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Parthenon

The Parthenon (/ˈpɑːrθəˌnɒn, -nən/; Ancient Greek: Παρθενών, Parthenṓn, [par.tʰe.nɔ̌ːn]; Greek: Παρθενώνας, Parthenónas, [parθeˈnonas]) is a former temple[6][7] on the Athenian Acropolis, Greece, that was dedicated to the goddess Athena during the fifth century BC. Its decorative sculptures are considered some of the high points of Greek art, an enduring symbol of Ancient Greece, democracy and Western civilization.[8][9]

Parthenon
Παρθενώνας
The Parthenon in 1978
General information
TypeTemple
Architectural styleClassical
LocationAthens, Greece
Coordinates37°58′17″N 23°43′36″E / 37.9715°N 23.7266°E / 37.9715; 23.7266
Construction started447 BC[1][2]
Completed432 BC[1][2]
DestroyedPartially on 26 September 1687
Height13.72 m (45.0 ft)[3]
Dimensions
Other dimensionsCella: 29.8 by 19.2 m (98 by 63 ft)
Technical details
MaterialPentelic Marble[4]
Size69.5 by 30.9 m (228 by 101 ft)
Floor area73 by 34 m (240 by 112 ft)[5]
Design and construction
Architect(s)Iktinos, Callicrates
Other designersPhidias (sculptor)

The Parthenon was built in thanksgiving for the Hellenic victory over Persian invaders during the Greco-Persian Wars.[10] Like most Greek temples, the Parthenon also served as the city treasury.[11][12]

Construction started in 447 BC when the Delian League was at the peak of its power. It was completed in 438; work on the decoration continued until 432. For a time, it served as the treasury of the Delian League, which later became the Athenian Empire. In the final decade of the 6th century AD, the Parthenon was converted into a Christian church dedicated to the Virgin Mary. After the Ottoman conquest in the mid-fifteenth century, it became a mosque. In the Morean War, a Venetian bomb landed on the Parthenon, which the Ottomans had used as a munitions dump, during the 1687 siege of the Acropolis. The resulting explosion severely damaged the Parthenon. From 1800 to 1803,[13] the 7th Earl of Elgin took down some of the surviving sculptures, now known as the Elgin Marbles, in an act widely considered, both in its time and subsequently, to constitute vandalism and looting.[14]

The Parthenon replaced an older temple of Athena, which historians call the Pre-Parthenon or Older Parthenon, that was demolished in the Persian invasion of 480 BC.

Since 1975, numerous large-scale restoration projects have been undertaken to preserve remaining artefacts and ensure its structural integrity.[15][16]

Etymology

The origin of the word "Parthenon" comes from the Greek word parthénos (παρθένος), meaning "maiden, girl" as well as "virgin, unmarried woman." The Liddell–Scott–Jones Greek–English Lexicon states that it may have referred to the "unmarried women's apartments" in a house, but that in the Parthenon it seems to have been used for a particular room of the temple.[17] There is some debate as to which room that was. The lexicon states that this room was the western cella of the Parthenon. This has also been suggested by J.B. Bury.[10] Jamauri D. Green claims that the Parthenon was the room where the arrephoroi, a group of four young girls chosen to serve Athena each year, wove a peplos that was presented to Athena during Panathenaic Festivals.[18] Christopher Pelling asserts that the name "Parthenon" means the "temple of the virgin goddess," referring to the cult of Athena Parthenos that was associated with the temple.[19] It has also been suggested that the name of the temple alludes to the maidens (parthénoi), whose supreme sacrifice guaranteed the safety of the city.[20] In that case, the room originally known as the Parthenon could have been a part of the temple known today as the Erechtheion.[21]

In 5th-century BC accounts of the building, the structure is simply called ὁ νᾱός (ho naos; lit. "the temple"). Douglas Frame writes that the name "Parthenon" was a nickname related to the statue of Athena Parthenos, and only appeared a century after construction. He contends that "Athena’s temple was never officially called the Parthenon and she herself most likely never had the cult title parthénos."[22] The ancient architects Iktinos and Callicrates appear to have called the building Ἑκατόμπεδος (Hekatómpedos; lit. "the hundred footer") in their lost treatise on Athenian architecture.[23] Harpocration wrote that some people used to call the Parthenon the "Hekatompedos," not due to its size but because of its beauty and fine proportions.[23] The first instance in which Parthenon definitely refers to the entire building comes from the fourth century BC orator Demosthenes.[citation needed] In the 4th century BC and later, the building was referred to as the Hekatompedos or the Hekatompedon as well as the Parthenon. Plutarch referred to the building during the first century AD as the Hekatompedos Parthenon.[24]

A 2020 study by Janric van Rookhuijzen supports the idea that the building known today as the Parthenon was originally called the Hekatompedon. Based on literary and historical research, he proposes that "the treasury called the Parthenon should be recognized as the west part of the building now conventionally known as the Erechtheion."[25][26]

Because the Parthenon was dedicated to the Greek goddess Athena it has sometimes been referred to as the Temple of Minerva, the Roman name for Athena, particularly during the 19th century.[27]

Parthénos was also applied to the Virgin Mary (Parthénos Maria) when the Parthenon was converted to a Christian church dedicated to the Virgin Mary in the final decade of the 6th century.[28]

Function

 
The Doric order of the Parthenon

Although the Parthenon is architecturally a temple and is usually called so, some scholars have argued that it is not really a temple in the conventional sense of the word.[29] A small shrine has been excavated within the building, on the site of an older sanctuary probably dedicated to Athena as a way to get closer to the goddess,[29] but the Parthenon apparently never hosted the official cult of Athena Polias, patron of Athens. The cult image of Athena Polias, which was bathed in the sea and to which was presented the peplos, was an olive-wood xoanon, located in another temple on the northern side of the Acropolis, more closely associated with the Great Altar of Athena.[30]

The colossal statue of Athena by Phidias was not specifically related to any cult attested by ancient authors[31] and is not known to have inspired any religious fervour.[30] Preserved ancient sources do not associate it with any priestess, altar or cult name.[32]

According to Thucydides, during the Peloponnesian War when Sparta's forces were first preparing to invade Attica, Pericles, in an address to the Athenian people, said that the statue could be used as a gold reserve if that was necessary to preserve Athens, stressing that it "contained forty talents of pure gold and it was all removable," but adding that the gold would afterward have to be restored.[33] The Athenian statesman thus implies that the metal, obtained from contemporary coinage,[34] could be used again if absolutely necessary without any impiety.[32] According to Aristotle, the building also contained golden figures that he described as "Victories."[35] The classicist Harris Rackham noted that eight of those figures were melted down for coinage during the Peloponnesian War.[36] Other Greek writers have claimed that treasures such as Persian swords were also stored inside the temple.[citation needed] Some scholars, therefore, argue that the Parthenon should be viewed as a grand setting for a monumental votive statue rather than as a cult site.[37]

Archaeologist Joan Breton Connelly has recently argued for the coherency of the Parthenon's sculptural programme in presenting a succession of genealogical narratives that track Athenian identity back through the ages: from the birth of Athena, through cosmic and epic battles, to the final great event of the Athenian Bronze Age, the war of Erechtheus and Eumolpos.[38][39] She argues a pedagogical function for the Parthenon's sculptured decoration, one that establishes and perpetuates Athenian foundation myth, memory, values and identity.[40][41] While some classicists, including Mary Beard, Peter Green, and Garry Wills[42][43] have doubted or rejected Connelly's thesis, an increasing number of historians, archaeologists, and classical scholars support her work. They include: J.J. Pollitt,[44] Brunilde Ridgway,[45] Nigel Spivey,[46] Caroline Alexander,[47] and A. E. Stallings.[48]

Older Parthenon

 
The Older Parthenon (in black) was destroyed by the Achaemenids during the Destruction of Athens in 480–479 BC, and then rebuilt by Pericles (in grey).

