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Cyrene, Libya

Cyrene, also sometimes anglicized as Kyrene, was an ancient Greek colony and Roman city near present-day Shahhat in northeastern Libya in North Africa. It was part of the Pentapolis, an important group of five cities in the region, and gave the area its classical and early modern name Cyrenaica.

Cyrene
Κυρήνη
Sanctuary of Apollo at Cyrene
Shown within Libya
Alternative nameKyrene
LocationShahhat, Jabal al Akhdar, Cyrenaica, Libya
RegionJebel Akhdar
Coordinates32°49′30″N 21°51′29″E / 32.82500°N 21.85806°E / 32.82500; 21.85806
TypeSettlement
History
BuilderColonists from Thera led by Battus I
Founded631 BC
Abandoned7th century AD
PeriodsArchaic Greece to Umayyad Caliphate
Site notes
Official nameArchaeological Site of Cyrene
TypeCultural
Criteriaii, iii, vi
Designated1982 (6th session)
Reference no.190
RegionArab States

Cyrene lies on a ridge of the Jebel Akhdar uplands. The archaeological remains cover several hectares and include several monumental temples, stoas, theatres, bathhouses, churches, and palatial residences. The city is surrounded by the Necropolis of Cyrene. Since 1982, it has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[1] The city's port was Apollonia (Marsa Sousa), located about 16 kilometres (10 mi) to the north.

The city was attributed to Apollo and the legendary etymon Cyrene by the Greeks themselves but it was probably actually colonized by settlers from Thera (modern Santorini) in the late seventh century BC. It was initially ruled by a dynasty of monarchs called the Battiads, who grew rich and powerful as a result of successive waves of immigration and the export of horses and silphium, a medicinal plant. By the fifth century BC, they had expanded their control over the other cities of Cyrenaica. It became the seat of the Cyrenaics, a school of philosophy in the fourth century BC, founded by Aristippus, a disciple of Socrates. In the Hellenistic Age, the city alternated between being part of Ptolemaic Egypt and the capital of an independent kingdom. It was also an important Jewish hub. In 96 BC, it passed to the Roman Republic and became part of the province of Crete and Cyrenaica. The city was destroyed by Jewish fighters in AD 115 during Kitos War, and slowly rebuilt over the following century. Earthquakes in 262 and 365 devastated the city, but some habitation continued through the early Byzantine period and the Muslim conquest of the Maghreb in 642, after which the site was abandoned until the establishment of an Italian military base on the site in 1913. Excavations have been ongoing since that time.

Name edit

Cyrene is the latinized form of the Greek name Kyrḗnē (Κυρήνη) of uncertain origin. The Greeks themselves attributed the name to the legendary Thessalian princess Cyrene who supposedly founded the city with help from the sun god Apollo.[2] Some modern scholars sometimes attribute the name to its spring Cyra (Κύρα, Kýra), which was considered sacred to Apollo by the city's Greco-Roman inhabitants.[3] The legend of Thessalian Cyrene seems to long predate attestation of the spring, however, and Janko instead suggests that the existing legend and name were adopted by the early Theran settlers for this specific location after some unattested but similar local name in the Libu or Garamantian language.[3] Although both the Greek and Latin forms of the name were pronounced something like /kuˈrn/ koo-RAY-nay,[4] they are more often read in modern English as /kˈrni/ ky-REE-nee or, in its Latin form, /sˈrni/ sy-REE-nee.[citation needed]

History edit

People have lived in Cyrenaica since the Palaeolithic. There is some evidence for settlement in the caves below the Acropolis which may pre-date Greek settlement. It is possible that Minoans and Mycenaeans visited Cyrene in the Bronze Age, since it is on the easiest sea route from the Aegean to Egypt, but the only archaeological evidence for this are separate finds of a small Minoan altar and a Minoan seal, which might have been brought over at a later date.[2][5]

Foundation edit

A Greek myth first recorded by Pindar in the early fifth century BC reports that the god Apollo fell in love with the huntress Cyrene and brought her to Libya, where she gave birth to a son Aristaeus.[2] Greek historical traditions, reported in Herodotus' Histories and in a fourth-century BC inscription found at Cyrene, say that a group of Cretan Greeks, who had been expelled from Sparta and settled on the island of Thera, founded Cyrene in 631 BC, under the leadership of Battus I, at the prompting of the Oracle of Delphi.[6][7] Some traditions say that the settlers left Thera because of a famine, others because of a civil war. Most say that the colonists first settled on an island at Aziris (east of Derna) before relocating to Cyrene.[7] The historicity of these narratives is uncertain, particularly the idea that Thera was Cyrene's sole "mother city." Relationships with other cities, such as Sparta[8] and Samos,[9] mentioned in the foundation narratives, are uncertain.[6]

Archaeological evidence from the site, especially ceramic finds, confirm that Greek settlement began in the mid-seventh century BC. This early pottery derves from Thera, Sparta, and Samos, but also Rhodes.[10] The initial area of habitation was a ridge stretching eastwards from the Acropolis to the Agora, but the city rapidly expanded eastwards.[11] The sanctuary of Apollo to the north of the Acropolis, of Demeter to the south, and of Zeus to the east all go back to the seventh or sixth centuries BC. Archaeological evidence shows that several other sites in Cyrenaica, such as Apollonia, Euesperides, and Taucheira (modern Benghazi and Tocra) were settled at the same time as Cyrene.[10]

Archaic period edit

After its foundation, the city was ruled by a series of monarchs descended from Battus I. Over the course of the sixth century BC, Cyrene grew to become the most powerful city in the region.[12] In the first half of the sixth century BC, Battus II encouraged further Greek settlement in the city, especially from the Peloponnese and Crete. This sparked conflict with the indigenous Libyans, whose king Adicran appealed to Egypt for help around 570 BC. The pharaoh Apries launched a military expedition against Cyrene, but was decisively defeated at the Battle of Irasa.[13][14][7]

 
Arcesilaus II oversees the weighing of silphium for export, on a Laconian kylix, ca. 565-560 BC.

According to Herodotus, conflict with king Arcesilaus II "the Cruel" (ca. 560-550 BC) led his brothers to leave the city and found the city of Barca to the west. Archaeological evidence shows that Greek presence at Barca predates this foundation, going back to the seventh century.[15] Arcesilaus was defeated by the Barcans and Libyans at the Battle of Leuco, killed by his brother and succeeded by his infant son Battus III (ca. 550-530 BC), under whom Cyrene continued to suffer from continued internal conflict.[16] This was resolved through a reform of the city's laws by Demonax of Mantinea.[17] These reforms appear to have limited the authority of the king to religious matters, vested political power in the Cyrenaean people, and divided the Cyreneans into three tribes. He may also have mediated a peace with Barca and introduced trial by combat.[16]

Battus III's son Arcesilaus III (ca. 530-515 BC) attempted to revoke Demonax's constitution and was driven into exile. He returned with an army from Samos and regained control but forced out once more and was assassinated at Barca. His mother Pheretime appealed to the Achaemenid governor of Egypt, Aryandes, who besieged and sacked Barca in 515 BC. According to Herodotus, Aryandes marched his troops through Cyrene and then, regretting that he had not taken the opportunity to conquer Cyrene, attempted to get back in, but was prevented. The story is strange; it may be that the city was actually conquered by the Persians.[17][12][18] Remains of an extramural temple destroyed by the Persians at this time have been found.[19]

Classical period edit

 
The Temple of Zeus, Cyrene

In the fifth century BC, perhaps as a consequence of the Persian intervention, Cyrene's influence over the other Greek cities in Cyrenaica seems to have solidified into institutionalised political control.[12] The city was prosperous and construction of the Temple of Apollo, Temple of Zeus, Temple of Demeter, and structures in the Agora date to this time.[12] Cyrene's chief local export through much of its early history was the medicinal herb silphium, which may have been used as an abortifacient; the herb was pictured on most Cyrenian coins. Silphium was in such demand that it was harvested to extinction by the end of the first century BC.[20] Cyrene also made money from raising of horses and the transhipment trade between Egypt, the Aegean, and Carthage. It was a landing point for Greeks seeking to visit the oracle of Ammon at Siwah.[21]

Arcesilaus IV won the chariot race at the Pythian Games in 462 BC and at the Olympic Games in 460 BC, in celebration of which Pindar wrote the Fourth and Fifth Pythian Odes. Following this victory, he organised a new wave of Greek settlement at Euesperides. Some time after this however, the Cyreneans monarchy was abolished in obscure circumstances and the tomb of his ancestor Battus I was destroyed.[22][23] In 454 BC, Cyrene gave refuge to the remnants of an Athenian army that had been defeated by the Persians in Egypt.[23] In the following years, Barca seems to have become the dominant city in the region[24] and Cyrene was regularly in conflict with the other Greek cities of Cyrenaica and with the Libyans.[17] In 414 BC, during the Peloponnesian War, Spartan forces travelling to Sicily were driven to Cyrenaica by adverse winds and Cyrene provided them with two triremes and pilots to lead them to Sicily.[25][17]

Towards the end of the fifth century BC, one Ariston took control of the city, put five hundred leading Cyreneans to death and exiled others. It is possible that he attempted to establish a radical democracy on the Athenian model. A group of 3,000 Messenians who had been expelled from Naupactus by the Spartans arrived in Cyrene in 404 BC and joined forces with the exiles, but were almost all killed in a battle, after which the Cyrenean exiles and the followers of Ariston reconciled. The surviving Messenians settled at Euhesperides.[26] There are some signs that civic conflict continued over the following century.[27]

During the fourth century BC, Cyrene clashed with Carthage over the Syrtis and the trans-Saharan trade routes that ended there. The border was established at the Altars of the Phileni. Cyrene may also have extended its control eastwards to Catabathmus Magnus. Cyrene constructed a treasury at Delphi between 350 and 325 BC.[27] When Alexander the Great conquered Egypt in 331 BC and marched west to visit the oracle at Siwah, the Cyreneans sent an embassy to declare their friendship; they did not come under Macedonian control. An inscription records that during a famine in the late 320s, Cyrene sent over 800,000 medimni of grain (ca. 40,000,000 litres) to the cities of Greece and the Macedonian royal family.[28]

Hellenistic period edit

 
The Cyrene bronze head in the British Museum (300 BC).

