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Dipylon

The Dipylon (Greek: Δίπυλον, "Two-Gated") was the main gate in the city wall of Classical Athens. Located in the modern suburb of Kerameikos, it led to the namesake ancient cemetery, and to the roads connecting Athens with the rest of Greece. The gate was of major ceremonial significance as the starting point of the procession of the Great Panathenaea, and accordingly it was a large, monumental structure, "the largest gate of the ancient world". Erected in 478 BC as part of Themistocles' fortification of Athens and rebuilt in the 300s BC, it remained standing and in use until the 3rd century AD.

The remains of the Dipylon Gate today

History edit

The Dipylon gate was built, along with the neighbouring Sacred Gate, in 478 BC as part of Themistocles' fortification of Athens following the Persian Wars. The new circuit was much wider than the old one that was destroyed by the Persians, and many of the graves and monuments of the already existing Kerameikos cemetery were used in its construction, a fact which earned Themistocles the hostility of many Athenians whose relatives' tombs were despoiled.[1] During the Peace of Nicias (421–416 BC), the wall was complemented by a moat and a secondary wall (proteichisma).[2] The construction of the Pompeion in the empty space between the Dipylon and Sacred Gate began shortly after, but was not completed until the next century.[3] The Themistoclean Wall was torn down after the Athenian defeat in the Peloponnesian War in 404 BC,[2] but in 394 BC, with the help of Persian funds, the Athenian statesman Conon restored it.[4]

 
The ruins of the Pompeion

The gate was not only the principal gate for the city's communication with the rest of Greece—with roads leading both north to Boeotia and south to the Peloponnese,[5] but also played an important part in the city's rituals, as the starting point (along with the adjacent Pompeion) of the ceremonial procession to the Acropolis of Athens during the Great Panathenaea.[6] Outside the gate lay the Kerameikos cemetery and specifically the Demosion Sema, the state cemetery where the city buried its most honoured citizens.[6] According to the 2nd-century AD writer Lucian, the walls of the gate were written over with graffiti such as love messages.[5]

In its original state, it comprised a set of double gates set further back from the line of the walls, so that a square court was created that, covered by the walls and four towers set in its corners, served as a killing ground against attackers.[6] The gate received its name in the 3rd century BC; before that—possibly in combination with the nearby Sacred Gate—it was known as the Thriasian Gates (Θριάσιαι Πύλαι), as it led to the Thriasian Plain.[6] Repairs to the fortifications in the Kerameikos were carried out under Demosthenes after the Battle of Chaeronea in 338 BC, but the wall and the Dipylon suffered heavy damage in an earthquake in subsequent years, so that they were rebuilt, following the original outline, in c. 307/4 BC, when Athens was under the control of Demetrios Poliorketes.[7] In 267–262 BC, Athens participated in the unsuccessful Chremonidean War against Macedon; lead tablets with the mark and price of horses and their owners that date to this period, probably a record of the Athenian cavalry, have been found in a well at the Dipylon.[8]

In 200 BC, however, when Philip V of Macedon attacked Athens, the fortifications of the Dipylon helped the Athenians fend off the Macedonian king.[9] In late Hellenistic times, a second wall with a double gate was added at the outer side of the court, thus creating a fully walled-off enclosure.[10] The walls could not hold off the Roman general Sulla, however, who in 86 BC sacked the city. Plutarch reports that the slaughter in the city was so great, that "blood flowed through the gate and flooded the suburb".[11] The wall was repaired soon after, so that the city was able to withstand the attacks of Quintus Fufius Calenus in 48 BC.[12] In the Roman Imperial period, the city experienced a revival, and potters and metalworkers settled in the buildings around the Dipylon.[13] During the long Pax Romana, the walls were allowed to fall into disrepair. With the onset of the barbarian invasions in the 3rd century, Emperor Valerian (r. 253–260) restored the city wall, but this was not enough to prevent the sack of Athens by the Heruli in 267.[14] In its aftermath, the city contracted to a small fortified core around the Acropolis of Athens, but gradually recovered and expanded again during Late Antiquity, so that Emperor Justinian I (r. 527–565) restored the Themosticlean Wall. Shortly after, however, the Slavic invasions began, and the Dipylon and the entire area were abandoned, fell quickly into ruin, and were buried.[15]