The first endeavour to build a sanctuary for Athena Parthenos on the site of the present Parthenon was begun shortly after the Battle of Marathon (c. 490–488 BC) upon a solid limestone foundation that extended and levelled the southern part of the Acropolis summit. This building replaced a Hekatompedon temple ("hundred-footer") and would have stood beside the archaic temple dedicated to Athena Polias ("of the city"). The Older or Pre-Parthenon, as it is frequently referred to, was still under construction when the Persians sacked the city in 480 BC razing the Acropolis.[49][50]

The existence of both the proto-Parthenon and its destruction were known from Herodotus,[51] and the drums of its columns were visible built into the curtain wall north of the Erechtheion. Further physical evidence of this structure was revealed with the excavations of Panagiotis Kavvadias of 1885–90. The findings of this dig allowed Wilhelm Dörpfeld, then director of the German Archaeological Institute, to assert that there existed a distinct substructure to the original Parthenon, called Parthenon I by Dörpfeld, not immediately below the present edifice as previously assumed.[52] Dörpfeld's observation was that the three steps of the first Parthenon consisted of two steps of Poros limestone, the same as the foundations, and a top step of Karrha limestone that was covered by the lowest step of the Periclean Parthenon. This platform was smaller and slightly to the north of the final Parthenon, indicating that it was built for a different building, now completely covered over. This picture was somewhat complicated by the publication of the final report on the 1885–90 excavations, indicating that the substructure was contemporary with the Kimonian walls, and implying a later date for the first temple.[53]

 
Part of the archaeological remains called Perserschutt, or "Persian rubble": remnants of the destruction of Athens by the armies of Xerxes I. Photographed in 1866, just after excavation.

If the original Parthenon was indeed destroyed in 480, it invites the question of why the site was left as a ruin for thirty-three years. One argument involves the oath sworn by the Greek allies before the Battle of Plataea in 479 BC[54] declaring that the sanctuaries destroyed by the Persians would not be rebuilt, an oath from which the Athenians were only absolved with the Peace of Callias in 450.[55] The cost of reconstructing Athens after the Persian sack is at least as likely a cause. The excavations of Bert Hodge Hill led him to propose the existence of a second Parthenon, begun in the period of Kimon after 468.[56] Hill claimed that the Karrha limestone step Dörpfeld thought was the highest of Parthenon I was the lowest of the three steps of Parthenon II, whose stylobate dimensions Hill calculated at 23.51 by 66.888 metres (77.13 ft × 219.45 ft).

One difficulty in dating the proto-Parthenon is that at the time of the 1885 excavation, the archaeological method of seriation was not fully developed; the careless digging and refilling of the site led to a loss of much valuable information. An attempt to make sense of the potsherds found on the Acropolis came with the two-volume study by Graef and Langlotz published in 1925–33.[57] This inspired American archaeologist William Bell Dinsmoor to give limiting dates for the temple platform and the five walls hidden under the re-terracing of the Acropolis. Dinsmoor concluded that the latest possible date for Parthenon I was no earlier than 495 BC, contradicting the early date given by Dörpfeld.[58] He denied that there were two proto-Parthenons, and held that the only pre-Periclean temple was what Dörpfeld referred to as Parthenon II. Dinsmoor and Dörpfeld exchanged views in the American Journal of Archaeology in 1935.[59]

Present building

 
The Parthenon in 2018

In the mid-5th century BC, when the Athenian Acropolis became the seat of the Delian League and Athens was the greatest cultural centre of its time, Pericles initiated an ambitious building project that lasted the entire second half of the century. The most important buildings visible on the Acropolis today – the Parthenon, the Propylaia, the Erechtheion and the temple of Athena Nike – were erected during this period. The Parthenon was built under the general supervision of Phidias, who also had charge of the sculptural decoration. The architects Ictinos and Callicrates began their work in 447, and the building was substantially completed by 432. Work on the decorations continued until at least 431.[citation needed]

The Parthenon was built primarily by men who knew how to work marble. These quarrymen had exceptional skills and were able to cut the blocks of marble to very specific measurements. The quarrymen also knew how to avoid the faults, which were numerous in the Pentelic marble. If the marble blocks were not up to standard, the architects would reject them. The marble was worked with iron tools – picks, points, punches, chisels, and drills. The quarrymen would hold their tools against the marble block and firmly tap the surface of the rock.[60]

A big project like the Parthenon attracted stonemasons from far and wide who travelled to Athens to assist in the project. Slaves and foreigners worked together with the Athenian citizens in the building of the Parthenon, doing the same jobs for the same pay. Temple building was a very specialized craft, and there were not many men in Greece qualified to build temples like the Parthenon, so these men would travel around and work where they were needed.[60]

Other craftsmen were necessary for the building of the Parthenon, specifically carpenters and metalworkers. Unskilled labourers also had key roles in the building of the Parthenon. They loaded and unloaded the marble blocks and moved the blocks from place to place. In order to complete a project like the Parthenon, many different labourers were needed, and each played a critical role in constructing the final building.[60]

Architecture

 
Floor plan of the Parthenon

The Parthenon is a peripteral octastyle Doric temple with Ionic architectural features. It stands on a platform or stylobate of three steps. In common with other Greek temples, it is of post and lintel construction and is surrounded by columns ('peripteral') carrying an entablature. There are eight columns at either end ('octastyle') and seventeen on the sides. There is a double row of columns at either end. The colonnade surrounds an inner masonry structure, the cella, which is divided into two compartments. The opisthodomos (the back room of the cella) contained the monetary contributions of the Delian League. At either end of the building, the gable is finished with a triangular pediment originally occupied by sculpted figures.[citation needed]

The Parthenon has been described as "the culmination of the development of the Doric order."[61] The Doric columns, for example, have simple capitals, fluted shafts, and no bases. Above the architrave of the entablature is a frieze of carved pictorial panels (metopes), separated by formal architectural triglyphs, also typical of the Doric order. The continuous frieze in low relief around the cella and across the lintels of the inner columns, in contrast, reflects the Ionic order. Architectural historian John R. Senseney suggests that this unexpected switch between orders was due to an aesthetic choice on the part of builders during construction, and was likely not part of the original plan of the Parthenon.[62]

Measured at the stylobate, the dimensions of the base of the Parthenon are 69.5 by 30.9 metres (228 by 101 ft). The cella was 29.8 metres long by 19.2 metres wide (97.8 × 63.0 ft). On the exterior, the Doric columns measure 1.9 metres (6.2 ft) in diameter and are 10.4 metres (34 ft) high. The corner columns are slightly larger in diameter. The Parthenon had 46 outer columns and 23 inner columns in total, each column having 20 flutes. (A flute is the concave shaft carved into the column form.) The roof was covered with large overlapping marble tiles known as imbrices and tegulae.[63][64]

The Parthenon is regarded as the finest example of Greek architecture. John Julius Cooper wrote that "even in antiquity, its architectural refinements were legendary, especially the subtle correspondence between the curvature of the stylobate, the taper of the naos walls, and the entasis of the columns."[65] Entasis refers to the slight swelling, of 4 centimetres (1.6 in), in the center of the columns to counteract the appearance of columns having a waist, as the swelling makes them look straight from a distance. The stylobate is the platform on which the columns stand. As in many other classical Greek temples,[66] it has a slight parabolic upward curvature intended to shed rainwater and reinforce the building against earthquakes. The columns might therefore be supposed to lean outward, but they actually lean slightly inward so that if they carried on, they would meet almost exactly 2,400 metres (1.5 mi) above the centre of the Parthenon.[67] Since they are all the same height, the curvature of the outer stylobate edge is transmitted to the architrave and roof above: "All follow the rule of being built to delicate curves", Gorham Stevens observed when pointing out that, in addition, the west front was built at a slightly higher level than that of the east front.[68]

 
The east facade

It is not universally agreed what the intended effect of these "optical refinements" was. They may serve as a sort of "reverse optical illusion."[69] As the Greeks may have been aware, two parallel lines appear to bow, or curve outward, when intersected by converging lines. In this case, the ceiling and floor of the temple may seem to bow in the presence of the surrounding angles of the building. Striving for perfection, the designers may have added these curves, compensating for the illusion by creating their own curves, thus negating this effect and allowing the temple to be seen as they intended. It is also suggested that it was to enliven what might have appeared an inert mass in the case of a building without curves. But the comparison ought to be, according to Smithsonian historian Evan Hadingham, with the Parthenon's more obviously curved predecessors than with a notional rectilinear temple.[70]

Some studies of the Acropolis, including of the Parthenon and its facade, have conjectured that many of its proportions approximate the golden ratio.[71] More recent studies have shown that the proportions of the Parthenon do not match the golden proportion.[72][73]