In 324 BC, a Spartan mercenary leader, Thibron, joined forces with Cyrenean and Barcan exiles on Crete and invaded Cyrenaica, capturing Cyrene's port and forcing Cyrene to accept his rule.[27] However, one of his officers, Mnasicles, defected to the Cyreneans and helped them to expel Thibron's troops and recapture the port.[29] Cyrene allied with the Libyans and Carthaginians, but Thibron returned in 322 BC and defeated them. A democratic revolution took place in Cyrene and the exiled aristocrats appealed to Ptolemy I Soter for help. Ptolemy sent his general Ophellas to occupy the city and established a new constitution for the city, which is recorded on a large inscription,[30][31] which was heavily oligarchic and reserved a permanent role for himself in the city's administration.[32][29] The city was accepted by the other Macedonian leaders as part of the Ptolemaic realm in the Treaty of Triparadisus in 321 BC. Cyrenean rebels attempted to expel the Ptolemaic garrison in 313 BC, but Ptolemy sent reinforcements who suppressed the revolt.[29] In 308 BC, Ophellas led Cyrenaean and Athenian troops west to join Agathocles of Syracuse's attack on Carthage and was immediately murdered.[32]

 
Coin of Magas as king of Cyrene, circa 282/75 to 261 BC.

Cyrene rebelled against Ptolemy again around 305 BC. Control was re-established in 300 BC by Ptolemy's step-son Magas.[33] After Ptolemy's death in 282 BC, Magas refused to submit to his half-brother Ptolemy II and had crowned himself king by 276 BC. He married Apama the daughter of the Seleucid king Antiochus I and assisted him in an unsuccessful invasion of Egypt during the First Syrian War.[34][33] Inscribed accounts indicate severe inflation of food prices and a large fundraising campaign, possibly for repairs to the city walls.[33] After his death, Apama invited a Macedonian prince, Demetrius the Fair, to marry her daughter Berenice and take the throne, but he was murdered after a short conflict with Berenice. She married Ptolemy III in 246 BC, bringing Cyrene back under Ptolemaic control.[35] In the process, the city of Euesperides was destroyed and re-founded as Berenice and the cities of Cyrenaica formed a federation, called the Pentapolis, which minted its own coinage.[36] Constitutional reforms by a pair of Arcadians, Ecdelus and Demophanes, may also belong in this period.[37]

 
Gymnasium of Cyrene.

Cyrene was reduced to subject status, a garrison was installed, and a succession of Ptolemaic courtiers were appointed to the city's priesthood of Apollo.[37] Cyrene was established as a separate kingdom once more for Ptolemy VIII in 163 BC after his siblings expelled him from Egypt.[38][39][40] The city rebelled against him but was defeated. It is possible that he granted Cyrene's port, Apollonia, independence from Cyrene at this time, as a reward for remaining loyal.[41] Ptolemy engaged in a wide-ranging construction project in the city, including the construction of a monumental gymnasium.[40] He also had a will inscribed, promising Cyrene to the Roman Republic in the event that he died without heirs. However, he regained control of Egypt in 145 BC.[42] In the dynastic conflicts that followed, Cyrene probably remained under the control of Ptolemy VIII and then of Ptolemy IX.[40] It was apparently given to Ptolemy VIII's illegitimate son Ptolemy Apion as a separate kingdom ca. 105-101 BC. Apion made a similar will to that of his father and the territory passed to Rome when he died without heirs in 96 BC.[36]

The city became an important Jewish centre during the Hellenistic period. The deuterocanonical book 2 Maccabees, is said by its author to be an abridgment of a five-volume work by a Hellenized Jew by the name of Jason of Cyrene who lived around 100 BC.

Roman period edit

 
Marble bust of Emperor Antoninus Pius (r. 138–161 AD), from the house of Jason Magnus at Cyrene, now in The British Museum, London

After 96 BC, the Romans initially ignored the new territory. Plutarch mentions a tyrant of Cyrene, Nicocrates, who was deposed by his wife Aretaphila of Cyrene and succeeded by his brother Learchus, who was murdered in turn.[43][44] Lucullus visited the city in 87 BC, suppressed the tyranny and granted Cyrene a new constitution.[44] But it was only in 74 BC that the Romans first sent a governor, Publius Cornelius Lentulus Marcellinus.[36] At some point between 67 and 30 BC, Cyrenaica became part of the Roman province of Crete and Cyrenaica. The provincial capital was on Crete, but Cyrene remained the chief city in Cyrenaica and enjoyed a highly prosperous period and much construction dates to the first century AD.[36] In the mid-first century AD, the Roman authorities launched an extensive surveying campaign to reclaim the public land around Cyrene that had slipped into private control and stopped paying dividends to the fisc.[45]

Because of its large Jewish population, Cyrene was an early centre of Christianity. A Cyrenian named Simon carried the cross of Jesus.[46] Acts claims that Jews from Cyrene heard the disciples speaking in their own language in Jerusalem on the day of Pentecost and later says that Christians from Cyrene and Cyprus were among the assembled.[47] According to the tradition of the Coptic Orthodox Church, its founder, Saint Mark was a native of Cyrene and ordained the first bishop of Cyrene.

 
Apollo Kitharoidos from Cyrene. Roman statue from the second century AD now in the British Museum.

A massive Jewish revolt, the Kitos War, broke out in Cyrenaica, Egypt, and Judaea in 115 AD. Cyrene was sacked and almost all of the city's buildings were destroyed. Literary sources claim that 220,000 people were killed before the revolt was quelled by Marcius Turbo.[48][49] According to Eusebius of Caesarea, the Jewish rebellion left Libya depopulated to such an extent that a few years later new colonies had to be established there by the emperor Hadrian to maintain the viability of continued settlement. Restoration work is recorded in inscriptions and visible archaeologically; it was not completted until the reign of Commodus.[45] The city was an early member of Hadrian's Panhellenion and a long inscription records its attempts to block membership for one of its neighbours. Cyrene was once again prosperous by the third quarter of the second century AD and several palaces date to this period, including the House of Jason Magnus.[50]

In the mid-third century AD, Cyrene's economy began to decline. This was hastened by an earthquake of 262, which destroyed much of the city.[45] After the disaster, the city was raided by the Marmaritae, Libyan nomads, who were defeated in 269 by Tenagino Probus, prefect of Egypt. The emperor Claudius Gothicus restored Cyrene, naming it Claudiopolis. Many buildings were subsequently rebuilt,[51] but a hurriedly built new defensive wall enclosed only the western half of the city.[49] The civic hub shifted north from the street of Battus to the Valley street and many of the old public spaces were filled in with housing and shops.[52] In the reforms of Diocletian, Cyrene became part of the new province of Libya Superior (also called Pentapolis).[45] The Roman Martyrology[53] mentions under 4 July a tradition that in the persecution of Diocletian a bishop Theodorus of Cyrene was scourged and had his tongue cut out. Earlier editions of the Martyrology mentioned what may be the same person also under 26 March.

Byzantine period edit

Another earthquake destroyed the city on 21 July 365. Skeletons crushed by falling masonry have been found and one tomb inscription mentions the earthquake.[51] A contemporary historian, Ammianus Marcellinus, describes Cyrene as "an ancient but deserted city."[51] However, the damage may have been over-emphasised. Archaeology shows that most buildings were damaged, but also that many were rebuilt, including many pagan temples, which were only closed by the Theodosian decrees in 395.[54] Settlement seems to have expanded east beyond Claudius Gothicus' fortification wall and a generation after the earthquake, Cyrene was a significant centre.[49] Synesius, a wealthy magnate who became bishop of Ptolemais and whose letters are preserved, grew up in Cyrene in the generation after the earthquake.[55] Letter 67 of Synesius tells of an irregular episcopal ordination carried out by a bishop Philo of Cyrene, which was condoned by Athanasius. The same letter mentions that a nephew of this Philo, who bore the same name, also became bishop of Cyrene.

