statues, and above all, weapons and
| |
| armor. The Chalkotheke therefore also functioned as a
| |
| military arsenal, as further evidenced by the stockpile of
| |
| artillery and naval equipment the Athenians stored in the
| |
| building in 320 BCE.
| |
| |-|Priest House=
| |
| In ancient Greece, priests and priestesses were either
| |
| designated or elected from among citizens and clerical
| |
| families.
| |
|
| |
| They performed sacred rituals on special occasions like
| |
| festivals, or when otherwise required.
| |
|
| |
| Priest houses are often linked with the priesthood, but priests
| |
| did not actually live in them, preferring to stay at their own
| |
| homes in the city's residential quarter.
| |
|
| |
| Instead, the main purpose of priest houses was to provide
| |
| priests with a space to carry out their rituals during specific
| |
| days on the religious calendar.
| |
|
| |
| Priest houses were considered too sacred for the mundane
| |
| activities of daily life, and priests had to perform purification
| |
| rituals - such as a period of chastity - before they were
| |
| allowed to enter.
| |
| |-|Stoa of Zeus=
| |
| The Stoa of Zeus Eleutherios stood out because of its
| |
| architecture. It followed the form of most civic buildings, but
| |
| with the addition of two projecting wings on either side. On top
| |
| of each of these wings were akroterion of Nike, the goddess of
| |
| victory.
| |
|
| |
| The cult of Zeus Eleutherios, the "Zeus of Freedom”, was
| |
| established after the Battle of Plataia in 479 BCE - the Greek :
| |
| victory that ended the second Persian invasion. The Stoa was
| |
| built in the latter half of the 5th century BCE.
| |
|
| |
| According to Pausanias, the shields of those who died fighting
| |
| for the liberty of Athens were prominently displayed on the
| |
| monument.
| |
| |-|Altar of the Twelve Gods=
| |
| This altar dedicated to the twelve gods seems to have served
| |
| as both a place of refuge and a topographical point of
| |
| reference. Herodotos used the altar to give sample distances,
| |
| and it functioned as a milestone for all distances in Attika.
| |
|
| |
| The altar was dedicated by the archon Peisistratos in 522 BCE.
| |
| The exact identity of the twelve gods is still debated, but itis
| |
| commonly accepted that they were the same twelve Olympian
| |
| gods that were represented on the east frieze of the
| |
| Parthenon.
| |
| |-|Apollo=
| |
| Apollo was a complex deity with several different attributions.
| |
| He was the god of art, music and poetry, Light and knowledge,
| |
| prophecies, and medical healing.
| |
|
| |
| He was the son of Zeus and Leto, and the brother of Artemis.
| |
| Since Hera was very jealous of Zeus's extramarital lovers,
| |
| Leto was forced to seek refuge in Delos to bear her child.
| |
| Apolto was depicted as a young, beardless, and beautiful man.
| |
| His main symbols were the lyre, the bow, the tripod, and the
| |
| laurel branch.
| |
|
| |
| Apollo had several sanctuaries in Greece, but the most
| |
| famous was the sanctuary in Delphi, where his Oracle resided.
| |
| |-|Boule=
| |
| Bills passed by the prytaneis had to be submitted to the citizen
| |
| assembly, the ekklesia.
| |
|
| |
| The boule and the ekklesia worked together in coordinating
| |
| and calling the assembly. When laws were voted on, they sent
| |
| the relevant decrees to the city's magistrates and inhabitants.
| |
| They were the link between decisions made in the assembly
| |
| and their implementation.
| |
|
| |
| The boule also supervised other matters like city finances,
| |
| magistrate coordination, sacred affairs, etc.
| |
| |-|Eponymous Heroes=
| |
| The Monument of the Eponymous Heroes was built in honor of
| |
| the heroes from whom the ten founding tribes of Athens took
| |
| their names. The bronze statues were erected on a marble
| |
| base that also served as an official notice board for the
| |
| Athenian people.