Sculpture

 
Group from the east pediment, British Museum

The cella of the Parthenon housed the chryselephantine statue of Athena Parthenos sculpted by Phidias and dedicated in 439 or 438 BC. The appearance of this is known from other images. The decorative stonework was originally highly coloured.[74] The temple was dedicated to Athena at that time, though construction continued until almost the beginning of the Peloponnesian War in 432. By the year 438, the Doric metopes on the frieze above the exterior colonnade and the Ionic frieze around the upper portion of the walls of the cella had been completed.[citation needed]

Only a small number of the original sculptures remain in situ. Most of the surviving sculptures are at the Acropolis Museum in Athens and (controversially) at the British Museum in London (see Elgin Marbles). Additional pieces are at the Louvre, the National Museum of Denmark, and museums in Rome, Vienna, and Palermo.[75]

In March 2022, the Acropolis Museum launched a new website with "photographs of all the frieze blocks preserved today in the Acropolis Museum, the British Museum and the Louvre."[76]

Metopes

 
Detail of the West metopes

The frieze of the Parthenon's entablature contained 92 metopes, 14 each on the east and west sides, 32 each on the north and south sides. They were carved in high relief, a practice employed until then only in treasuries (buildings used to keep votive gifts to the gods).[77] According to the building records, the metope sculptures date to the years 446–440. The metopes of the east side of the Parthenon, above the main entrance, depict the Gigantomachy (the mythical battle between the Olympian gods and the Giants). The metopes of the west end show the Amazonomachy (the mythical battle of the Athenians against the Amazons). The metopes of the south side show the Thessalian Centauromachy (battle of the Lapiths aided by Theseus against the half-man, half-horse Centaurs). Metopes 13–21 are missing, but drawings from 1674 attributed to Jaques Carrey indicate a series of humans; these have been variously interpreted as scenes from the Lapith wedding, scenes from the early history of Athens, and various myths.[78] On the north side of the Parthenon, the metopes are poorly preserved, but the subject seems to be the sack of Troy.[citation needed]

The mythological figures of the metopes of the East, North, and West sides of the Parthenon had been deliberately mutilated by Christian iconoclasts in late antiquity.[79]

The metopes present examples of the Severe Style in the anatomy of the figures' heads, in the limitation of the corporal movements to the contours and not to the muscles, and in the presence of pronounced veins in the figures of the Centauromachy. Several of the metopes still remain on the building, but, with the exception of those on the northern side, they are severely damaged. Some of them are located at the Acropolis Museum, others are in the British Museum, and one is at the Louvre museum.[80]

In March 2011, archaeologists announced that they had discovered five metopes of the Parthenon in the south wall of the Acropolis, which had been extended when the Acropolis was used as a fortress. According to Eleftherotypia daily, the archaeologists claimed the metopes had been placed there in the 18th century when the Acropolis wall was being repaired. The experts discovered the metopes while processing 2,250 photos with modern photographic methods, as the white Pentelic marble they are made of differed from the other stone of the wall. It was previously presumed that the missing metopes were destroyed during the Morosini explosion of the Parthenon in 1687.[81]

Frieze

 
Phidias Showing the Frieze of the Parthenon to his Friends, 1868 painting by Lawrence Alma-Tadema

The most characteristic feature in the architecture and decoration of the temple is the Ionic frieze running around the exterior of the cella walls. The bas-relief frieze was carved in situ and is dated to 442–438.[citation needed]

One interpretation is that it depicts an idealized version of the Panathenaic procession from the Dipylon Gate in the Kerameikos to the Acropolis. In this procession held every year, with a special procession taking place every four years, Athenians and foreigners participated in honouring the goddess Athena by offering her sacrifices and a new peplos dress, woven by selected noble Athenian girls called ergastines. The procession is more crowded (appearing to slow in pace) as it nears the gods on the eastern side of the temple.[82]

Joan Breton Connelly offers a mythological interpretation for the frieze, one that is in harmony with the rest of the temple's sculptural programme which shows Athenian genealogy through a series of succession myths set in the remote past. She identifies the central panel above the door of the Parthenon as the pre-battle sacrifice of the daughter of the king Erechtheus, a sacrifice that ensured Athenian victory over Eumolpos and his Thracian army. The great procession marching toward the east end of the Parthenon shows the post-battle thanksgiving sacrifice of cattle and sheep, honey and water, followed by the triumphant army of Erechtheus returning from their victory. This represents the first Panathenaia set in mythical times, the model on which historic Panathenaic processions were based.[83][84]

Pediments

 
Part of the east pediment still found on the Parthenon (although part of it, like Dionysus, is a copy)

Two pediments rise above the portals of the Parthenon, one on the east front, one on the west. The triangular sections once contained massive sculptures that, according to the second-century geographer Pausanias, recounted the birth of Athena and the mythological battle between Athena and Poseidon for control of Athens.[85]

East pediment

The east pediment originally contained 10 to 12 sculptures depicting the Birth of Athena. Most of those pieces were removed and lost during renovations in either the eighth or the twelfth century.[86] Only two corners remain today with figures depicting the passage of time over the course of a full day. Tethrippa of Helios is in the left corner and Selene is on the right. The horses of Helios's chariot are shown with livid expressions as they ascend into the sky at the start of the day. Selene's horses struggle to stay on the pediment scene as the day comes to an end.[87][88]

West pediment

The supporters of Athena are extensively illustrated at the back of the left chariot, while the defenders of Poseidon are shown trailing behind the right chariot. It is believed that the corners of the pediment are filled by Athenian water deities, such as the Kephisos river, the Ilissos river, and nymph Kallirhoe. This belief emerges from the fluid character of the sculptures' body position which represents the effort of the artist to give the impression of a flowing river.[89][90] Next to the left river god, there are the sculptures of the mythical king of Athens (Cecrops or Kekrops) with his daughters ( Aglaurus, Pandrosos, Herse). The statue of Poseidon was the largest sculpture in the pediment until it broke into pieces during Francesco Morosini's effort to remove it in 1688. The posterior piece of the torso was found by Lusieri in the groundwork of a Turkish house in 1801 and is currently held in British Museum. The anterior portion was revealed by Ross in 1835 and is now held in the Acropolis Museum of Athens.[91]

Every statue on the west pediment has a fully completed back, which would have been impossible to see when the sculpture was on the temple; this indicates that the sculptors put great effort into accurately portraying the human body.[90]

Athena Parthenos

The only piece of sculpture from the Parthenon known to be from the hand of Phidias[92] was the statue of Athena housed in the naos. This massive chryselephantine sculpture is now lost and known only from copies, vase painting, gems, literary descriptions and coins.[93]

Later history

Late antiquity

 
The Parthenon's position on the Acropolis dominates the city skyline of Athens.

A major fire broke out in the Parthenon shortly after the middle of the third century AD.[94][95] which destroyed the roof and much of the sanctuary's interior.[96] Heruli pirates sacked Athens in 276, and destroyed most of the public buildings there, including the Parthenon.[97] Repairs were made in the fourth century AD, possibly during the reign of Julian the Apostate.[98] A new wooden roof overlaid with clay tiles was installed to cover the sanctuary. It sloped at a greater angle than the original roof and left the building's wings exposed.[96]

The Parthenon survived as a temple dedicated to Athena for nearly 1,000 years until Theodosius II, during the Persecution of pagans in the late Roman Empire, decreed in 435 that all pagan temples in the Eastern Roman Empire be closed.[99] It is debated exactly when during the 5th century that the closure of the Parthenon as a temple was put into practice. It is suggested to have occurred in c. 481–484, on the order of Emperor Zeno, because the temple had been the focus of Pagan Hellenic opposition against Zeno in Athens in support of Illus, who had promised to restore Hellenic rites to the temples that were still standing.[100]

At some point in the fifth century, Athena's great cult image was looted by one of the emperors and taken to Constantinople, where it was later destroyed, possibly during the siege and sack of Constantinople during the Fourth Crusade in 1204 AD.[101]

Christian church

The Parthenon was converted into a Christian church in the final decades of the fifth century [102] to become the Church of the Parthenos Maria (Virgin Mary) or the Church of the Theotokos (Mother of God). The orientation of the building was changed to face towards the east; the main entrance was placed at the building's western end, and the Christian altar and iconostasis were situated towards the building's eastern side adjacent to an apse built where the temple's pronaos was formerly located.[103][104][105] A large central portal with surrounding side-doors was made in the wall dividing the cella, which became the church's nave, from the rear chamber, the church's narthex.[103] The spaces between the columns of the opisthodomos and the peristyle were walled up, though a number of doorways still permitted access.[103] Icons were painted on the walls, and many Christian inscriptions were carved into the Parthenon's columns.[98] These renovations inevitably led to the removal and dispersal of some of the sculptures.