The Central and East Churches were built in the fifth or sixth century AD and renovated several times.[56] A bishop of Cyrene name Rufus attended the Robber Council of Ephesus in 449 and there was still a bishop of Cyrene, named Leontius, at the time of Patriarch Eulogius of Alexandria (580–607).[57][58] The city fell under Arab conquest in 643. At some point thereafter it was abandoned, but the ancient name lived on as "Grennah" in the 19th century.[59]

Modern history edit

The site was totally abandoned in the early modern period. Frederick and Richard Beechey visited and produced the first site plans in 1821-1822. The French consul at Benghazi looted part of a tomb later in the century for the Louvre. The first systematic excavations were undertaken by Robert Murdoch Smith and E. A. Porcher between 1860 and 1861; their findings mostly went to the British Museum.[60][61] They include the Apollo of Cyrene and a unique bronze head of an African man.[62][63] The American Richard Norton began more scientific excavations in 1910, which were halted by the Italian invasion of Libya in 1911.[60] The tomb of the excavation's epigrapher, Herbert de Cou, who was shot in mysterious circumstances, is located on the site.[64]

The Italian colonial government established a military base at the site in 1913.[59] In the course of building the base, Italian soldiers found the "Venus of Cyrene", a headless marble statue representing the goddess Venus, a Roman copy of a Greek original, which prompted them to restrict their base to the Acropolis. The statue was transported to Rome, where it remained until 2008, when it was returned to Libya.[65] The village of Shahat grew up on the site as a result of the Italian presence.[59]

The Italians created an antiquities service and, after the discovery of the Venus of Cyrene, carried out excavations at Cyrene on a very large scale, which were closely connected with the regime's propaganda. The Italian archaeologists were expelled in 1943 when the Allies captured Cyrenaica.[60] Richard Goodchild, controller of antiquities from 1955 to 1966 moved the village of Shahat off the site and re-established it to the south; it has since expanded over much of the southern necropolis.[59] He also restored control of excavations at the site to the Italians, under Sandro Stucchi [it]. Goodchild also The Italian mission has excavated much of the site and restored several buildings through the process of anastylosis.[66]

The site was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1982.[67] Beginning in 2006, the Global Heritage Fund, in partnership with the Second University of Naples (SUN, Italy), the Libyan Department of Antiquities, and the Libyan Ministry of Culture, worked to preserve the ancient site through a combination of holistic conservation practices and training of local skilled and unskilled labor. The GHF-led team conducted ongoing emergency conservation on the theater inside the Sanctuary of Apollo.[68]

In 2017 UNESCO added Cyrene to its List of World Heritage in Danger.[69]

Archaeological site edit

Cyrene is now an archaeological site north of the village of Shahhat and east of Bayda, on a ridge of the Jabal Akhdar, about 600 metres above sea level. The southern edge of the ridge and the city is formed by the Wadi Bil Ghadir and the northern edge by the Wadi Bu Turqiyah. The Acropolis, at the western edge of the ridge, was the original centre of Greek occupation. From there, a road referred to by modern scholars as the "Street of Battus" or "Skyrotà" runs along the ridge to the southeast for around 1 kilometre, past the Agora, the House of Jason Magnus and a number of other palatial residences, the Stoa of Hermes and Heracles, the Caesareum, two theatres, a sacred area, and the caravanserai until it reaches the gates of the city. Below the Acropolis to the north, the Springs of Apollo and Cyra emerge from the cliff-face onto a triangular plateau at the base of the Wadi Bu Turqiyah. This plateau contains the Greek Theatre, the Sanctuary of Apollo, and the Baths of Trajan. From the sanctuary, a road known as "Valley Street" leads southeast up the Wadi Bu Turqiyah, roughly parallel to the "Street of Battus", lined by a stepped portico and the Aqua Augusta, past the Baths of Paris to the Market Theatre and the Central Quarter, which contains several public buildings and palatial residences. To the northeast, on another ridge, but still inside the city walls, is the largely unexcavated northeastern quarter, containing the Temple of Zeus, the hippodrome, and the East Church. Outside the city walls to the south is the Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone. The necropolis of Cyrene covers about 20 km² to the south and north of the city.[70]

Archaeological finds are stored and displayed in a temporary museum in the eastern portion of the site. In 2005, Italian archaeologists from the University of Urbino discovered 76 intact Roman statues at Cyrene from the 2nd century AD. The statues remained undiscovered for so long because "during the earthquake of 375 AD, a supporting wall of the temple fell on its side, burying all the statues. They remained hidden under stone, rubble and earth for 1,630 years. The other walls sheltered the statues, so we were able to recover all the pieces, even works that had been broken."[71]

Acropolis edit

Agora edit

House of Jason Magnus edit

Caesareum and Stoa of Hermes and Heracles edit

Caravanserai edit

Sanctuary of Apollo edit

One of its more significant features is the temple of Apollo, which was originally constructed as early as 7th century BC. Other ancient structures include a temple to Demeter. There is a large necropolis approximately 10 km between Cyrene and its ancient port of Apollonia.

Central Quarter edit

Temple of Zeus edit

 
The reconstructed temple of Zeus, seen from the southwest.

The Temple of Zeus was the largest ancient Greek temple at Cyrene, and one of the largest Greek temples ever built. The original Doric octastyle peripteral temple was constructed around 500-480 BC,[72] It faced east and stood atop a three-stepped crepidoma, with a length of 68.3 metres and a width of 30.4 metres,[73] making it roughly the same size as the Temple of Zeus at Olympia and the Parthenon at Athens.[72] The front porch (pronaos) was supported by two columns in antis; the back porch (opisthodomos) by three columns in antis. The cella was two stories high and two rows of columns divided it into three aisles. The external colonnade (peripteros) has eight columns at the front and rear and seventeen columns on each of the long sides. It was destroyed in 115 AD during the Jewish sack of the city. Around 172-175 AD it was partially rebuilt as a non-peripteral temple. Between 185 and 192 AD, a colossal cult statue, modelled on the Statue of Zeus at Olympia was installed.[74] The temple was destroyed once more in 365 AD by an earthquake and then burnt by Christians.[75]

East Church edit

Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone edit

The sanctuary to Demeter and Persephone, which includes a temple and theater complex, is located south of the Wadi Bil Ghadir ravine, outside the city walls. The Sanctuary comprised structures sprawled out over twenty miles and are divided into three terraces: the Lower, Middle and Upper Sanctuaries.[76] The archaeological remains date from the late seventh century BC to the mid-third century AD. During the time of this sacred activity at the Sanctuary a voluminous amount of votive material was accumulated in its interior: pottery, lamps, coinage, stone sculpture, jewellery, inscriptions, glass, as well as bronze and terracotta figurines. The pottery excavated at the Sanctuary provides useful evidence concerning both the question of its foundation and type of religious activity.[77]

Necropolis edit

 
Rock-cut tombs in the necropolis of Cyrene.

The necropolis consists of graves, rock-cut tombs, temple-tombs, and sarcophagi, dating from the sixth century BC until the fifth century AD. It covers about 20 km² to the south and north of the city, making it one of the largest known Greek necropoleis.[78] The southern section has been encroached upon by the growing city of Shahat, especially after 2013, when many tombs were bulldozed.[79] The northern portion is better preserved. Several of the tombs of the Roman period have niches for portrait busts of the deceased. A common find are statues of the so-called "Goddess of Death", a female bust - often faceless - depicted in the process of unveiling herself.[80]

Philosophy edit

Cyrene contributed to the intellectual life of the Greeks, through renowned philosophers and mathematicians. The School of Cyrene, known as the Cyrenaics, developed here as a minor Socratic school founded by Aristippus (perhaps the friend of Socrates, though according to some accounts a grandson of Aristippus with the same name). French Neo-Epicurean philosopher Michel Onfray has called Cyrene "a philosophical Atlantis" thanks to its huge importance in the birth and initial development of the ethics of pleasure.

Notable people edit

List of bishops edit

Known bishops of the town include[57][58][85][86]

  • Saint Luke by tradition
  • Theodoro (fl. 302)
  • Filo I (fl. 370 circa)
  • Filo II (fl.370 circa)
  • Rufo (fl.449)
  • Leontius (fl.600 circa)

No longer a residential bishopric, Cyrene is today listed by the Catholic Church as a titular see.[87][88][89] The Greek Orthodox Church has also treated it as a titular see.[58]

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "21 World Heritage Sites you have probably never heard of". Daily Telegraph. from the original on 2015-12-03. Retrieved 2018-04-04.
  2. ^ a b c Kenrick 2013, p. 200.
  3. ^ a b Janko, Richard (1982), Homer, Hesiod, and the Hymns: Diachronic Development in Epic Diction, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 247, n. 38.
  4. ^ "2957. Kuréné", Strong's Concordance.
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  9. ^ White, Domald (1975). "Archaic Cyrene and the Cult of Demeter and Persephone". Expedition Magazine. Vol. 17, no. 4. Penn Museum. Retrieved 2021-10-16.
  10. ^ a b Rosamilia 2023, p. 18.
  11. ^ Kenrick 2013, p. 156.
  12. ^ a b c d Rosamilia 2023, p. 21.
  13. ^ Clayton 2006, pp. 195–197.
  14. ^ Kenrick 2013, p. 2.
  15. ^ Kenrick 2013, p. 68.
  16. ^ a b Rosamilia 2023, p. 20.
  17. ^ a b c d Kenrick 2013, p. 3.
  18. ^ Ray, John D. (2006). "Egypt, 525–404 B.C.". In Boardman, John; Hammond, N.D.L.; Lewis, D.M.; Ostwald, M. (eds.). The Cambridge Ancient History, vol. IV – Persia, Greece and the Western Mediterranean c. 525 to 479 B.C. (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 266. ISBN 0-521-22804-2.
  19. ^ Kenrick 2013, p. 242.
  20. ^ Parejko, Ken (2003). "Pliny the Elder's Silphium: First Recorded Species Extinction". Conservation Biology. 17 (3): 925–927. doi:10.1046/j.1523-1739.2003.02067.x. JSTOR 3095254. S2CID 84007922.
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Bibliography edit