| |
|
| |
| Athens was divided into ten tribes when Kleisthenes
| |
| reorganized the political system in 508 BCE. The tribes' ten
| |
| heroes were chosen from amongst the mythical figures of
| |
| Athens by the Oracle at Delphi. The chosen figures were
| |
| Erechtheus, Aigeus, Pandion, Leos, Akamas, Oeneus,
| |
| Kekrops II, Hippothoon, Ajax, and Antiochos.
| |
|
| |
| Athens's tribal structure meant that citizens voted by tribes,
| |
| and the council of the Boule featured a rotation of tribal
| |
| delegations.
| |
| |-|Garden of Hephaistos=
| |
| In the precinct of the Hephaisteion, excavators have
| |
| discovered archaeological traces of the "Garden of
| |
| Hephaistos”. According to their findings, trees and shrubs
| |
| used to be planted in rows running parallel to the main
| |
| structure.
| |
| |-|South Stoa=
| |
| The South Stoa was, unsurprisingly, Located on the south side
| |
| of the agora. Built during the first decade of the
| |
| Peloponnesian War, the building was about 80 meters long,
| |
| and large enough to contain sixteen rooms.
| |
|
| |
| Based on evidence of dining couches lining the walls, itis
| |
| thought that some of these rooms were dining halls where
| |
| magistrates were fed at public expense.
| |
|
| |
| The purpose of another room was inferred by the discovery of
| |
| an inscription that suggested it was used by the metronomoi,
| |
| the magistrates in charge of weights and measures.
| |
|
| |
| It's possible the other rooms had similar commercial
| |
| functions, as excavations in the building have turned up
| |
| numerous coins.
| |
| |-|Fountain House=
| |
| Water was supplied to the agora through fountain houses.
| |
| Aqueducts delivered the water to a reservoir, and the overflow
| |
| was evacuated through a drain. Fountain houses are amongst
| |
| the earliest public buildings in the agora.
| |
| |-|Coins=
| |
| Athenian coinage was the most abundant Greek coinage in the
| |
| 5th century BCE. The coins came in many denominations,
| |
| from tiny coins weighing approximately 0.15g to larger
| |
| tetradrachms weighing 17.20g.
| |
| At one point, Athens even struck an issue of dekadrachms
| |
| weighing 43.209. These large coins dated back to the 460s
| |
| BCE, and have been linked to either the Athenian victory over
| |
| the Persians at the Eurymedon River - which resulted in an
| |
| enormous amount of seized booty - or the capture of Thasos
| |
| and its rich mines.
| |
|
| |
| Athens also occasionally struck gold coins, and from the end
| |
| of the 5th century BCE, they minted bronze coinage as well.
| |
| |-|Siege Tactics=
| |
| Persian siege tactics were a bit more advanced than those of
| |
| the Greeks, for they knew how to build ramps to get their
| |
| troops past the city walls, and they also knew how to
| |
| undermine them - this explains their successes in taking the
| |
| lonian cities in Asia Minor that revolted before the outbreak of
| |
| the Greco-Persian Wars.
| |
|
| |
| It would take another 200 years for the Greeks to Learn how to
| |
| properly build siege machines that were capable of breaching
| |
| walls.
| |
|
| |
| Usual siege tactics involved two main approaches. The first
| |
| was starving a city into submission, but that was time
| |
| consuming and exposed the besieging army to the same
| |
| hardship as the besieged, and it was almost impossible if the
| |
| city in question was supplied by sea - this being the case of
| |
| Athens during these times. The second method involved
| |
| having spies or collaborators within the city walls that would
| |
| open the gates for the besiegers.
| |
|
| |
| Therefore, the most common option for the attacker was to
| |
| devastate the fields of the defender to provoke the latter to
| |
| accept an open battle. This explains, in a way, the
| |
| development of the hoplite phalanx rather than hit and run
| |
| tactics using skirmishers. The phalanx was formed of a line
| |
| consisting of the very same citizens that were interested in
| |
| defending their belongings and their crops, while hit and run
| |
| tactics risked the destruction of those same crops.