The Parthenon became the fourth most important Christian pilgrimage destination in the Eastern Roman Empire after Constantinople, Ephesos, and Thessaloniki.[106] In 1018, the emperor Basil II went on a pilgrimage to Athens after his final victory over the First Bulgarian Empire for the sole purpose of worshipping at the Parthenon.[106] In medieval Greek accounts it is called the Temple of Theotokos Atheniotissa and often indirectly referred to as famous without explaining exactly which temple they were referring to, thus establishing that it was indeed well known.[106]

At the time of the Latin occupation, it became for about 250 years a Roman Catholic church of Our Lady. During this period a tower, used either as a watchtower or bell tower and containing a spiral staircase, was constructed at the southwest corner of the cella, and vaulted tombs were built beneath the Parthenon's floor.[107]

The rediscovery of the Parthenon as an ancient monument dates back to the period of Humanism; Cyriacus of Ancona was the first after antiquity to describe the Parthenon, of which he had read many times in ancient texts. Thanks to him, Western Europe was able to have the first design of the monument, which Ciriaco called "temple of the goddess Athena", unlike previous travellers, who had called it "church of Virgin Mary":[108]

...mirabile Palladis Divae marmoreum templum, divum quippe opus Phidiae ("...the wonderful temple of the goddess Athena, a divine work of Phidias")

Islamic mosque

 
Drawing of the Parthenon by James Skene, 1838

In 1456, Ottoman Turkish forces invaded Athens and laid siege to a Florentine army defending the Acropolis until June 1458, when it surrendered to the Turks.[109] The Turks may have briefly restored the Parthenon to the Greek Orthodox Christians for continued use as a church.[110] Some time before the end of the fifteenth century, the Parthenon became a mosque.[111][112]

The precise circumstances under which the Turks appropriated it for use as a mosque are unclear; one account states that Mehmed II ordered its conversion as punishment for an Athenian plot against Ottoman rule.[113] The apse became a mihrab,[114] the tower previously constructed during the Roman Catholic occupation of the Parthenon was extended upwards to become a minaret,[115] a minbar was installed,[103] the Christian altar and iconostasis were removed, and the walls were whitewashed to cover icons of Christian saints and other Christian imagery.[116]

Despite the alterations accompanying the Parthenon's conversion into a church and subsequently a mosque, its structure had remained basically intact.[117] In 1667, the Turkish traveller Evliya Çelebi expressed marvel at the Parthenon's sculptures and figuratively described the building as "like some impregnable fortress not made by human agency".[118] He composed a poetic supplication stating that, as "a work less of human hands than of Heaven itself, [it] should remain standing for all time".[119] The French artist Jacques Carrey in 1674 visited the Acropolis and sketched the Parthenon's sculptural decorations.[120] Early in 1687, an engineer named Plantier sketched the Parthenon for the Frenchman Graviers d'Ortières.[96] These depictions, particularly Carrey's, provide important, and sometimes the only, evidence of the condition of the Parthenon and its various sculptures prior to the devastation it suffered in late 1687 and the subsequent looting of its art objects.[120]

Destruction

 
Fragment of an exploded shell found on top of a wall in the Parthenon, thought to originate from the time of the Venetian siege

As part of the Morean War (1684–1699), the Venetians sent an expedition led by Francesco Morosini to attack Athens and capture the Acropolis. The Ottoman Turks fortified the Acropolis and used the Parthenon as a gunpowder magazine – despite having been forewarned of the dangers of this use by the 1656 explosion that severely damaged the Propylaea – and as a shelter for members of the local Turkish community.[121]

On 26 September 1687 a Venetian mortar round, fired from the Hill of Philopappos, blew up the magazine.[98][122] The explosion blew out the building's central portion and caused the cella's walls to crumble into rubble.[117] According to Greek architect and archaeologist Kornilia Chatziaslani:[96]

...three of the sanctuary's four walls nearly collapsed and three-fifths of the sculptures from the frieze fell. Nothing of the roof apparently remained in place. Six columns from the south side fell, eight from the north, as well as whatever remained from the eastern porch, except for one column. The columns brought down with them the enormous marble architraves, triglyphs, and metopes.

About three hundred people were killed in the explosion, which showered marble fragments over nearby Turkish defenders[121] and sparked fires that destroyed many homes.[96]

 
The southern side of the Parthenon, which sustained considerable damage in the 1687 explosion

Accounts written at the time conflict over whether this destruction was deliberate or accidental; one such account, written by the German officer Sobievolski, states that a Turkish deserter revealed to Morosini the use to which the Turks had put the Parthenon; expecting that the Venetians would not target a building of such historic importance. Morosini was said to have responded by directing his artillery to aim at the Parthenon.[96][121] Subsequently, Morosini sought to loot sculptures from the ruin and caused further damage in the process. Sculptures of Poseidon and Athena's horses fell to the ground and smashed as his soldiers tried to detach them from the building's west pediment.[104][123]

In 1688 the Venetians abandoned Athens to avoid a confrontation with a large force the Turks had assembled at Chalcis; at that time, the Venetians had considered blowing up what remained of the Parthenon along with the rest of the Acropolis to deny its further use as a fortification to the Turks, but that idea was not pursued.[121]

Once the Turks had recaptured the Acropolis, they used some of the rubble produced by this explosion to erect a smaller mosque within the shell of the ruined Parthenon.[124] For the next century and a half, parts of the remaining structure were looted for building material and especially valuable objects.[125]

The 18th century was a period of Ottoman stagnation—so that many more Europeans found access to Athens, and the picturesque ruins of the Parthenon were much drawn and painted, spurring a rise in philhellenism and helping to arouse sympathy in Britain and France for Greek independence. Amongst those early travellers and archaeologists were James Stuart and Nicholas Revett, who were commissioned by the Society of Dilettanti to survey the ruins of classical Athens. They produced the first measured drawings of the Parthenon, published in 1787 in the second volume of Antiquities of Athens Measured and Delineated. In 1801, the British Ambassador at Constantinople, the Earl of Elgin, obtained a questionable firman (edict) from the Sultan, whose existence or legitimacy has not been proved to this day, to make casts and drawings of the antiquities on the Acropolis, to demolish recent buildings if this was necessary to view the antiquities, and to remove sculptures from them.[citation needed]

Independent Greece

When independent Greece gained control of Athens in 1832, the visible section of the minaret was demolished; only its base and spiral staircase up to the level of the architrave remain intact.[126] Soon all the medieval and Ottoman buildings on the Acropolis were destroyed. The image of the small mosque within the Parthenon's cella has been preserved in Joly de Lotbinière's photograph, published in Lerebours's Excursions Daguerriennes in 1842: the first photograph of the Acropolis.[127] The area became a historical precinct controlled by the Greek government. In the later 19th century, the Parthenon was widely considered by Americans and Europeans to be the pinnacle of human architectural achievement, and became a popular destination and subject of artists, including Frederic Edwin Church and Sanford Robinson Gifford.[128][129] Today it attracts millions of tourists every year, who travel up the path at the western end of the Acropolis, through the restored Propylaea, and up the Panathenaic Way to the Parthenon, which is surrounded by a low fence to prevent damage.[citation needed]

 
Life-size pediment sculptures from the Parthenon in the British Museum

Dispute over the marbles

The dispute centres around those of the Parthenon Marbles removed by Thomas Bruce, 7th Earl of Elgin, from 1801 to 1803, which are in the British Museum.[14] A few sculptures from the Parthenon are also in the Louvre in Paris, in Copenhagen, and elsewhere, while more than half are in the Acropolis Museum in Athens.[19][130] A few can still be seen on the building itself. The Greek government has campaigned since 1983 for the British Museum to return the sculptures to Greece.[130] The British Museum has consistently refused to return the sculptures,[131] and successive British governments have been unwilling to force the museum to do so (which would require legislation). Talks between senior representatives from Greek and British cultural ministries and their legal advisors took place in London on 4 May 2007. These were the first serious negotiations for several years, and there were hopes that the two sides might move a step closer to a resolution.[132]

In December 2022, the British newspaper The Guardian published a story with quotes from Greek government officials that suggested negotiations to return the marbles were underway and a "credible" solution was being discussed.[133]

Four pieces of the sculptures have been repatriated to Greece: 3 from the Vatican and 1 from a museum in Sicilly[134]

Restoration

 
Restoration works in 2022

An organized effort to preserve and restore buildings on the Acropolis began in 1975, when the Greek government established the Committee for the Conservation of the Acropolis Monuments (ESMA). That group of interdisciplinary specialist scholars oversees the academic understanding of the site to guide restoration efforts.[135] The project later attracted funding and technical assistance from the European Union. An archaeological committee thoroughly documented every artefact remaining on the site, and architects assisted with computer models to determine their original locations. Particularly important and fragile sculptures were transferred to the Acropolis Museum.