  • Asolati, Michele; Crisafulli, Cristina (2018). Cirene e la Cirenaica in età greca e romana. Roma: "L'Erma" di Bretschneider. ISBN 9788891317155.
  • Cariddi, Lorenzo (2020). Cirene e l'acqua: ricerche e documenti sulla gestione delle risorse idriche in città e nella chora. Roma: "L'Erma" di Bretschneider. ISBN 9788891319623.
  • Clayton, Peter A. (2006). Chronicles of the Pharaohs: the reign-by-reign record of the rulers and dynasties of ancient Egypt. Thames & Hudson. ISBN 0-500-28628-0.
  • Dinsmoor, William Bell (1950). The Architecture of Ancient Greece: An Account of Its Historic Development. Biblo & Tannen Publishers.
  • Goodchild, Richard George (1971). Kyrene und Apollonia (in German). Zurich: Raggi.
  • Goodchild, R. G.; Reynolds, J. M.; Herington, C. J. (1958). "The Temple of Zeus at Cyrene". Papers of the British School at Rome. 26: 30–62. ISSN 0068-2462. JSTOR 40310596.
  • Grainger, John D. (2010). The Syrian Wars. ISBN 9789004180505.
  • Hölbl, Günther (2001). A History of the Ptolemaic Empire. London & New York: Routledge. pp. 143–152 & 181–194. ISBN 0415201454.
  • Kenrick, Philip (2013). Cyrenaica. Libya Archaeological Guides. Vol. 2. Silphium Press. ISBN 978-1-900971-14-0.
  • Laronde, Andre (1987). Cyrène et la Libye hellénistique, Libykai Historiai : de l'époque républicaine au principat d'Auguste. Éditions du Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique.
  • Luni, Mario (2014). La scoperta di Cirene: un secolo di scavi (1913-2013). Roma: "L'Erma" di Bretschneider. ISBN 9788891306425.
  • Poli Fabrice, Vottéro Guy, De Cyrène à Catherine : trois mille ans de libyennes, Nancy, ADRA, 2005, 464p.
  • Rosamilia, Emilio (2023). La città del silfio. Istituzioni, culti ed economia di Cirene classica ed ellenistica attraverso le fonti epigrafiche (in Italian). Pisa: Scuola Normale Superiore. ISBN 9788876427367.
  • Rosenbaum, Elizabeth; Ward-Perkins, John (1980). Justinianic mosaic pavements in Cyrenaican Churches. Rome: Bretschneider. ISBN 9788891323729.
  • Sachs, Gerd (2019). Alt-Thera und Kyrene – zwei verwandte griechische Städte. Mythos, Geschichte, Kultur. Antiquitates, vol 71. Hamburg: Verlag Dr. Kovač, ISBN 978-3-339-10636-0.
  • Stucchi, Sandro (1976). Architettura cirenaica. Rome: Bretschneider. ISBN 887062448X.
  • Thorn, James Copland (2005). The Necropolis of Cyrene: two hundred years of exploration. Roma: "L'Erma" di Bretschneider. ISBN 9788882653392.
Excavation reports
  • Stucchi, Sandro (1965). L'Agorà di Cirene. I: I lati nord ed est della platea inferiore (in Italian). L'Erma di Bretchneider. ISBN 9788870624472.
  • Bacchielli, Lidiano (1981). L'Agorà di Cirene. II,1: L' area settentrionale del lato ovest della platea inferiore / F. Martelli. Roma: Bretschneider. ISBN 9788870625028.
  • Purcaro, Valeria (2001). L'Agorà di Cirene. II,3: L' area meridionale del lato ovest dell'agorà / Valeria Purcaro. Roma: Bretschneider. ISBN 9788882651169.
  • Bacchielli, Lidiano; Stucchi, Sandro (1983). L'Agorà di Cirene. II,4: Il lato sud della platea inferiore e il lato nord della terrazza superiore / Sandro Stucchi; Lidiano Bacchielli. Con contributi di G. Lepore. Roma: Bretschneider. ISBN 9788870625387.
  • Ermeti, Anna Lia; Bacchielli, Lidiano (1981). L'Agorà di Cirene. III,1: Il monumento navale / Anna Lia Ermeti Allegati. Roma: "L'Erma" di Bretschneider. ISBN 9788870625035.
  • Mingazzini, Paolino (1966). L'insula di Giasone Magno a Cirene. Rome: Bretschneider. ISBN 8870623742.
  • Santucci, Anna; Micheli, Maria Elisa (2000). Il santuario delle nymphai chthoniai a Cirene: il sito e le terrecotte. Roma: "L'Erma" di Bretschneider. ISBN 9788882650759.
  • Ghislanzoni, Ettore (1916). Gli scavi delle terme romane a Cirene (in Italian). Alfieri.
  • Pernier, Luigi (1935). Il tempio e l'altare di Apollo a Cirene: scavi e studi dal 1925 al 1934 (in Italian). Istituto Italiano dÁrti Grafiche.

External links edit

  • at Global Heritage Fund
  • on Global Heritage Network
  • by Jona Lendering
  • University of Pennsylvania Museum excavations at Cyrene
  • Dobias-Lalou, Catherine; Bencivenni, Alice; Berthelot, Hugues; Antolini, Simona; Marengo, Silvia Maria; Rosamilia, Emilio; Reynolds, Joyce; Roueché, Charlotte. "Home". Inscriptions of Greek Cyrenaica and Greek Verse Inscriptions of Cyrenaica. Retrieved 2023-09-14.
  • Reynolds, Joyce; Roueché, Charlotte; Bodard, Gabriel; Dobias-Lalou, Catherine. "IRCyr. Inscriptions of Roman Cyrenaica". ircyr2020.inslib.kcl.ac.uk. Retrieved 2023-09-14.