| |
| |-|Kore Phrasikleia=
| |
| Kore Phrasikleia is one of the most important works of
| |
| archaic sculpture. It depicts a young woman [kore], and was
| |
| found in Attika during excavations next to a young male
| |
| statue.
| |
|
| |
| The statue is dated to 550-530 BCE and depicts a Kore wearing
| |
| sandals, a full length sleeved chiton, and a tall kalathos
| |
| decorated with flowers. In her hand, she holds a lotus bud.
| |
| She is also wearing earrings, a necklace, and two bracelets.
| |
| The height of the statue is 1.79 meters, and the preservation
| |
| of its polychromy is astonishing. Recent research confirms
| |
| the use of eleven different colorants, as well as gold and lead
| |
| foil.
| |
|
| |
| We know the name of the deceased Phrasikleia because it is
| |
| inscribed on the base of the statue. Her young age is also
| |
| implied, as she is called maiden in the inscription, meaning
| |
| she died before she got married. On the left side of the base is
| |
| the name of the sculptor, Aristion of Paros. The base was not
| |
| buried with the Kore, but was used as a building material in a
| |
| nearby church, where it was recovered.
| |
|
| |
| Aristion fabricated and signed other statues as well, which
| |
| allow us to date the creation of the statue of Phrasikleia to
| |
| between 550 and 530 BCE. It's not impossible that the artist
| |
| was associated with the sphere of power of the tyrants of
| |
| Athens, and that the statue might have belonged to the
| |
| Peisistratid family.
| |
| |-|Mysteries of Eleusis=
| |
| Eleusis is a city in West Attika, at the northern end of the
| |
| Saronic Gulf and at a distance of 20 kilometers from the
| |
| center of Athens.
| |
|
| |
| The city of Eleusis was practically unknown until the 1930's,
| |
| when excavations determined the shape of the Classical city.
| |
| High on the summit, the akropolis of Eleusis was fortified
| |
| since the Mycenaean period, and the Sanctuary of Demeter
| |
| was situated lower down the hill and outside the fortification.
| |
| According to the Homeric Hymn to Demeter, Demeter herself
| |
| introduced the mysteries at Eleusis during the quest for her
| |
| daughter, Persephone. At some point, Demeter stopped at the
| |
| palace of King Keleos, and as a gift for his hospitality, she
| |
| taught Triptolemos the art of agriculture. From him, the rest
| |
| of Greece was educated in agriculture, anditis inin
| |
| Demeter's honor that the people of Eleusis built a sanctuary.
| |
| Demeter also taught the people the rites to the "Mysteries”, a
| |
| secret cult restricted to initiates.
| |
|
| |
| The hymn to Demeter provides the association between myth
| |
| and ritual, and builds the necessary connection for the
| |
| establishment of the Eleusis cult.
| |
|
| |
| Demeter and Persephone were worshiped together at Eleusis
| |
| and were referred to as “goddesses”. They were distinguished
| |
| from each other as “the older” (Demeter) or “the younger”
| |
| (Persephone).
| |
| |-|The Battle of Salamis=
| |
| The Battle of Salamis took place in 480 BCE, and ended in a
| |
| stunning victory for the Greeks. The battle marked the
| |
| beginning of the end of the second Persian invasion of Greece.
| |
| After the Greek loss at the Battle of Thermopylai, central
| |
| Greece was open to invasion by King Xerxes and his Persian
| |
| forces. Xerxes was closer than ever to the vengeance he
| |
| sought for the humiliations his father Darius suffered during
| |
| the first Persian invasion of Greece.
| |
|
| |
| However, the city of Athens was much stronger than it had
| |
| been during Darius's time. Rich with resources from the
| |
| Laurion silver mines, the city used its considerable funds to
| |
| finance its military effort, with the general Themistokles
| |
| ordering the construction of 200 triremes.
| |
|
| |
| The Athenians' strength was bolstered by their cooperation
| |
| with other Greek cities. At Salamis, the Greeks faced their
| |
| enemy together.
| |
|
| |
| The battle itself occurred at sea, in a small closed bay west of
| |
| Athens. It was hard-fought on both sides, but in the end, the
| |
| Persians suffered far more casualties than the Greeks.