A crane was installed for moving marble blocks; the crane was designed to fold away beneath the roofline when not in use.[136] In some cases, prior re-constructions were found to be incorrect. These were dismantled, and a careful process of restoration began.[137]

Originally, various blocks were held together by elongated iron H pins that were completely coated in lead, which protected the iron from corrosion. Stabilizing pins added in the 19th century were not so coated, and corroded. Since the corrosion product (rust) is expansive, the expansion caused further damage by cracking the marble.[138]

In 2019, Greece's Central Archaeological Council approved a restoration of the interior cella's north wall (along with parts of others). The project will reinstate as many as 360 ancient stones, and install 90 new pieces of Pentelic marble, minimizing the use of new material as much as possible. The eventual result of these restorations will be a partial restoration of some or most of each wall of the interior cella.[139]

See also

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  • "Parthenon". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 5 May 2007.
  • Ioanna Venieri. "Acropolis of Athens – History". Acropolis of Athens. Οδυσσεύς. Retrieved 4 May 2007.
  • Nova – PBS. "Secrets of the Parthenon – History". Acropolis of Athens. PBS. Retrieved 14 October 2010.

Further reading

  • Beard, Mary. The Parthenon. Harvard University: 2003. ISBN 0-674-01085-X.
  • Vinzenz Brinkmann (ed.): Athen. Triumph der Bilder. Exhibition catalogue Liebieghaus Skulpturensammlung, Frankfurt, 2016, ISBN 978-3-7319-0300-0.
  • "The Parthenon Enigma: A New Understanding of the West's Most Iconic Building and the People Who Made It." 28 July 2020 at the Wayback Machine Knopf: 2014. ISBN 0-307-47659-6.
  • Cosmopoulos, Michael (editor). The Parthenon and its Sculptures. Cambridge University: 2004. ISBN 0-521-83673-5.
  • Holtzman, Bernard (2003). L'Acropole d'Athènes : Monuments, Cultes et Histoire du sanctuaire d'Athèna Polias (in French). Paris: Picard. ISBN 978-2-7084-0687-2.
  • King, Dorothy "The Elgin Marbles" Hutchinson / Random House, 2006. ISBN 0-09-180013-7
  • Osada, T. (ed.) The Parthenon Frieze. The Ritual Communication between the Goddess and the Polis. Parthenon Project Japan 2011–2014 Phoibos Verlag, Wien 2016, ISBN 978-3-85161-124-3.
  • Queyrel, François (2008). Le Parthénon: un monument dans l'histoire. Bartillat. ISBN 978-2-84100-435-5..
  • Papachatzis, Nikolaos D. Pausaniou Ellados Periegesis- Attika Athens, 1974.
  • Tournikio, Panayotis. Parthenon. Abrams: 1996. ISBN 0-8109-6314-0.
  • Traulos, Ioannis N. I Poleodomike ekselikses ton Athinon Athens, 1960 ISBN 960-7254-01-5
  • Woodford, Susan. The Parthenon. Cambridge University, 1981. ISBN 0-521-22629-5.

External links

  • The Acropolis of Athens: The Parthenon (official site with a schedule of its opening hours, tickets, and contact information)
  • (Hellenic Ministry of Culture) The Acropolis Restoration Project
  • (Hellenic Ministry of Culture) The Parthenon Frieze (in Greek)
  • UNESCO World Heritage Centre – Acropolis, Athens
  • Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County – The Parthenon 28 January 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  • The Athenian Acropolis by Livio C. Stecchini (Takes the heterodox view of the date of the proto-Parthenon, but a useful summary of the scholarship.)
  • The Friends of the Acropolis
  • Illustrated Parthenon Marbles – Dr. Janice Siegel, Department of Classics, Hampden–Sydney College, Virginia
  • Parthenon:description, photo album
  • View a digital reconstruction of the Parthenon in virtual reality from Sketchfab

Videos

  • A Wikimedia video of the main sights of the Athenian Acropolis
  • Secrets of the Parthenon video by Public Broadcasting Service, on YouTube
  • Parthenon by Costas Gavras
  • The history of Acropolis and Parthenon from the Greek tv show Η Μηχανή του Χρόνου (Time machine) (in Greek), on YouTube
  • The Acropolis of Athens in ancient Greece – Dimensions and proportions of Parthenon on Youtube
  • Institute for Advanced Study: The Parthenon Sculptures