cyrene, libya, cyrene, also, sometimes, anglicized, kyrene, ancient, greek, colony, roman, city, near, present, shahhat, northeastern, libya, north, africa, part, pentapolis, important, group, five, cities, region, gave, area, classical, early, modern, name, c. Cyrene also sometimes anglicized as Kyrene was an ancient Greek colony and Roman city near present day Shahhat in northeastern Libya in North Africa It was part of the Pentapolis an important group of five cities in the region and gave the area its classical and early modern name Cyrenaica CyreneKyrhnhSanctuary of Apollo at CyreneShown within LibyaAlternative nameKyreneLocationShahhat Jabal al Akhdar Cyrenaica LibyaRegionJebel AkhdarCoordinates32 49 30 N 21 51 29 E 32 82500 N 21 85806 E 32 82500 21 85806TypeSettlementHistoryBuilderColonists from Thera led by Battus IFounded631 BCAbandoned7th century ADPeriodsArchaic Greece to Umayyad CaliphateSite notesUNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficial nameArchaeological Site of CyreneTypeCulturalCriteriaii iii viDesignated1982 6th session Reference no 190RegionArab StatesCyrene lies on a ridge of the Jebel Akhdar uplands The archaeological remains cover several hectares and include several monumental temples stoas theatres bathhouses churches and palatial residences The city is surrounded by the Necropolis of Cyrene Since 1982 it has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site 1 The city s port was Apollonia Marsa Sousa located about 16 kilometres 10 mi to the north The city was attributed to Apollo and the legendary etymon Cyrene by the Greeks themselves but it was probably actually colonized by settlers from Thera modern Santorini in the late seventh century BC It was initially ruled by a dynasty of monarchs called the Battiads who grew rich and powerful as a result of successive waves of immigration and the export of horses and silphium a medicinal plant By the fifth century BC they had expanded their control over the other cities of Cyrenaica It became the seat of the Cyrenaics a school of philosophy in the fourth century BC founded by Aristippus a disciple of Socrates In the Hellenistic Age the city alternated between being part of Ptolemaic Egypt and the capital of an independent kingdom It was also an important Jewish hub In 96 BC it passed to the Roman Republic and became part of the province of Crete and Cyrenaica The city was destroyed by Jewish fighters in AD 115 during Kitos War and slowly rebuilt over the following century Earthquakes in 262 and 365 devastated the city but some habitation continued through the early Byzantine period and the Muslim conquest of the Maghreb in 642 after which the site was abandoned until the establishment of an Italian military base on the site in 1913 Excavations have been ongoing since that time Contents 1 Name 2 History 2 1 Foundation 2 2 Archaic period 2 3 Classical period 2 4 Hellenistic period 2 5 Roman period 2 6 Byzantine period 2 7 Modern history 3 Archaeological site 3 1 Acropolis 3 2 Agora 3 3 House of Jason Magnus 3 4 Caesareum and Stoa of Hermes and Heracles 3 5 Caravanserai 3 6 Sanctuary of Apollo 3 7 Central Quarter 3 8 Temple of Zeus 3 9 East Church 3 10 Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone 3 11 Necropolis 4 Philosophy 5 Notable people 5 1 List of bishops 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksName editCyrene is the latinized form of the Greek name Kyrḗne Kyrhnh of uncertain origin The Greeks themselves attributed the name to the legendary Thessalian princess Cyrene who supposedly founded the city with help from the sun god Apollo 2 Some modern scholars sometimes attribute the name to its spring Cyra Kyra Kyra which was considered sacred to Apollo by the city s Greco Roman inhabitants 3 The legend of Thessalian Cyrene seems to long predate attestation of the spring however and Janko instead suggests that the existing legend and name were adopted by the early Theran settlers for this specific location after some unattested but similar local name in the Libu or Garamantian language 3 Although both the Greek and Latin forms of the name were pronounced something like k u ˈ r eɪ n eɪ koo RAY nay 4 they are more often read in modern English as k aɪ ˈ r iː n i ky REE nee or in its Latin form s aɪ ˈ r iː n i sy REE nee citation needed History editPeople have lived in Cyrenaica since the Palaeolithic There is some evidence for settlement in the caves below the Acropolis which may pre date Greek settlement It is possible that Minoans and Mycenaeans visited Cyrene in the Bronze Age since it is on the easiest sea route from the Aegean to Egypt but the only archaeological evidence for this are separate finds of a small Minoan altar and a Minoan seal which might have been brought over at a later date 2 5 Foundation edit Main article Greek colonisation A Greek myth first recorded by Pindar in the early fifth century BC reports that the god Apollo fell in love with the huntress Cyrene and brought her to Libya where she gave birth to a son Aristaeus 2 Greek historical traditions reported in Herodotus Histories and in a fourth century BC inscription found at Cyrene say that a group of Cretan Greeks who had been expelled from Sparta and settled on the island of Thera founded Cyrene in 631 BC under the leadership of Battus I at the prompting of the Oracle of Delphi 6 7 Some traditions say that the settlers left Thera because of a famine others because of a civil war Most say that the colonists first settled on an island at Aziris east of Derna before relocating to Cyrene 7 The historicity of these narratives is uncertain particularly the idea that Thera was Cyrene s sole mother city Relationships with other cities such as Sparta 8 and Samos 9 mentioned in the foundation narratives are uncertain 6 Archaeological evidence from the site especially ceramic finds confirm that Greek settlement began in the mid seventh century BC This early pottery derves from Thera Sparta and Samos but also Rhodes 10 The initial area of habitation was a ridge stretching eastwards from the Acropolis to the Agora but the city rapidly expanded eastwards 11 The sanctuary of Apollo to the north of the Acropolis of Demeter to the south and of Zeus to the east all go back to the seventh or sixth centuries BC Archaeological evidence shows that several other sites in Cyrenaica such as Apollonia Euesperides and Taucheira modern Benghazi and Tocra were settled at the same time as Cyrene 10 Archaic period edit After its foundation the city was ruled by a series of monarchs descended from Battus I Over the course of the sixth century BC Cyrene grew to become the most powerful city in the region 12 In the first half of the sixth century BC Battus II encouraged further Greek settlement in the city especially from the Peloponnese and Crete This sparked conflict with the indigenous Libyans whose king Adicran appealed to Egypt for help around 570 BC The pharaoh Apries launched a military expedition against Cyrene but was decisively defeated at the Battle of Irasa 13 14 7 nbsp Arcesilaus II oversees the weighing of silphium for export on a Laconian kylix ca 565 560 BC According to Herodotus conflict with king Arcesilaus II the Cruel ca 560 550 BC led his brothers to leave the city and found the city of Barca to the west Archaeological evidence shows that Greek presence at Barca predates this foundation going back to the seventh century 15 Arcesilaus was defeated by the Barcans and Libyans at the Battle of Leuco killed by his brother and succeeded by his infant son Battus III ca 550 530 BC under whom Cyrene continued to suffer from continued internal conflict 16 This was resolved through a reform of the city s laws by Demonax of Mantinea 17 These reforms appear to have limited the authority of the king to religious matters vested political power in the Cyrenaean people and divided the Cyreneans into three tribes He may also have mediated a peace with Barca and introduced trial by combat 16 Battus III s son Arcesilaus III ca 530 515 BC attempted to revoke Demonax s constitution and was driven into exile He returned with an army from Samos and regained control but forced out once more and was assassinated at Barca His mother Pheretime appealed to the Achaemenid governor of Egypt Aryandes who besieged and sacked Barca in 515 BC According to Herodotus Aryandes marched his troops through Cyrene and then regretting that he had not taken the opportunity to conquer Cyrene attempted to get back in but was prevented The story is strange it may be that the city was actually conquered by the Persians 17 12 18 Remains of an extramural temple destroyed by the Persians at this time have been found 19 Classical period edit nbsp The Temple of Zeus CyreneIn the fifth century BC perhaps as a consequence of the Persian intervention Cyrene s influence over the other Greek cities in Cyrenaica seems to have solidified into institutionalised political control 12 The city was prosperous and construction of the Temple of Apollo Temple of Zeus Temple of Demeter and structures in the Agora date to this time 12 Cyrene s chief local export through much of its early history was the medicinal herb silphium which may have been used as an abortifacient the herb was pictured on most Cyrenian coins Silphium was in such demand that it was harvested to extinction by the end of the first century BC 20 Cyrene also made money from raising of horses and the transhipment trade between Egypt the Aegean and Carthage It was a landing point for Greeks seeking to visit the oracle of Ammon at Siwah 21 Arcesilaus IV won the chariot race at the Pythian Games in 462 BC and at the Olympic Games in 460 BC in celebration of which Pindar wrote the Fourth and Fifth Pythian Odes Following this victory he organised a new wave of Greek settlement at Euesperides Some time after this however the Cyreneans monarchy was abolished in obscure circumstances and the tomb of his ancestor Battus I was destroyed 22 23 In 454 BC Cyrene gave refuge to the remnants of an Athenian army that had been defeated by the Persians in Egypt 23 In the following years Barca seems to have become the dominant city in the region 24 and Cyrene was regularly in conflict with the other