| |
| |-|The Deposition=
| |
| The last step in the funeral process was placing the deceased
| |
| into their tomb - an act known as “the deposition”. Although
| |
| this was a holy ceremony, the presence of a priest was not
| |
| required.
| |
|
| |
| Women handled almost all preparations. Small offerings were
| |
| made to the dead - like when Achilles offered his hair to his
| |
| dead friend Patroklos.
| |
|
| |
| A banquet called a perideipnon was held for mourners, and
| |
| was typically prepared by the grieving women. This is why
| |
| women were almost always the first to leave the funeral
| |
| proceedings while others lingered.
| |
| |-|Perfume for the Dead=
| |
| Even in their earliest days, Greeks used perfume in funeral
| |
| rites, as seen in Achilles's anointing of Hector's body in “The
| |
| Iliad”.
| |
|
| |
| Perfume helped prepare and preserve the body for its
| |
| “journey to the beyond”. Flasks of perfume also accompanied
| |
| the deceased to their grave as a mark of social status and a
| |
| balm for “the eternal banquets”. If the deceased was too poor
| |
| to afford these bottles, they were painted on their coffins as a
| |
| sort of empty consolation.
| |
|
| |
| Even when a body was burned on a pyre, mourners threw
| |
| incense in the fire, and afterwards mixed the ashes and bones
| |
| with precious ointments before enclosing them in funeral
| |
| urns.
| |
| |-|100 Elected Magistrates=
| |
| While Athens did not have a bureaucracy in place to
| |
| permanently run the city and the rest of its empire, it did elect
| |
| more than 1,000 officials every year to manage its affairs.
| |
| Most of these officials had very minor responsibilities, and
| |
| therefore only worked part-time.
| |
|
| |
| The vast majority of officiais were chosen by lot, but the most
| |
| important ones were elected by popular vote in the Athenian
| |
| assembly. In both cases, citizens who wished to hold one of
| |
| the positions had to first nominate themselves.
| |
|
| |
| Citizens had to be thirty years old to qualify for an official
| |
| position, and even then, they could still be dismissed. Despite
| |
| these limitations, however, up to 5% of all Athenian citizens
| |
| were appointed or elected to official positions on a yearly
| |
| basis, or became part of the Council of 500.
| |
|
| |
| Depending on the year, up to 100 officials were elected. The
| |
| most important of these were the ten generais, or strategoi.
| |
| The generals were officially in charge of military matters, but
| |
| over the course of the 5th century BCE, their influence
| |
| expanded to political matters as well. For example, Perikles
| |
| was elected general 15 times between 443 and 429 BCE, and
| |
| used that time to cement his hold on Athenian politics.
| |
| |-|Family Altar=
| |
| Religion was an important aspect of Greek private life. Though
| |
| the walls of the house provided physical protection, the family
| |
| needed divine protection as well, and for this they turned to
| |
| Zeus. Every house had an altar dedicated to Zeus Herkeios [of
| |
| the Fencel] that the family could worship at by offering
| |
| sacrifices and libations in the god's honor.
| |
|
| |
| Sacrifices were also performed in the house on special
| |
| occasions like weddings, births, or for the festival of Zeus
| |
| Ktesios. The Greek dramatist Menander mentions that
| |
| worshippers would circle the altar with sacrificial tools like a
| |
| vessel of holy water. They sprinkled the water around the
| |
| altar to purify it, then began the sacrifice proper. Household
| |
| sacrifices could be animals, but also offerings of incense and
| |
| vegetables.
| |
|
| |
| The ceremony of Amphidromia celebrated the presentation of
| |
| a newborn, and might have taken place in the courtyard. The
| |
| ceremony was held when the baby was five days old, and
| |
| symbolized its acceptance into the family. Friends were
| |
| invited to the occasion, and the house's exterior was
| |
| decorated differently depending on the sex of the child: olive
| |
| branches indicated a boy, while garlands of wool signaled a
| |
| girl.