parthenon, temple, athena, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, temple, athena, disambiguation, confused, with, pantheon, rome, ɑːr, ancient, greek, Παρθενών, parthenṓn, tʰe, greek, Παρθενώνας, parthenónas, parθeˈnonas, former, temple, athenian, acrop. Temple of Athena redirects here For other uses see Parthenon disambiguation and Temple of Athena disambiguation Not to be confused with Pantheon Rome The Parthenon ˈ p ɑːr 8 e ˌ n ɒ n n en Ancient Greek Par8enwn Parthenṓn par tʰe nɔ ːn Greek Par8enwnas Parthenonas par8eˈnonas is a former temple 6 7 on the Athenian Acropolis Greece that was dedicated to the goddess Athena during the fifth century BC Its decorative sculptures are considered some of the high points of Greek art an enduring symbol of Ancient Greece democracy and Western civilization 8 9 ParthenonPar8enwnasThe Parthenon in 1978General informationTypeTempleArchitectural styleClassicalLocationAthens GreeceCoordinates37 58 17 N 23 43 36 E 37 9715 N 23 7266 E 37 9715 23 7266Construction started447 BC 1 2 Completed432 BC 1 2 DestroyedPartially on 26 September 1687Height13 72 m 45 0 ft 3 DimensionsOther dimensionsCella 29 8 by 19 2 m 98 by 63 ft Technical detailsMaterialPentelic Marble 4 Size69 5 by 30 9 m 228 by 101 ft Floor area73 by 34 m 240 by 112 ft 5 Design and constructionArchitect s Iktinos CallicratesOther designersPhidias sculptor The Parthenon was built in thanksgiving for the Hellenic victory over Persian invaders during the Greco Persian Wars 10 Like most Greek temples the Parthenon also served as the city treasury 11 12 Construction started in 447 BC when the Delian League was at the peak of its power It was completed in 438 work on the decoration continued until 432 For a time it served as the treasury of the Delian League which later became the Athenian Empire In the final decade of the 6th century AD the Parthenon was converted into a Christian church dedicated to the Virgin Mary After the Ottoman conquest in the mid fifteenth century it became a mosque In the Morean War a Venetian bomb landed on the Parthenon which the Ottomans had used as a munitions dump during the 1687 siege of the Acropolis The resulting explosion severely damaged the Parthenon From 1800 to 1803 13 the 7th Earl of Elgin took down some of the surviving sculptures now known as the Elgin Marbles in an act widely considered both in its time and subsequently to constitute vandalism and looting 14 The Parthenon replaced an older temple of Athena which historians call the Pre Parthenon or Older Parthenon that was demolished in the Persian invasion of 480 BC Since 1975 numerous large scale restoration projects have been undertaken to preserve remaining artefacts and ensure its structural integrity 15 16 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Function 2 1 Older Parthenon 2 2 Present building 3 Architecture 4 Sculpture 4 1 Metopes 4 2 Frieze 4 3 Pediments 4 3 1 East pediment 4 3 2 West pediment 4 4 Athena Parthenos 5 Later history 5 1 Late antiquity 5 2 Christian church 5 3 Islamic mosque 5 4 Destruction 5 5 Independent Greece 5 6 Dispute over the marbles 6 Restoration 7 See also 8 References 9 Sources 9 1 Printed sources 9 2 Online sources 10 Further reading 11 External links 11 1 VideosEtymology EditThe origin of the word Parthenon comes from the Greek word parthenos par8enos meaning maiden girl as well as virgin unmarried woman The Liddell Scott Jones Greek English Lexicon states that it may have referred to the unmarried women s apartments in a house but that in the Parthenon it seems to have been used for a particular room of the temple 17 There is some debate as to which room that was The lexicon states that this room was the western cella of the Parthenon This has also been suggested by J B Bury 10 Jamauri D Green claims that the Parthenon was the room where the arrephoroi a group of four young girls chosen to serve Athena each year wove a peplos that was presented to Athena during Panathenaic Festivals 18 Christopher Pelling asserts that the name Parthenon means the temple of the virgin goddess referring to the cult of Athena Parthenos that was associated with the temple 19 It has also been suggested that the name of the temple alludes to the maidens parthenoi whose supreme sacrifice guaranteed the safety of the city 20 In that case the room originally known as the Parthenon could have been a part of the temple known today as the Erechtheion 21 In 5th century BC accounts of the building the structure is simply called ὁ nᾱos ho naos lit the temple Douglas Frame writes that the name Parthenon was a nickname related to the statue of Athena Parthenos and only appeared a century after construction He contends that Athena s temple was never officially called the Parthenon and she herself most likely never had the cult title parthenos 22 The ancient architects Iktinos and Callicrates appear to have called the building Ἑkatompedos Hekatompedos lit the hundred footer in their lost treatise on Athenian architecture 23 Harpocration wrote that some people used to call the Parthenon the Hekatompedos not due to its size but because of its beauty and fine proportions 23 The first instance in which Parthenon definitely refers to the entire building comes from the fourth century BC orator Demosthenes citation needed In the 4th century BC and later the building was referred to as the Hekatompedos or the Hekatompedon as well as the Parthenon Plutarch referred to the building during the first century AD as the Hekatompedos Parthenon 24 A 2020 study by Janric van Rookhuijzen supports the idea that the building known today as the Parthenon was originally called the Hekatompedon Based on literary and historical research he proposes that the treasury called the Parthenon should be recognized as the west part of the building now conventionally known as the Erechtheion 25 26 Because the Parthenon was dedicated to the Greek goddess Athena it has sometimes been referred to as the Temple of Minerva the Roman name for Athena particularly during the 19th century 27 Parthenos was also applied to the Virgin Mary Parthenos Maria when the Parthenon was converted to a Christian church dedicated to the Virgin Mary in the final decade of the 6th century 28 Function Edit The Doric order of the Parthenon Although the Parthenon is architecturally a temple and is usually called so some scholars have argued that it is not really a temple in the conventional sense of the word 29 A small shrine has been excavated within the building on the site of an older sanctuary probably dedicated to Athena as a way to get closer to the goddess 29 but the Parthenon apparently never hosted the official cult of Athena Polias patron of Athens The cult image of Athena Polias which was bathed in the sea and to which was presented the peplos was an olive wood xoanon located in another temple on the northern side of the Acropolis more closely associated with the Great Altar of Athena 30 The colossal statue of Athena by Phidias was not specifically related to any cult attested by ancient authors 31 and is not known to have inspired any religious fervour 30 Preserved ancient sources do not associate it with any priestess altar or cult name 32 According to Thucydides during the Peloponnesian War when Sparta s forces were first preparing to invade Attica Pericles in an address to the Athenian people said that the statue could be used as a gold reserve if that was necessary to preserve Athens stressing that it contained forty talents of pure gold and it was all removable but adding that the gold would afterward have to be restored 33 The Athenian statesman thus implies that the metal obtained from contemporary coinage 34 could be used again if absolutely necessary without any impiety 32 According to Aristotle the building also contained golden figures that he described as Victories 35 The classicist Harris Rackham noted that eight of those figures were melted down for coinage during the Peloponnesian War 36 Other Greek writers have claimed that treasures such as Persian swords were also stored inside the temple citation needed Some scholars therefore argue that the Parthenon should be viewed as a grand setting for a monumental votive statue rather than as a cult site 37 Archaeologist Joan Breton Connelly has recently argued for the coherency of the Parthenon s sculptural programme in presenting a succession of genealogical narratives that track Athenian identity back through the ages from the birth of Athena through cosmic and epic battles to the final great event of the Athenian Bronze Age the war of Erechtheus and Eumolpos 38 39 She argues a pedagogical function for the Parthenon s sculptured decoration one that establishes and perpetuates Athenian foundation myth memory values and identity 40 41 While some classicists including Mary Beard Peter Green and Garry Wills 42 43 have doubted or rejected Connelly s thesis an increasing number of historians archaeologists and classical scholars support her work They include J J Pollitt 44 Brunilde Ridgway 45 Nigel Spivey 46 Caroline Alexander 47 and A E Stallings 48 Older Parthenon Edit Main article Older Parthenon The Older Parthenon in black was destroyed by the Achaemenids during the Destruction of Athens in 480 479 BC and then rebuilt by Pericles in grey The first endeavour to build a sanctuary for Athena Parthenos on the site of the present Parthenon was begun shortly after the Battle of Marathon c 490 488 BC upon a solid limestone foundation that extended and levelled the southern part of the Acropolis summit This building replaced a Hekatompedon temple hundred footer and would have stood beside the archaic temple dedicated to Athena Polias of the city The Older or Pre Parthenon as it is frequently referred to was still under construction when the Persians sacked the city in 480 BC razing the Acropolis 49 50 The existence of both the proto Parthenon and its destruction were known from Herodotus 51 and the drums of its columns were visible built into the curtain wall north of the Erechtheion Further physical evidence of this structure was revealed with the excavations of Panagiotis Kavvadias of 1885 90 The findings of this dig allowed Wilhelm Dorpfeld then director of the German Archaeological Institute to assert that there existed a distinct substructure to the original Parthenon called Parthenon I by Dorpfeld not immediately below the present edifice as previously assumed 52 Dorpfeld s observation was that the three steps of the first Parthenon consisted of two steps of Poros limestone the same as the foundations and a top step of Karrha limestone that was covered by the lowest step of the Periclean Parthenon This platform was smaller and slightly to the north of the final Parthenon indicating that it was built for a different building now completely covered over This picture was somewhat complicated by the publication of the final report on the 1885 90 excavations indicating that the substructure was contemporary with the Kimonian walls and implying a later date for the first temple 53 Part of the archaeological remains called Perserschutt or Persian rubble remnants of the destruction of Athens by the armies of Xerxes I Photographed in 1866 just after excavation If the original Parthenon was indeed destroyed in 480 it invites the question of why the site was left as a ruin for thirty three years One argument involves the oath sworn by the Greek allies before the Battle of Plataea in 