Greek cities of Cyrenaica and with the Libyans 17 In 414 BC during the Peloponnesian War Spartan forces travelling to Sicily were driven to Cyrenaica by adverse winds and Cyrene provided them with two triremes and pilots to lead them to Sicily 25 17 Towards the end of the fifth century BC one Ariston took control of the city put five hundred leading Cyreneans to death and exiled others It is possible that he attempted to establish a radical democracy on the Athenian model A group of 3 000 Messenians who had been expelled from Naupactus by the Spartans arrived in Cyrene in 404 BC and joined forces with the exiles but were almost all killed in a battle after which the Cyrenean exiles and the followers of Ariston reconciled The surviving Messenians settled at Euhesperides 26 There are some signs that civic conflict continued over the following century 27 During the fourth century BC Cyrene clashed with Carthage over the Syrtis and the trans Saharan trade routes that ended there The border was established at the Altars of the Phileni Cyrene may also have extended its control eastwards to Catabathmus Magnus Cyrene constructed a treasury at Delphi between 350 and 325 BC 27 When Alexander the Great conquered Egypt in 331 BC and marched west to visit the oracle at Siwah the Cyreneans sent an embassy to declare their friendship they did not come under Macedonian control An inscription records that during a famine in the late 320s Cyrene sent over 800 000 medimni of grain ca 40 000 000 litres to the cities of Greece and the Macedonian royal family 28 Hellenistic period edit nbsp The Cyrene bronze head in the British Museum 300 BC In 324 BC a Spartan mercenary leader Thibron joined forces with Cyrenean and Barcan exiles on Crete and invaded Cyrenaica capturing Cyrene s port and forcing Cyrene to accept his rule 27 However one of his officers Mnasicles defected to the Cyreneans and helped them to expel Thibron s troops and recapture the port 29 Cyrene allied with the Libyans and Carthaginians but Thibron returned in 322 BC and defeated them A democratic revolution took place in Cyrene and the exiled aristocrats appealed to Ptolemy I Soter for help Ptolemy sent his general Ophellas to occupy the city and established a new constitution for the city which is recorded on a large inscription 30 31 which was heavily oligarchic and reserved a permanent role for himself in the city s administration 32 29 The city was accepted by the other Macedonian leaders as part of the Ptolemaic realm in the Treaty of Triparadisus in 321 BC Cyrenean rebels attempted to expel the Ptolemaic garrison in 313 BC but Ptolemy sent reinforcements who suppressed the revolt 29 In 308 BC Ophellas led Cyrenaean and Athenian troops west to join Agathocles of Syracuse s attack on Carthage and was immediately murdered 32 nbsp Coin of Magas as king of Cyrene circa 282 75 to 261 BC Cyrene rebelled against Ptolemy again around 305 BC Control was re established in 300 BC by Ptolemy s step son Magas 33 After Ptolemy s death in 282 BC Magas refused to submit to his half brother Ptolemy II and had crowned himself king by 276 BC He married Apama the daughter of the Seleucid king Antiochus I and assisted him in an unsuccessful invasion of Egypt during the First Syrian War 34 33 Inscribed accounts indicate severe inflation of food prices and a large fundraising campaign possibly for repairs to the city walls 33 After his death Apama invited a Macedonian prince Demetrius the Fair to marry her daughter Berenice and take the throne but he was murdered after a short conflict with Berenice She married Ptolemy III in 246 BC bringing Cyrene back under Ptolemaic control 35 In the process the city of Euesperides was destroyed and re founded as Berenice and the cities of Cyrenaica formed a federation called the Pentapolis which minted its own coinage 36 Constitutional reforms by a pair of Arcadians Ecdelus and Demophanes may also belong in this period 37 nbsp Gymnasium of Cyrene Cyrene was reduced to subject status a garrison was installed and a succession of Ptolemaic courtiers were appointed to the city s priesthood of Apollo 37 Cyrene was established as a separate kingdom once more for Ptolemy VIII in 163 BC after his siblings expelled him from Egypt 38 39 40 The city rebelled against him but was defeated It is possible that he granted Cyrene s port Apollonia independence from Cyrene at this time as a reward for remaining loyal 41 Ptolemy engaged in a wide ranging construction project in the city including the construction of a monumental gymnasium 40 He also had a will inscribed promising Cyrene to the Roman Republic in the event that he died without heirs However he regained control of Egypt in 145 BC 42 In the dynastic conflicts that followed Cyrene probably remained under the control of Ptolemy VIII and then of Ptolemy IX 40 It was apparently given to Ptolemy VIII s illegitimate son Ptolemy Apion as a separate kingdom ca 105 101 BC Apion made a similar will to that of his father and the territory passed to Rome when he died without heirs in 96 BC 36 The city became an important Jewish centre during the Hellenistic period The deuterocanonical book 2 Maccabees is said by its author to be an abridgment of a five volume work by a Hellenized Jew by the name of Jason of Cyrene who lived around 100 BC Roman period edit nbsp Marble bust of Emperor Antoninus Pius r 138 161 AD from the house of Jason Magnus at Cyrene now in The British Museum LondonAfter 96 BC the Romans initially ignored the new territory Plutarch mentions a tyrant of Cyrene Nicocrates who was deposed by his wife Aretaphila of Cyrene and succeeded by his brother Learchus who was murdered in turn 43 44 Lucullus visited the city in 87 BC suppressed the tyranny and granted Cyrene a new constitution 44 But it was only in 74 BC that the Romans first sent a governor Publius Cornelius Lentulus Marcellinus 36 At some point between 67 and 30 BC Cyrenaica became part of the Roman province of Crete and Cyrenaica The provincial capital was on Crete but Cyrene remained the chief city in Cyrenaica and enjoyed a highly prosperous period and much construction dates to the first century AD 36 In the mid first century AD the Roman authorities launched an extensive surveying campaign to reclaim the public land around Cyrene that had slipped into private control and stopped paying dividends to the fisc 45 Because of its large Jewish population Cyrene was an early centre of Christianity A Cyrenian named Simon carried the cross of Jesus 46 Acts claims that Jews from Cyrene heard the disciples speaking in their own language in Jerusalem on the day of Pentecost and later says that Christians from Cyrene and Cyprus were among the assembled 47 According to the tradition of the Coptic Orthodox Church its founder Saint Mark was a native of Cyrene and ordained the first bishop of Cyrene nbsp Apollo Kitharoidos from Cyrene Roman statue from the second century AD now in the British Museum A massive Jewish revolt the Kitos War broke out in Cyrenaica Egypt and Judaea in 115 AD Cyrene was sacked and almost all of the city s buildings were destroyed Literary sources claim that 220 000 people were killed before the revolt was quelled by Marcius Turbo 48 49 According to Eusebius of Caesarea the Jewish rebellion left Libya depopulated to such an extent that a few years later new colonies had to be established there by the emperor Hadrian to maintain the viability of continued settlement Restoration work is recorded in inscriptions and visible archaeologically it was not completted until the reign of Commodus 45 The city was an early member of Hadrian s Panhellenion and a long inscription records its attempts to block membership for one of its neighbours Cyrene was once again prosperous by the third quarter of the second century AD and several palaces date to this period including the House of Jason Magnus 50 In the mid third century AD Cyrene s economy began to decline This was hastened by an earthquake of 262 which destroyed much of the city 45 After the disaster the city was raided by the Marmaritae Libyan nomads who were defeated in 269 by Tenagino Probus prefect of Egypt The emperor Claudius Gothicus restored Cyrene naming it Claudiopolis Many buildings were subsequently rebuilt 51 but a hurriedly built new defensive wall enclosed only the western half of the city 49 The civic hub shifted north from the street of Battus to the Valley street and many of the old public spaces were filled in with housing and shops 52 In the reforms of Diocletian Cyrene became part of the new province of Libya Superior also called Pentapolis 45 The Roman Martyrology 53 mentions under 4 July a tradition that in the persecution of Diocletian a bishop Theodorus of Cyrene was scourged and had his tongue cut out Earlier editions of the Martyrology mentioned what may be the same person also under 26 March Byzantine period edit Another earthquake destroyed the city on 21 July 365 Skeletons crushed by falling masonry have been found and one tomb inscription mentions the earthquake 51 A contemporary historian Ammianus Marcellinus describes Cyrene as an ancient but deserted city 51 However the damage may have been over emphasised Archaeology shows that most buildings were damaged but also that many were rebuilt including many pagan temples which were only closed by the Theodosian decrees in 395 54 Settlement seems to have expanded east beyond Claudius Gothicus fortification wall and a generation after the earthquake Cyrene was a significant centre 49 Synesius a wealthy magnate who became bishop of Ptolemais and whose letters are preserved grew up in Cyrene in the generation after the earthquake 55 Letter 67 of Synesius tells of an irregular episcopal ordination carried out by a bishop Philo of Cyrene which was condoned by Athanasius The same letter mentions that a nephew of this Philo who bore the same name also became bishop of Cyrene The Central and East Churches were built in the fifth or sixth century AD and renovated several times 56 A bishop of Cyrene name Rufus attended the Robber Council of Ephesus in 449 and there was still a bishop of Cyrene named Leontius at the time of Patriarch Eulogius of Alexandria 580 607 57 58 