| |
|
| |
| The most central part of the Amphidromia was the circling the
| |
| house's hearth with the newborn, followed by the presenting
| |
| of the child to both the house's gods and the rest of the family.
| |
| The newborn also received their name during the ceremony.
| |
| |-|The Great Panathenaia=
| |
| The Panathenaia was the most important religious festival in
| |
| ancient Athens. It was held each year at the end of July and
| |
| beginning of August. Every four years, the festival was
| |
| celebrated on an even greater scale - this was known as the
| |
| Great Panathenaia.
| |
|
| |
| According to some scholars, the Great Panathenaia was
| |
| expanded from the Lesser Panathenaia by the tyrant
| |
| Peisistratos in 566 BCE, to serve as Athens's own version of
| |
| the Olympic Games.
| |
|
| |
| The celebrations included a day procession of Athenian
| |
| citizens and resident aliens, athletic games, music and
| |
| rhapsodic contests, a night procession with a torch relay race,
| |
| great sacrifices, and communal feasting.
| |
|
| |
| The festival was so important to ancient Athenians that many
| |
| iconographic, sculptural, and written testimonies of the
| |
| celebrations were preserved. Furthermore, numerous
| |
| Panathenaic amphoras (containers) were discovered all over
| |
| the Greek world. They were great vessels filled with the most
| |
| expensive Athenian olive oil, and were awarded to the winners
| |
| of the Panathenaic games. The amphoras were decorated
| |
| with specific scenes - such as young men running or Athena
| |
| Promachos wearing military equipment - and they could be
| |
| sold by the champions for significant amounts of money.
| |
| |-|Sanctuary of Zeus Polieos=
| |
| Besides Athena Polias and Poseidon-Erechtheus, Athenians
| |
| believed their city was also protected by Zeus Polieos (of the
| |
| city). This was based on Zeus being the judge of Athena and
| |
| Poseidon's mythical competition to become Athens's chief
| |
| deity.
| |
|
| |
| Consequently, a small walled open-air sanctuary was erected
| |
| to Zeus Polieos ca. 500 BCE. There are no traces left of it,
| |
| other than cuttings in the bedrock interpreted by
| |
| archaeologists to be either remnants of a barn for sacrificial
| |
| animals, or chutes designed to lead the animals to slaughter.
| |
|
| |
| The main ritual dedicated to Zeus Polieos was the Bouphonia
| |
| ("the ox murder”), which took place each summer during the
| |
| greater festival of Dipolieia. Two working oxen, whose
| |
| sacrifice was normally prohibited, were led to the sanctuary
| |
| altar, where grain was spread. The first ox to eat the grain
| |
| was considered to consent to being sacrificed, and was slain
| |
| by a member of the Thaulonidai family, who subsequently had
| |
| to throw aside his axe and flee the Akropolis. That man and
| |
| his companions were later tried for “murder”, but always
| |
| acquitted. In the end the sacrificial axe (or knife) was found
| |
| guilty and thrown into the sea.
| |
|
| |
| The ritual, believed to be very archaic, was based on the myth
| |
| of a priest who accidentally killed a ploughing ox and had to
| |
| expiate the sin through annual sacrifices to Zeus. It reminded
| |
| the ancient Athenians that laboring beasts should not be
| |
| sacrificed, and that they should respect the sacred laws of
| |
| raising special sacrificial animals. Modern scholars also think
| |
| the ritual was a means to explain how humanity passed from
| |
| grain and honey offerings to animal sacrifices.
| |
| |-|Priesthood=
| |
| There was no professional qualification needed to become a
| |
| priest or a priestess. A wealthy family, luck, and, less often,
| |
| the will of the Public Assembly were the only criteria that
| |
| mattered. Many priesthoods stayed within the same families
| |
| or clans for generations, as the appointment of priests outside
| |
| the members of the clan was strictly prohibited. For example,
| |
| in Athens, both the priestess of Athena Polias and Poseidon-
| |
| Erechtheus had to come from the Eteoboutadai.
| |
|
| |
| Priests and priestesses were in charge of the sacrifices to the
| |
| gods, and of any other cultic duties preserved by tradition.