Archaeological excavations in the Kerameikos area began by the Greek Archaeological Society in 1870, under St. Koumanoudis. At the time, the site was covered by up to 8 m of soil.[16] Since 1913, excavations in the area have been conducted by the German Archaeological Institute at Athens.[16]

Layout and description edit

 
Layout of the gate complex of Kerameikos in c. 300BC, including the Dipylon, the Sacred Gate, and the Pompeion

The Dipylon was the "largest gate of the ancient world", with a surface of c. 1,800 square metres (19,000 sq ft).[6] Its extraordinary size points to its use not only as a city gate, but also its ceremonial significance and monumental role as the starting point of the Panathenaic procession.[17]

Themistoclean structure edit

The original, Themistoclean-era gate largely established the final shape of the structure and covered the same area as the Hellenistic structure, and was built of clay bricks on top of a pedestal of Poros limestone blocks.[18] Its general shape resembles a right-angled trapezoid, with the gates located on the cityward, right-angled lateral side. The bases were of unequal length, with the southern one projecting a bit. Square towers were located at each corner of the trapezoid.[18]

Archaeological evidence shows traces of later repairs, possibly under Conon, when the pedestal was covered with flat limestone blocks.[18] Parts of the Themistoclean wall are preserved only between the northwestern and southwestern towers,[19] but the towers themselves preserved several Archaic-period funeral monuments that were used as spolia during their construction, and were recovered by archaeologists.[20] The existence of two gates in the wall already during the Themistoclean phase is confirmed by preserved cart grooves; the southern gate is also crossed by a broad canal, which went parallel to the southern wall and then turned south, probably joining the Eridanos river nearby.[20]

Hellenistic structure edit

The Hellenistic gate complex was an altogether more massive and elaborate affair, being built of large finely hewn ashlar blocks, comprising a breccia core and covered with fine Piraeus sandstone slabs.[21] Apart from the north-eastern landward tower, the cores of the others survive to some height even today; originally they were probably covered with a tiled roof.[21] The curtain wall connecting them, originally 9 metres (30 ft) high and 4 metres (13 ft) thick and crowned with crenelations, some of which survive on the southern wall.[21] Access to both the walls and the towers was through staircases, one of which survives behind the cityward southeastern tower.[21] The northern cityward gate is still visible, but the southern one has been destroyed through the construction of a modern canal. However, the remains of the gate frames show that the gates were rectangular, in contrast to the second set of gates added in the late Hellenistic period, which were surmounted by marble apses. The pedestal of the central pier of the later set was built of marble spolia; in front of it, facing outward from the city, is a square marble pedestal, which may have hosted an equestrian statue of a Roman emperor or general.[22]

Well house edit

Just after the cityward gate, on the eastern side, between the gate and the stairway leading up to the wall, are the remnants of a well house, which was supplied with fresh water through underground aqueducts. The present structure was probably erected during the gate's reconstruction in 307/4 BC, but likely also had a Themistoclean antecedent, of which two pipes and a few Ionic column bases survive.[23] The structure was rectangular, divided into an L-shaped basin with low walls into which water flowed, and a small entrance hall that was supported by three Ionic columns. The entrance was between the second and third column. The floor, which largely survives, was built of marble slabs from Hymettus.[24]

Proteichisma edit

The proteichisma (προτείχισμα, "fore-wall"), which includes a wall as well as a moat in front of it, was erected during the Peloponnesian War, most likely as part of the repairs to the walls following an earthquake in 420 BC. They were extensively rebuilt under Conon, and again under Demetrios Poliorketes in the late 4th century.[25] Traces of the proteichisma survive particularly intact in the Kerameikos area,[25] including remnants of 4th-century BC pitfall traps against siege engines, consisting of 2 metres (6.6 ft) high pithoi let into the ground.[26]