The city fell under Arab conquest in 643 At some point thereafter it was abandoned but the ancient name lived on as Grennah in the 19th century 59 Modern history edit The site was totally abandoned in the early modern period Frederick and Richard Beechey visited and produced the first site plans in 1821 1822 The French consul at Benghazi looted part of a tomb later in the century for the Louvre The first systematic excavations were undertaken by Robert Murdoch Smith and E A Porcher between 1860 and 1861 their findings mostly went to the British Museum 60 61 They include the Apollo of Cyrene and a unique bronze head of an African man 62 63 The American Richard Norton began more scientific excavations in 1910 which were halted by the Italian invasion of Libya in 1911 60 The tomb of the excavation s epigrapher Herbert de Cou who was shot in mysterious circumstances is located on the site 64 The Italian colonial government established a military base at the site in 1913 59 In the course of building the base Italian soldiers found the Venus of Cyrene a headless marble statue representing the goddess Venus a Roman copy of a Greek original which prompted them to restrict their base to the Acropolis The statue was transported to Rome where it remained until 2008 when it was returned to Libya 65 The village of Shahat grew up on the site as a result of the Italian presence 59 The Italians created an antiquities service and after the discovery of the Venus of Cyrene carried out excavations at Cyrene on a very large scale which were closely connected with the regime s propaganda The Italian archaeologists were expelled in 1943 when the Allies captured Cyrenaica 60 Richard Goodchild controller of antiquities from 1955 to 1966 moved the village of Shahat off the site and re established it to the south it has since expanded over much of the southern necropolis 59 He also restored control of excavations at the site to the Italians under Sandro Stucchi it Goodchild also The Italian mission has excavated much of the site and restored several buildings through the process of anastylosis 66 The site was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1982 67 Beginning in 2006 the Global Heritage Fund in partnership with the Second University of Naples SUN Italy the Libyan Department of Antiquities and the Libyan Ministry of Culture worked to preserve the ancient site through a combination of holistic conservation practices and training of local skilled and unskilled labor The GHF led team conducted ongoing emergency conservation on the theater inside the Sanctuary of Apollo 68 In 2017 UNESCO added Cyrene to its List of World Heritage in Danger 69 Archaeological site editCyrene is now an archaeological site north of the village of Shahhat and east of Bayda on a ridge of the Jabal Akhdar about 600 metres above sea level The southern edge of the ridge and the city is formed by the Wadi Bil Ghadir and the northern edge by the Wadi Bu Turqiyah The Acropolis at the western edge of the ridge was the original centre of Greek occupation From there a road referred to by modern scholars as the Street of Battus or Skyrota runs along the ridge to the southeast for around 1 kilometre past the Agora the House of Jason Magnus and a number of other palatial residences the Stoa of Hermes and Heracles the Caesareum two theatres a sacred area and the caravanserai until it reaches the gates of the city Below the Acropolis to the north the Springs of Apollo and Cyra emerge from the cliff face onto a triangular plateau at the base of the Wadi Bu Turqiyah This plateau contains the Greek Theatre the Sanctuary of Apollo and the Baths of Trajan From the sanctuary a road known as Valley Street leads southeast up the Wadi Bu Turqiyah roughly parallel to the Street of Battus lined by a stepped portico and the Aqua Augusta past the Baths of Paris to the Market Theatre and the Central Quarter which contains several public buildings and palatial residences To the northeast on another ridge but still inside the city walls is the largely unexcavated northeastern quarter containing the Temple of Zeus the hippodrome and the East Church Outside the city walls to the south is the Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone The necropolis of Cyrene covers about 20 km to the south and north of the city 70 Archaeological finds are stored and displayed in a temporary museum in the eastern portion of the site In 2005 Italian archaeologists from the University of Urbino discovered 76 intact Roman statues at Cyrene from the 2nd century AD The statues remained undiscovered for so long because during the earthquake of 375 AD a supporting wall of the temple fell on its side burying all the statues They remained hidden under stone rubble and earth for 1 630 years The other walls sheltered the statues so we were able to recover all the pieces even works that had been broken 71 Acropolis edit Agora edit House of Jason Magnus edit Caesareum and Stoa of Hermes and Heracles edit Caravanserai edit Sanctuary of Apollo edit One of its more significant features is the temple of Apollo which was originally constructed as early as 7th century BC Other ancient structures include a temple to Demeter There is a large necropolis approximately 10 km between Cyrene and its ancient port of Apollonia Central Quarter edit Temple of Zeus edit nbsp The reconstructed temple of Zeus seen from the southwest Main article Temple of Zeus Cyrene The Temple of Zeus was the largest ancient Greek temple at Cyrene and one of the largest Greek temples ever built The original Doric octastyle peripteral temple was constructed around 500 480 BC 72 It faced east and stood atop a three stepped crepidoma with a length of 68 3 metres and a width of 30 4 metres 73 making it roughly the same size as the Temple of Zeus at Olympia and the Parthenon at Athens 72 The front porch pronaos was supported by two columns in antis the back porch opisthodomos by three columns in antis The cella was two stories high and two rows of columns divided it into three aisles The external colonnade peripteros has eight columns at the front and rear and seventeen columns on each of the long sides It was destroyed in 115 AD during the Jewish sack of the city Around 172 175 AD it was partially rebuilt as a non peripteral temple Between 185 and 192 AD a colossal cult statue modelled on the Statue of Zeus at Olympia was installed 74 The temple was destroyed once more in 365 AD by an earthquake and then burnt by Christians 75 East Church edit Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone edit Main article Extramural Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone Cyrene The sanctuary to Demeter and Persephone which includes a temple and theater complex is located south of the Wadi Bil Ghadir ravine outside the city walls The Sanctuary comprised structures sprawled out over twenty miles and are divided into three terraces the Lower Middle and Upper Sanctuaries 76 The archaeological remains date from the late seventh century BC to the mid third century AD During the time of this sacred activity at the Sanctuary a voluminous amount of votive material was accumulated in its interior pottery lamps coinage stone sculpture jewellery inscriptions glass as well as bronze and terracotta figurines The pottery excavated at the Sanctuary provides useful evidence concerning both the question of its foundation and type of religious activity 77 Necropolis edit Main article Necropolis of Cyrene nbsp Rock cut tombs in the necropolis of Cyrene The necropolis consists of graves rock cut tombs temple tombs and sarcophagi dating from the sixth century BC until the fifth century AD It covers about 20 km to the south and north of the city making it one of the largest known Greek necropoleis 78 The southern section has been encroached upon by the growing city of Shahat especially after 2013 when many tombs were bulldozed 79 The northern portion is better preserved Several of the tombs of the Roman period have niches for portrait busts of the deceased A common find are statues of the so called Goddess of Death a female bust often faceless depicted in the process of unveiling herself 80 Philosophy editCyrene contributed to the intellectual life of the Greeks through renowned philosophers and mathematicians The School of Cyrene known as the Cyrenaics developed here as a minor Socratic school founded by Aristippus perhaps the friend of Socrates though according to some accounts a grandson of Aristippus with the same name French Neo Epicurean philosopher Michel Onfray has called Cyrene a philosophical Atlantis thanks to its huge importance in the birth and initial development of the ethics of pleasure Notable people editAretaphila of Cyrene noblewoman Arete of Cyrene philosopher Aristippus c 435 c 356 BC philosopher and founder of the Cyrenaic School Carneades Academic skeptic philosopher Callicratidas a general 81 Callimachus 310 305 240 BC poet critic and scholar at the Library of Alexandria Cratisthenes of Cyrene an Olympic winner at chariot race There was a statue of him at Olympia created by Pythagoras 82 Eratosthenes 276 194 BC mathematician geographer astronomer librarian at the Library of Alexandria First to calculate the circumference of the Earth Eugammon fl 6th century BC epic poet Idaeus of Cyrene an ancient Olympic winner at foot race He won at 275 B C 83 84 Lacydes 3rd century BC philosopher Philostephanus Hellenistic writer Ptolemais philosopher of music Simon of Cyrene the man who helped carry the cross of Jesus Synesius c 373 c 414 AD author and bishop of Ptolemais Theodorus c 5th century BC mathematician Theaetetus of Cyrene poetList of bishops edit Known bishops of the town include 57 58 85 86 Saint Luke by tradition Theodoro fl 302 Filo I fl 370 circa Filo II fl 370 circa Rufo fl 449 Leontius fl 600 circa No longer a residential bishopric Cyrene is today listed by the Catholic Church as a titular see 87 88 89 The Greek Orthodox Church has also treated it as a titular see 58 Gallery edit nbsp The Temple of Zeus nbsp The Tomb of Battus nbsp nbsp The Temple of Zeus nbsp The Temple of Apollo nbsp nbsp nbsp The Temple of Apollo nbsp Agora Victory MonumentSee also editCyrenaica