479 BC 54 declaring that the sanctuaries destroyed by the Persians would not be rebuilt an oath from which the Athenians were only absolved with the Peace of Callias in 450 55 The cost of reconstructing Athens after the Persian sack is at least as likely a cause The excavations of Bert Hodge Hill led him to propose the existence of a second Parthenon begun in the period of Kimon after 468 56 Hill claimed that the Karrha limestone step Dorpfeld thought was the highest of Parthenon I was the lowest of the three steps of Parthenon II whose stylobate dimensions Hill calculated at 23 51 by 66 888 metres 77 13 ft 219 45 ft One difficulty in dating the proto Parthenon is that at the time of the 1885 excavation the archaeological method of seriation was not fully developed the careless digging and refilling of the site led to a loss of much valuable information An attempt to make sense of the potsherds found on the Acropolis came with the two volume study by Graef and Langlotz published in 1925 33 57 This inspired American archaeologist William Bell Dinsmoor to give limiting dates for the temple platform and the five walls hidden under the re terracing of the Acropolis Dinsmoor concluded that the latest possible date for Parthenon I was no earlier than 495 BC contradicting the early date given by Dorpfeld 58 He denied that there were two proto Parthenons and held that the only pre Periclean temple was what Dorpfeld referred to as Parthenon II Dinsmoor and Dorpfeld exchanged views in the American Journal of Archaeology in 1935 59 Present building Edit The Parthenon in 2018 In the mid 5th century BC when the Athenian Acropolis became the seat of the Delian League and Athens was the greatest cultural centre of its time Pericles initiated an ambitious building project that lasted the entire second half of the century The most important buildings visible on the Acropolis today the Parthenon the Propylaia the Erechtheion and the temple of Athena Nike were erected during this period The Parthenon was built under the general supervision of Phidias who also had charge of the sculptural decoration The architects Ictinos and Callicrates began their work in 447 and the building was substantially completed by 432 Work on the decorations continued until at least 431 citation needed The Parthenon was built primarily by men who knew how to work marble These quarrymen had exceptional skills and were able to cut the blocks of marble to very specific measurements The quarrymen also knew how to avoid the faults which were numerous in the Pentelic marble If the marble blocks were not up to standard the architects would reject them The marble was worked with iron tools picks points punches chisels and drills The quarrymen would hold their tools against the marble block and firmly tap the surface of the rock 60 A big project like the Parthenon attracted stonemasons from far and wide who travelled to Athens to assist in the project Slaves and foreigners worked together with the Athenian citizens in the building of the Parthenon doing the same jobs for the same pay Temple building was a very specialized craft and there were not many men in Greece qualified to build temples like the Parthenon so these men would travel around and work where they were needed 60 Other craftsmen were necessary for the building of the Parthenon specifically carpenters and metalworkers Unskilled labourers also had key roles in the building of the Parthenon They loaded and unloaded the marble blocks and moved the blocks from place to place In order to complete a project like the Parthenon many different labourers were needed and each played a critical role in constructing the final building 60 Architecture Edit Floor plan of the Parthenon The Parthenon is a peripteral octastyle Doric temple with Ionic architectural features It stands on a platform or stylobate of three steps In common with other Greek temples it is of post and lintel construction and is surrounded by columns peripteral carrying an entablature There are eight columns at either end octastyle and seventeen on the sides There is a double row of columns at either end The colonnade surrounds an inner masonry structure the cella which is divided into two compartments The opisthodomos the back room of the cella contained the monetary contributions of the Delian League At either end of the building the gable is finished with a triangular pediment originally occupied by sculpted figures citation needed The Parthenon has been described as the culmination of the development of the Doric order 61 The Doric columns for example have simple capitals fluted shafts and no bases Above the architrave of the entablature is a frieze of carved pictorial panels metopes separated by formal architectural triglyphs also typical of the Doric order The continuous frieze in low relief around the cella and across the lintels of the inner columns in contrast reflects the Ionic order Architectural historian John R Senseney suggests that this unexpected switch between orders was due to an aesthetic choice on the part of builders during construction and was likely not part of the original plan of the Parthenon 62 Measured at the stylobate the dimensions of the base of the Parthenon are 69 5 by 30 9 metres 228 by 101 ft The cella was 29 8 metres long by 19 2 metres wide 97 8 63 0 ft On the exterior the Doric columns measure 1 9 metres 6 2 ft in diameter and are 10 4 metres 34 ft high The corner columns are slightly larger in diameter The Parthenon had 46 outer columns and 23 inner columns in total each column having 20 flutes A flute is the concave shaft carved into the column form The roof was covered with large overlapping marble tiles known as imbrices and tegulae 63 64 The Parthenon is regarded as the finest example of Greek architecture John Julius Cooper wrote that even in antiquity its architectural refinements were legendary especially the subtle correspondence between the curvature of the stylobate the taper of the naos walls and the entasis of the columns 65 Entasis refers to the slight swelling of 4 centimetres 1 6 in in the center of the columns to counteract the appearance of columns having a waist as the swelling makes them look straight from a distance The stylobate is the platform on which the columns stand As in many other classical Greek temples 66 it has a slight parabolic upward curvature intended to shed rainwater and reinforce the building against earthquakes The columns might therefore be supposed to lean outward but they actually lean slightly inward so that if they carried on they would meet almost exactly 2 400 metres 1 5 mi above the centre of the Parthenon 67 Since they are all the same height the curvature of the outer stylobate edge is transmitted to the architrave and roof above All follow the rule of being built to delicate curves Gorham Stevens observed when pointing out that in addition the west front was built at a slightly higher level than that of the east front 68 The east facade It is not universally agreed what the intended effect of these optical refinements was They may serve as a sort of reverse optical illusion 69 As the Greeks may have been aware two parallel lines appear to bow or curve outward when intersected by converging lines In this case the ceiling and floor of the temple may seem to bow in the presence of the surrounding angles of the building Striving for perfection the designers may have added these curves compensating for the illusion by creating their own curves thus negating this effect and allowing the temple to be seen as they intended It is also suggested that it was to enliven what might have appeared an inert mass in the case of a building without curves But the comparison ought to be according to Smithsonian historian Evan Hadingham with the Parthenon s more obviously curved predecessors than with a notional rectilinear temple 70 Some studies of the Acropolis including of the Parthenon and its facade have conjectured that many of its proportions approximate the golden ratio 71 More recent studies have shown that the proportions of the Parthenon do not match the golden proportion 72 73 Sculpture Edit Parthenon Marbles redirects here For the works housed at the British Museum see Elgin Marbles Group from the east pediment British Museum The cella of the Parthenon housed the chryselephantine statue of Athena Parthenos sculpted by Phidias and dedicated in 439 or 438 BC The appearance of this is known from other images The decorative stonework was originally highly coloured 74 The temple was dedicated to Athena at that time though construction continued until almost the beginning of the Peloponnesian War in 432 By the year 438 the Doric metopes on the frieze above the exterior colonnade and the Ionic frieze around the upper portion of the walls of the cella had been completed citation needed Only a small number of the original sculptures remain in situ Most of the surviving sculptures are at the Acropolis Museum in Athens and controversially at the British Museum in London see Elgin Marbles Additional pieces are at the Louvre the National Museum of Denmark and museums in Rome Vienna and Palermo 75 In March 2022 the Acropolis Museum launched a new website with photographs of all the frieze blocks preserved today in the Acropolis Museum the British Museum and the Louvre 76 Metopes Edit Main article Metopes of the Parthenon Detail of the West metopes The frieze of the Parthenon s entablature contained 92 metopes 14 each on the east and west sides 32 each on the north and south sides They were carved in high relief a practice employed until then only in treasuries buildings used to keep votive gifts to the gods 77 According to the building records the metope sculptures date to the years 446 440 The metopes of the east side of the Parthenon above the main entrance depict the Gigantomachy the mythical battle between the Olympian gods and the Giants The metopes of the west end show the Amazonomachy the mythical battle of the Athenians against the Amazons The metopes of the south side show the Thessalian Centauromachy battle of the Lapiths aided by Theseus against the half man half horse Centaurs Metopes 13 21 are missing but drawings from 1674 attributed to Jaques Carrey indicate a series of humans these have been variously interpreted as scenes from the Lapith wedding scenes from the early history of Athens and various myths 78 On the north side of the Parthenon the metopes are poorly preserved but the subject seems to be the sack of Troy citation needed The mythological figures of the metopes of the East North and West sides of the Parthenon had been deliberately mutilated by Christian iconoclasts in late antiquity 79 The metopes present examples of the Severe Style in the anatomy of the figures heads in the limitation of the corporal movements to the contours and not to the muscles and in the presence of pronounced veins in the figures of the Centauromachy Several of the metopes still remain on the building but with the exception of those on the northern side they are severely damaged Some of them are located at the Acropolis Museum others are in the British Museum and one is at the Louvre museum 80 In March 2011 archaeologists announced that they had discovered five metopes of the Parthenon in the south wall of the Acropolis which had been extended when the Acropolis was used as a fortress According to Eleftherotypia daily the archaeologists claimed the