The proteichisma comprised an 8 metres (26 ft)–high wall, placed some 6 metres (20 ft) in front of the main wall. As the ground sloped heavily between the two walls, the space had to be filled in, thus creating a flat surface that served as a ring road, that in the 4th century ran around the entire circuit of the wall and was used to connect the various quarters of the city. Following the reconstruction of the walls in 307/4 BC, however, this ceased to be the case, as the proteichisma received a roofed chemin de ronde, blocking the road.[27] The late 4th-century BC proteichisma was built of fine ashlar breccia masonry.[25]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Knigge 1988, pp. 35–36, 72.
  2. ^ a b Knigge 1988, p. 36.
  3. ^ Knigge 1988, pp. 36, 39.
  4. ^ Knigge 1988, p. 39.
  5. ^ a b Knigge 1988, p. 69.
  6. ^ a b c d e Knigge 1988, p. 68.
  7. ^ Knigge 1988, pp. 40, 50, 69.
  8. ^ Knigge 1988, pp. 42–44.
  9. ^ Knigge 1988, pp. 71–72.
  10. ^ Knigge 1988, pp. 69–70.
  11. ^ Knigge 1988, p. 44.
  12. ^ Knigge 1988, p. 50.
  13. ^ Knigge 1988, pp. 45–46.
  14. ^ Knigge 1988, pp. 46, 50–51.
  15. ^ Knigge 1988, pp. 46, 72.
  16. ^ a b Knigge 1988, p. 166.
  17. ^ Knigge 1988, pp. 68–69.
  18. ^ a b c Knigge 1988, p. 72.
  19. ^ Knigge 1988, pp. 72–73.
  20. ^ a b Knigge 1988, p. 73.
  21. ^ a b c d Knigge 1988, p. 70.
  22. ^ Knigge 1988, pp. 70–71.
  23. ^ Knigge 1988, pp. 73–74.
  24. ^ Knigge 1988, p. 75.
  25. ^ a b c Knigge 1988, p. 76.
  26. ^ Knigge 1988, pp. 78–79.
  27. ^ Knigge 1988, pp. 76–77.

Sources edit

  • Knigge, Ursula (1988). Der Kerameikos von Athen. Führung durch Ausgrabungen und Geschichte [The Kerameikos of Athens. Tour through Excavations and History] (in German). Krene Verlag.