Cyrenaics List of Kings of Cyrene Priest of Apollo Cyrene Extramural Sanctuary of Demeter and Persephone at Cyrene LibyaReferences edit 21 World Heritage Sites you have probably never heard of Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 2015 12 03 Retrieved 2018 04 04 a b c Kenrick 2013 p 200 a b Janko Richard 1982 Homer Hesiod and the Hymns Diachronic Development in Epic Diction Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 247 n 38 2957 Kurene Strong s Concordance Boardman John 1968 Bronze Age Greece and Libya The Annual of the British School at Athens 63 41 44 ISSN 0068 2454 JSTOR 30103182 a b Osborne Robin 2009 Greece in the making 1200 469 B C London Routledge p 8 ISBN 978 0 415 46991 3 OCLC 488610565 a b c Rosamilia 2023 p 19 Art and Craft in Archaic Sparta Metropolitan Museum of Art Retrieved 2021 10 16 White Domald 1975 Archaic Cyrene and the Cult of Demeter and Persephone Expedition Magazine Vol 17 no 4 Penn Museum Retrieved 2021 10 16 a b Rosamilia 2023 p 18 Kenrick 2013 p 156 a b c d Rosamilia 2023 p 21 Clayton 2006 pp 195 197 Kenrick 2013 p 2 Kenrick 2013 p 68 a b Rosamilia 2023 p 20 a b c d Kenrick 2013 p 3 Ray John D 2006 Egypt 525 404 B C In Boardman John Hammond N D L Lewis D M Ostwald M eds The Cambridge Ancient History vol IV Persia Greece and the Western Mediterranean c 525 to 479 B C 2nd ed Cambridge University Press p 266 ISBN 0 521 22804 2 Kenrick 2013 p 242 Parejko Ken 2003 Pliny the Elder s Silphium First Recorded Species Extinction Conservation Biology 17 3 925 927 doi 10 1046 j 1523 1739 2003 02067 x JSTOR 3095254 S2CID 84007922 Kenrick 2013 p 4 Kenrick 2013 pp 3 amp 39 a b Rosamilia 2023 p 22 Rosamilia 2023 p 23 Thucydides 1998 Strassler Robert B ed The Peloponnesian War The Landmark Thucydides ed New York Touchstone sec 7 50 Rosamilia 2023 pp 23 24 a b c Rosamilia 2023 p 25 Dobias Lalou Catherine Account of Cyrene about grain supplies Inscriptions of Greek Cyrenaica Retrieved 2023 09 17 a b c Rosamilia 2023 p 26 Diagramma of Ptolemy I Inscriptions of Greek Cyrenaica Retrieved 2023 09 13 Pfeiffer Stefan Griechische und lateinische Inschriften zum Ptolemaerreich und zur romischen Provinz Aegyptus Munster Lit 2015 pp 26 33 a b de Lisle Christopher Mark 2021 Agathokles of Syracuse Sicilian Tyrant and Hellenistic King Oxford Oxford University Press pp 265 267 ISBN 9780198861720 a b c Rosamilia 2023 p 27 Bennett Christopher Magas king of Cyrene Egyptian Royal Genealogy Retrieved 2023 09 13 Bennett Christopher Berenice II Egyptian Royal Genealogy Retrieved 2023 09 13 a b c d Kenrick 2013 p 5 a b Rosamilia 2023 p 28 Grainger 2010 pp 325 amp 327 Holbl 2001 pp 185 186 a b c Rosamilia 2023 p 29 Kenrick 2013 p 259 Will of Ptolemy VIII Euergetes II Inscriptions of Greek Cyrenaica Retrieved 2023 09 13 Plutarch 1931 Bravery of Women Part 2 of 2 De Mulierum Virtutibus Loeb Classical Library edition Plutarch Vol III Retrieved 2008 02 14 a b Rosamilia 2023 p 30 a b c d Kenrick 2013 p 6 Mark 15 21 and parallels Acts 2 10 11 20 Cassius Dio lxviii 32 a b c Kenrick 2013 p 149 Kenrick 2013 pp 6 amp 163 a b c Kenrick 2013 p 7 Kenrick 2013 pp 149 amp 154 Martyrologium Romanum Typographia Vaticana 2001 ISBN 978 88 209 7210 3 Kenrick 2013 pp 7 amp 150 Kenrick 2013 p 8 Kenrick 2013 pp 150 188 225 226 a b Michel Le Quien 1740 Oriens christianus in quatuor Patriarchatus digestus Vol II Paris Typographia Regia pp 621 624 via Internet Archive Via Google Books a b c Raymond Janin v Cyrene in Dictionnaire d Histoire et de Geographie ecclesiastiques vol XIII Paris 1956 coll 1162 1164 a b c d Kenrick 2013 p 151 a b c Kenrick 2013 p 15 Person organisation Sir Robert Murdoch Smith Search for Robert Murdoch Smith British Museum Collection Retrieved 2023 09 14 Colossal marble statue of Apollo British Museum Highlights Archived from the original on 2015 10 18 Retrieved 2016 07 22 Bronze portrait of a man British Museum Highlights Archived from the original on 2015 10 18 Retrieved 2016 07 22 Kenrick 2013 p 237 Alessandro Chechi Anne Laure Bandle Marc Andre Renold Case Venus of Cyrene Italy and Libya Platform ArThemis Art Law Centre University of Geneva Archived from the original on 2013 12 13 Retrieved 2013 12 09 Kenrick 2013 p 16 Archaeological Site of Cyrene UNESCO World Heritage Centre Cyrene Libya Where We Work Global Heritage Fund GHF Archived from the original on 2009 04 09 Retrieved 2009 04 27 Archaeological Site of Cyrene Libya UNESCO Archived from the original on 2017 10 22 Retrieved 2017 10 21 Kenrick 2013 pp 148 254 Interview with archaeologist Mario Luni The Art Newspaper Archived from the original on 2011 05 14 Retrieved 2009 05 22 a b Kenrick 2013 p 222 Dinsmoor 1950 p 86 Goodchild Reynolds amp Herington 1958 p 51 61 Goodchild Reynolds amp Herington 1958 p 39 Cyrenaica Archaeological Project Cyrenacica org Archived from the original on 2013 01 21 Retrieved 2014 11 19 Mediterranean and Near Eastern Fieldwork at Penn Sas upenn edu Retrieved 2014 11 19 Kenrick 2013 p 235 Ancient Libyan Necropolis Bulldozed Archaeology News Network 2013 Archived from the original on 2017 10 21 Retrieved 2023 09 23 Kenrick 2013 p 238 244 245 Polyaenus Strategems 2 27 1 Pausanias Description of Greece Paus 6 18 1 Perseus Encyclopedia Idaeus Pausanias Description of Greece 6 12 2 Pius Bonifacius Gams Series episcoporum Ecclesiae Catholicae Archived 2015 06 26 at the Wayback Machine Leipzig 1931 p 462 Anton Joseph Binterim Suffraganei Colonienses extraordinarii sive de sacrae Coloniensis ecclesiae proepiscopis Archived 2018 01 07 at the Wayback Machine Magonza 1843 Annuario Pontificio 2013 Libreria Editrice Vaticana 2013 ISBN 978 88 209 9070 1 p 870 Titular Episcopal See of Cyrene Libya GCatholic org Archived from the original on 2017 06 17 Retrieved 2023 09 14 Cyrene Titular See Cyrenaea Catholic Hierarchy Archived from the original on 2017 06 25 Retrieved 2023 09 14 Bibliography editAsolati Michele Crisafulli Cristina 2018 Cirene e la Cirenaica in eta greca e romana Roma L Erma di Bretschneider ISBN 9788891317155 Cariddi Lorenzo 2020 Cirene e l acqua ricerche e documenti sulla gestione delle risorse idriche in citta e nella chora Roma L Erma di Bretschneider ISBN 9788891319623 Clayton Peter A 2006 Chronicles of the Pharaohs the reign by reign record of the rulers and dynasties of ancient Egypt Thames amp Hudson ISBN 0 500 28628 0 Dinsmoor William Bell 1950 The Architecture of Ancient Greece An Account of Its Historic Development Biblo amp Tannen Publishers Goodchild Richard George 1971 Kyrene und Apollonia in German Zurich Raggi Goodchild R G Reynolds J M Herington C J 1958 The Temple of Zeus at Cyrene Papers of the British School at Rome 26 30 62 ISSN 0068 2462 JSTOR 40310596 Grainger John D 2010 The Syrian Wars ISBN 9789004180505 Holbl Gunther 2001 A History of the Ptolemaic Empire London amp New York Routledge pp 143 152 amp 181 194 ISBN 0415201454 Kenrick Philip 2013 Cyrenaica Libya Archaeological Guides Vol 2 Silphium Press ISBN 978 1 900971 14 0 Laronde Andre 1987 Cyrene et la Libye hellenistique Libykai Historiai de l epoque republicaine au principat d Auguste Editions du Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique Luni Mario 2014 La scoperta di Cirene un secolo di scavi 1913 2013 Roma L Erma di Bretschneider ISBN 9788891306425 Poli Fabrice Vottero Guy De Cyrene a Catherine trois mille ans de libyennes Nancy ADRA 2005 464p Rosamilia Emilio 2023 La citta del silfio Istituzioni culti ed economia di Cirene classica ed ellenistica attraverso le fonti epigrafiche in Italian Pisa Scuola Normale Superiore ISBN 9788876427367 Rosenbaum Elizabeth Ward Perkins John 1980 Justinianic mosaic pavements in Cyrenaican Churches Rome Bretschneider ISBN 9788891323729 Sachs Gerd 2019 Alt Thera und Kyrene zwei verwandte griechische Stadte Mythos Geschichte Kultur Antiquitates vol 71 Hamburg Verlag Dr Kovac ISBN 978 3 339 10636 0 Stucchi Sandro 1976 Architettura cirenaica Rome Bretschneider ISBN 887062448X Thorn James Copland 2005 The Necropolis of Cyrene two hundred years of exploration Roma L Erma di Bretschneider ISBN 9788882653392 Excavation reportsStucchi Sandro 1965 L Agora di Cirene I I lati nord ed est della platea inferiore in Italian L Erma di Bretchneider ISBN 9788870624472 Bacchielli Lidiano 1981 L Agora di Cirene II 1 L area settentrionale del lato ovest della platea inferiore F Martelli Roma Bretschneider ISBN 9788870625028 Purcaro Valeria 2001 L Agora di Cirene II 3 L area meridionale del lato ovest dell agora Valeria Purcaro Roma Bretschneider ISBN 9788882651169 Bacchielli Lidiano Stucchi Sandro 1983 L Agora di Cirene II 4 Il lato sud della platea inferiore e il lato nord della terrazza superiore Sandro Stucchi Lidiano Bacchielli Con contributi di G Lepore Roma Bretschneider ISBN 9788870625387 Ermeti Anna Lia Bacchielli Lidiano 1981 L Agora di Cirene III 1 Il monumento navale Anna Lia Ermeti Allegati Roma L Erma di Bretschneider ISBN 9788870625035 Mingazzini Paolino 1966 L insula di Giasone Magno a Cirene Rome Bretschneider ISBN 8870623742 Santucci Anna Micheli Maria Elisa 2000 Il santuario delle nymphai chthoniai a Cirene il sito e le terrecotte Roma L Erma di Bretschneider ISBN 9788882650759 Ghislanzoni Ettore 1916 Gli scavi delle terme romane a Cirene in Italian Alfieri Pernier Luigi 1935 Il tempio e l altare di Apollo a Cirene scavi e studi dal 1925 al 1934 in Italian Istituto Italiano dArti Grafiche External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cyrene Cyrene project summary at Global Heritage Fund Explore Cyrene with Google Earth on Global Heritage Network Cyrene and the Cyrenaica by Jona Lendering University of Pennsylvania Museum excavations at Cyrene Dobias Lalou Catherine Bencivenni Alice Berthelot Hugues Antolini Simona Marengo Silvia Maria Rosamilia Emilio Reynolds Joyce Roueche Charlotte Home Inscriptions of Greek Cyrenaica and Greek Verse Inscriptions of Cyrenaica Retrieved 2023 09 14 Reynolds Joyce Roueche Charlotte Bodard Gabriel Dobias Lalou Catherine IRCyr Inscriptions of Roman Cyrenaica ircyr2020 inslib kcl ac uk Retrieved 2023 09 14 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cyrene Libya amp oldid 1217990890, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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