| |
| They also assisted political leaders and other citizens who
| |
| wished to correctly perform public and private religious
| |
| activities. Lastly, they presided over the affairs and resources
| |
| of their assigned sanctuary.
| |
|
| |
| They were held in high esteem by their fellow citizens, and
| |
| their political opinions carried a lot of weight in public
| |
| debates. In certain cities, the annual priesthood of the main
| |
| cult was even used as a way of measuring time. Priests and
| |
| priestesses also received significant shares of the sacrifices
| |
| they performed.
| |
|
| |
| Although priests generally enjoyed the same freedoms and
| |
| rights as citizens - like that of living at their own homes - they
| |
| also had to follow restrictive rules. Besides more general
| |
| requirements such as fasting and undergoing a period of
| |
| chastity before certain rituals, there were also strange
| |
| restrictions. For example, in Attika, the priestess of Athena
| |
| Polias was not allowed to eat cheese.
| |
| |-|Contest Between Poseidon and Athena=
| |
| The myth of Poseidon and Athena's competition for Athens's
| |
| patronage was one of the most well-known in Periklean
| |
| Athens, and was even depicted on the West Pediment of the
| |
| Parthenon. It was recounted later by many Greek and Roman
| |
| writers, and in many different forms.
| |
|
| |
| The basic version of the story states that the half-man half-
| |
| serpent Kekrops, the first king of a newly founded city in
| |
| Attika, needed the location to have a patron deity. Poseidon
| |
| was the first to apply, and struck the rock of the Akropolis
| |
| with his trident, turning it into a salty spring that he offered to
| |
| Kekrops's subjects as a gift [in later versions, the spring is
| |
| replaced by a horse, Poseidon's favorite creature). Athena
| |
| struck the rock as well, and an olive tree sprouted from the
| |
| ground. Depending on the version of the myth, either Kekrops
| |
| or a divine jury ruled that Athena's gift was more precious,
| |
| and so she became the patron goddess of the city that was
| |
| thenceforth known as Athens.
| |
|
| |
| The salty spring and the olive tree, which were both visible on
| |
| the Akropolis, were seen as symbols of seafaring and
| |
| agriculture, respectively. The earliest versions of the myth,
| |
| devised by landed elites, favored Athena and depicted
| |
| Poseidon as a vengeful ruffian who flooded part of Attika after
| |
| he had lost. However, after the naval battle of Salamis in 480
| |
| BCE and the creation of Athens's maritime empire, the sea-
| |
| minded Athenian democracy elaborated a new version of the
| |
| myth where the two gods are reconciled. Reconciliation was
| |
| reflected in the building of the Erechtheion, which was
| |
| dedicated both to Athena Polias [of the city) and to Poseidon
| |
| (Erechtheos).
| |
| |-|Theseus=
| |
| Theseus is a hero linked with the mythological origins of
| |
| Athens. He was responsible for the political unification of
| |
| Attika, and as such, was considered a symbol of Athenian
| |
| democracy.
| |
|
| |
| The myth of Theseus goes back to the 7th century BCE, but it
| |
| wasn't until the 5th century BCE that he started to be
| |
| incorporated into Athens's civic ideology as the founder of the
| |
| city.
| |
|
| |
| Theseus was the son of Aegeus, king of Athens, and Aithra,
| |
| daughter of Pittheus. Aithra was also possessed by Poseidon,
| |
| which means Theseus had a divine father in addition to a
| |
| mortal one.
| |
|
| |
| Aithra gave birth to Theseus on the island of Sphairos. After
| |
| growing up, Theseus travelled from Sphairos to Athens,
| |
| accomplishing several labors along the way.
| |
|
| |
| These labors include killing the bandits Periphetes, Kerkyon,
| |
| and Prokruste, and killing the Krommyonian Sow, a wild pig
| |
| that was ravaging the region of Krommyon.
| |
|
| |
| However, Theseus is best known for his capture of the bull of
| |
| Marathon, and his killing of the ferocious Minotaur.
| |
|
| |
|
| </tabber> | | </tabber> |