External links edit

  • 3d reconstruction of the city wall in the Keremikos area, by Ancient Athens 3D

dipylon, greek, Δίπυλον, gated, main, gate, city, wall, classical, athens, located, modern, suburb, kerameikos, namesake, ancient, cemetery, roads, connecting, athens, with, rest, greece, gate, major, ceremonial, significance, starting, point, procession, grea. The Dipylon Greek Dipylon Two Gated was the main gate in the city wall of Classical Athens Located in the modern suburb of Kerameikos it led to the namesake ancient cemetery and to the roads connecting Athens with the rest of Greece The gate was of major ceremonial significance as the starting point of the procession of the Great Panathenaea and accordingly it was a large monumental structure the largest gate of the ancient world Erected in 478 BC as part of Themistocles fortification of Athens and rebuilt in the 300s BC it remained standing and in use until the 3rd century AD The remains of the Dipylon Gate today Contents 1 History 2 Layout and description 2 1 Themistoclean structure 2 2 Hellenistic structure 2 3 Well house 2 4 Proteichisma 3 See also 4 References 5 Sources 6 External linksHistory editThe Dipylon gate was built along with the neighbouring Sacred Gate in 478 BC as part of Themistocles fortification of Athens following the Persian Wars The new circuit was much wider than the old one that was destroyed by the Persians and many of the graves and monuments of the already existing Kerameikos cemetery were used in its construction a fact which earned Themistocles the hostility of many Athenians whose relatives tombs were despoiled 1 During the Peace of Nicias 421 416 BC the wall was complemented by a moat and a secondary wall proteichisma 2 The construction of the Pompeion in the empty space between the Dipylon and Sacred Gate began shortly after but was not completed until the next century 3 The Themistoclean Wall was torn down after the Athenian defeat in the Peloponnesian War in 404 BC 2 but in 394 BC with the help of Persian funds the Athenian statesman Conon restored it 4 nbsp The ruins of the PompeionThe gate was not only the principal gate for the city s communication with the rest of Greece with roads leading both north to Boeotia and south to the Peloponnese 5 but also played an important part in the city s rituals as the starting point along with the adjacent Pompeion of the ceremonial procession to the Acropolis of Athens during the Great Panathenaea 6 Outside the gate lay the Kerameikos cemetery and specifically the Demosion Sema the state cemetery where the city buried its most honoured citizens 6 According to the 2nd century AD writer Lucian the walls of the gate were written over with graffiti such as love messages 5 In its original state it comprised a set of double gates set further back from the line of the walls so that a square court was created that covered by the walls and four towers set in its corners served as a killing ground against attackers 6 The gate received its name in the 3rd century BC before that possibly in combination with the nearby Sacred Gate it was known as the Thriasian Gates 8riasiai Pylai as it led to the Thriasian Plain 6 Repairs to the fortifications in the Kerameikos were carried out under Demosthenes after the Battle of Chaeronea in 338 BC but the wall and the Dipylon suffered heavy damage in an earthquake in subsequent years so that they were rebuilt following the original outline in c 307 4 BC when Athens was under the control of Demetrios Poliorketes 7 In 267 262 BC Athens participated in the unsuccessful Chremonidean War against Macedon lead tablets with the mark and price of horses and their owners that date to this period probably a record of the Athenian cavalry have been found in a well at the Dipylon 8 In 200 BC however when Philip V of Macedon attacked Athens the fortifications of the Dipylon helped the Athenians fend off the Macedonian king 9 In late Hellenistic times a second wall with a double gate was added at the outer side of the court thus creating a fully walled off enclosure 10 The walls could not hold off the Roman general Sulla however who in 86 BC sacked the city Plutarch reports that the slaughter in the city was so great that blood flowed through the gate and flooded the suburb 11 The wall was repaired soon after so that the city was able to withstand the attacks of Quintus Fufius Calenus in 48 BC 12 In the Roman Imperial period the city experienced a revival and potters and metalworkers settled in the buildings around the Dipylon 13 During the long Pax Romana the walls were allowed to fall into disrepair With the onset of the barbarian invasions in the 3rd century Emperor Valerian r 253 260 restored the city wall but this was not enough to prevent the sack of Athens by the Heruli in 267 14 In its aftermath the city contracted to a small fortified core around the Acropolis of Athens but gradually recovered and expanded again during Late Antiquity so that Emperor Justinian I r 527 565 restored the Themosticlean Wall Shortly after however the Slavic invasions began and the Dipylon and the entire area were abandoned fell quickly into ruin and were buried 15 Archaeological excavations in the Kerameikos area began by the Greek Archaeological Society in 1870 under St Koumanoudis At the time the site was covered by up to 8 m of soil 16 Since 1913 excavations in the area have been conducted by the German Archaeological Institute at Athens 16 Layout and description edit nbsp Layout of the gate complex of Kerameikos in c 300BC including the Dipylon the Sacred Gate and the PompeionThe Dipylon was the largest gate of the ancient world with a surface of c 1 800 square metres 19 000 sq ft 6 Its extraordinary size points to its use not only as a city gate but also its ceremonial significance and monumental role as the starting point of the Panathenaic procession 17 Themistoclean structure edit The original Themistoclean era gate largely established the final shape of the structure and covered the same area as the Hellenistic structure and was built of clay bricks on top of a pedestal of Poros limestone blocks 18 Its general shape resembles a right angled trapezoid with the gates located on the cityward right angled lateral side The bases were of unequal length with the southern one projecting a bit Square towers were located at each corner of the trapezoid 18 Archaeological evidence shows traces of later repairs possibly under Conon when the pedestal was covered with flat limestone blocks 18 Parts of the Themistoclean wall are preserved only between the northwestern and southwestern towers 19 but the towers themselves preserved several Archaic period funeral monuments that were used as spolia during their construction and were recovered by archaeologists 20 The existence of two gates in the wall already during the Themistoclean phase is confirmed by preserved cart grooves the southern gate is also crossed by a broad canal which went parallel to the southern wall and then turned south probably joining the Eridanos river nearby 20 Hellenistic structure edit The Hellenistic gate complex was an altogether more massive and elaborate affair being built of large finely hewn ashlar blocks comprising a breccia core and covered with fine Piraeus sandstone slabs 21 Apart from the north eastern landward tower the cores of the others survive to some height even today originally they were probably covered with a tiled roof 21 The curtain wall connecting them originally 9 metres 30 ft high and 4 metres 13 ft thick and crowned with crenelations some of which survive on the southern wall 21 Access to both the walls and the towers was through staircases one of which survives behind the cityward southeastern tower 21 The northern cityward gate is still visible but the southern one has been destroyed through the construction of a modern canal However the remains of the gate frames show that the gates were rectangular in contrast to the second set of gates added in the late Hellenistic period which were surmounted by marble apses The pedestal of the central pier of the later set was built of marble spolia in front of it facing outward from the city is a square marble pedestal which may have hosted an equestrian statue of a Roman emperor or general 22 Well house edit Just after the cityward gate on the eastern side between the gate and the stairway leading up to the wall are the remnants of a well house which was supplied with fresh water through underground aqueducts The present structure was probably erected during the gate s reconstruction in 307 4 BC but likely also had a Themistoclean antecedent of which two pipes and a few Ionic column bases survive 23 The structure was rectangular divided into an L shaped basin with low walls into which water flowed and a small entrance hall that was supported by three Ionic columns The entrance was between the second and third column The floor which largely survives was built of marble slabs from Hymettus 24 Proteichisma edit The proteichisma proteixisma fore wall which includes a wall as well as a moat in front of it was erected during the Peloponnesian War most likely as part of the repairs to the walls following an earthquake in 420 BC They were extensively rebuilt under Conon and again under Demetrios Poliorketes in the late 4th century 25 Traces of the proteichisma survive particularly intact in the Kerameikos area 25 including remnants of 4th century BC pitfall traps against siege engines consisting of 2 metres 6 6 ft high pithoi let into the ground 26 The proteichisma comprised an 8 metres 26 ft high wall placed some 6 metres 20 ft in front of the main wall As the ground sloped heavily between the two walls the space had to be filled in thus creating a flat surface that served as a ring road that in the 4th century ran around the entire circuit of the wall and was used to connect the various quarters of the city Following the reconstruction of the walls in 307 4 BC however this ceased to be the case as the proteichisma received a roofed chemin de ronde blocking the road 27 The late 4th century BC proteichisma was built of fine ashlar breccia masonry 25 See also editDipylon Master Funerary naiskos of AristonautesReferences edit Knigge 1988 pp 35 36 72 a b Knigge 1988 p 36 Knigge 1988 pp 36 39 Knigge 1988 p 39 a b Knigge 1988 p 69 a b c d e Knigge 1988 p 68 Knigge 1988 pp 40 50 69 Knigge 1988 pp 42 44 Knigge 1988 pp 71 72 Knigge 1988 pp 69 70 Knigge 1988 p 44 Knigge 1988 p 50 Knigge 1988 pp 45 46 Knigge 1988 pp 46 50 51 Knigge 1988 pp 46 72 a b Knigge 1988 p 166 Knigge 1988 pp 68 69 a b c Knigge 1988 p 72 Knigge 1988 pp 72 73 a b Knigge 1988 p 73 a b c d Knigge 1988 p 70 Knigge 1988 pp 70 71 Knigge 1988 pp 73 74 Knigge 1988 p 75 a b c Knigge 1988 p 76 Knigge 1988 pp 78 79 Knigge 1988 pp 76 77 Sources editKnigge Ursula 1988 Der Kerameikos von Athen Fuhrung durch Ausgrabungen und Geschichte The Kerameikos of Athens Tour through Excavations and History in German Krene Verlag External links edit3d reconstruction of the city wall in the Keremikos area by Ancient Athens 3D Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dipylon amp oldid 1137692103, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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