metopes had been placed there in the 18th century when the Acropolis wall was being repaired The experts discovered the metopes while processing 2 250 photos with modern photographic methods as the white Pentelic marble they are made of differed from the other stone of the wall It was previously presumed that the missing metopes were destroyed during the Morosini explosion of the Parthenon in 1687 81 Frieze Edit Main article Parthenon Frieze Phidias Showing the Frieze of the Parthenon to his Friends 1868 painting by Lawrence Alma Tadema The most characteristic feature in the architecture and decoration of the temple is the Ionic frieze running around the exterior of the cella walls The bas relief frieze was carved in situ and is dated to 442 438 citation needed One interpretation is that it depicts an idealized version of the Panathenaic procession from the Dipylon Gate in the Kerameikos to the Acropolis In this procession held every year with a special procession taking place every four years Athenians and foreigners participated in honouring the goddess Athena by offering her sacrifices and a new peplos dress woven by selected noble Athenian girls called ergastines The procession is more crowded appearing to slow in pace as it nears the gods on the eastern side of the temple 82 Joan Breton Connelly offers a mythological interpretation for the frieze one that is in harmony with the rest of the temple s sculptural programme which shows Athenian genealogy through a series of succession myths set in the remote past She identifies the central panel above the door of the Parthenon as the pre battle sacrifice of the daughter of the king Erechtheus a sacrifice that ensured Athenian victory over Eumolpos and his Thracian army The great procession marching toward the east end of the Parthenon shows the post battle thanksgiving sacrifice of cattle and sheep honey and water followed by the triumphant army of Erechtheus returning from their victory This represents the first Panathenaia set in mythical times the model on which historic Panathenaic processions were based 83 84 Pediments Edit Main article Pediments of the Parthenon Part of the east pediment still found on the Parthenon although part of it like Dionysus is a copy Two pediments rise above the portals of the Parthenon one on the east front one on the west The triangular sections once contained massive sculptures that according to the second century geographer Pausanias recounted the birth of Athena and the mythological battle between Athena and Poseidon for control of Athens 85 East pediment Edit The east pediment originally contained 10 to 12 sculptures depicting the Birth of Athena Most of those pieces were removed and lost during renovations in either the eighth or the twelfth century 86 Only two corners remain today with figures depicting the passage of time over the course of a full day Tethrippa of Helios is in the left corner and Selene is on the right The horses of Helios s chariot are shown with livid expressions as they ascend into the sky at the start of the day Selene s horses struggle to stay on the pediment scene as the day comes to an end 87 88 West pediment Edit The supporters of Athena are extensively illustrated at the back of the left chariot while the defenders of Poseidon are shown trailing behind the right chariot It is believed that the corners of the pediment are filled by Athenian water deities such as the Kephisos river the Ilissos river and nymph Kallirhoe This belief emerges from the fluid character of the sculptures body position which represents the effort of the artist to give the impression of a flowing river 89 90 Next to the left river god there are the sculptures of the mythical king of Athens Cecrops or Kekrops with his daughters Aglaurus Pandrosos Herse The statue of Poseidon was the largest sculpture in the pediment until it broke into pieces during Francesco Morosini s effort to remove it in 1688 The posterior piece of the torso was found by Lusieri in the groundwork of a Turkish house in 1801 and is currently held in British Museum The anterior portion was revealed by Ross in 1835 and is now held in the Acropolis Museum of Athens 91 Every statue on the west pediment has a fully completed back which would have been impossible to see when the sculpture was on the temple this indicates that the sculptors put great effort into accurately portraying the human body 90 Athena Parthenos Edit Main article Athena Parthenos The only piece of sculpture from the Parthenon known to be from the hand of Phidias 92 was the statue of Athena housed in the naos This massive chryselephantine sculpture is now lost and known only from copies vase painting gems literary descriptions and coins 93 Later history EditLate antiquity Edit The Parthenon s position on the Acropolis dominates the city skyline of Athens A major fire broke out in the Parthenon shortly after the middle of the third century AD 94 95 which destroyed the roof and much of the sanctuary s interior 96 Heruli pirates sacked Athens in 276 and destroyed most of the public buildings there including the Parthenon 97 Repairs were made in the fourth century AD possibly during the reign of Julian the Apostate 98 A new wooden roof overlaid with clay tiles was installed to cover the sanctuary It sloped at a greater angle than the original roof and left the building s wings exposed 96 The Parthenon survived as a temple dedicated to Athena for nearly 1 000 years until Theodosius II during the Persecution of pagans in the late Roman Empire decreed in 435 that all pagan temples in the Eastern Roman Empire be closed 99 It is debated exactly when during the 5th century that the closure of the Parthenon as a temple was put into practice It is suggested to have occurred in c 481 484 on the order of Emperor Zeno because the temple had been the focus of Pagan Hellenic opposition against Zeno in Athens in support of Illus who had promised to restore Hellenic rites to the temples that were still standing 100 At some point in the fifth century Athena s great cult image was looted by one of the emperors and taken to Constantinople where it was later destroyed possibly during the siege and sack of Constantinople during the Fourth Crusade in 1204 AD 101 Christian church Edit The Parthenon was converted into a Christian church in the final decades of the fifth century 102 to become the Church of the Parthenos Maria Virgin Mary or the Church of the Theotokos Mother of God The orientation of the building was changed to face towards the east the main entrance was placed at the building s western end and the Christian altar and iconostasis were situated towards the building s eastern side adjacent to an apse built where the temple s pronaos was formerly located 103 104 105 A large central portal with surrounding side doors was made in the wall dividing the cella which became the church s nave from the rear chamber the church s narthex 103 The spaces between the columns of the opisthodomos and the peristyle were walled up though a number of doorways still permitted access 103 Icons were painted on the walls and many Christian inscriptions were carved into the Parthenon s columns 98 These renovations inevitably led to the removal and dispersal of some of the sculptures The Parthenon became the fourth most important Christian pilgrimage destination in the Eastern Roman Empire after Constantinople Ephesos and Thessaloniki 106 In 1018 the emperor Basil II went on a pilgrimage to Athens after his final victory over the First Bulgarian Empire for the sole purpose of worshipping at the Parthenon 106 In medieval Greek accounts it is called the Temple of Theotokos Atheniotissa and often indirectly referred to as famous without explaining exactly which temple they were referring to thus establishing that it was indeed well known 106 At the time of the Latin occupation it became for about 250 years a Roman Catholic church of Our Lady During this period a tower used either as a watchtower or bell tower and containing a spiral staircase was constructed at the southwest corner of the cella and vaulted tombs were built beneath the Parthenon s floor 107 The rediscovery of the Parthenon as an ancient monument dates back to the period of Humanism Cyriacus of Ancona was the first after antiquity to describe the Parthenon of which he had read many times in ancient texts Thanks to him Western Europe was able to have the first design of the monument which Ciriaco called temple of the goddess Athena unlike previous travellers who had called it church of Virgin Mary 108 mirabile Palladis Divae marmoreum templum divum quippe opus Phidiae the wonderful temple of the goddess Athena a divine work of Phidias Islamic mosque Edit Drawing of the Parthenon by James Skene 1838 In 1456 Ottoman Turkish forces invaded Athens and laid siege to a Florentine army defending the Acropolis until June 1458 when it surrendered to the Turks 109 The Turks may have briefly restored the Parthenon to the Greek Orthodox Christians for continued use as a church 110 Some time before the end of the fifteenth century the Parthenon became a mosque 111 112 The precise circumstances under which the Turks appropriated it for use as a mosque are unclear one account states that Mehmed II ordered its conversion as punishment for an Athenian plot against Ottoman rule 113 The apse became a mihrab 114 the tower previously constructed during the Roman Catholic occupation of the Parthenon was extended upwards to become a minaret 115 a minbar was installed 103 the Christian altar and iconostasis were removed and the walls were whitewashed to cover icons of Christian saints and other Christian imagery 116 Despite the alterations accompanying the Parthenon s conversion into a church and subsequently a mosque its structure had remained basically intact 117 In 1667 the Turkish traveller Evliya Celebi expressed marvel at the Parthenon s sculptures and figuratively described the building as like some impregnable fortress not made by human agency 118 He composed a poetic supplication stating that as a work less of human hands than of Heaven itself it should remain standing for all time 119 The French artist Jacques Carrey in 1674 visited the Acropolis and sketched the Parthenon s sculptural decorations 120 Early in 1687 an engineer named Plantier sketched the Parthenon for the Frenchman Graviers d Ortieres 96 These depictions particularly Carrey s provide important and sometimes the only evidence of the condition of the Parthenon and its various sculptures prior to the devastation it suffered in late 1687 and the subsequent looting of its art objects 120 Destruction Edit Fragment of an exploded shell found on top of a wall in the Parthenon thought to originate from the time of the Venetian siege As part of the Morean War 1684 1699 the Venetians sent an expedition led by Francesco Morosini to attack Athens and capture the Acropolis The Ottoman Turks fortified the Acropolis and used the Parthenon as a gunpowder magazine despite having been forewarned of the dangers of this use by the 1656 explosion that severely damaged the Propylaea and as a shelter for members of the local Turkish community 121 On 26 September 1687 a Venetian mortar round fired from the Hill of Philopappos blew up the magazine 98 122 The explosion blew out the building s central portion and caused the cella s walls to crumble into rubble 117 According to Greek architect and archaeologist Kornilia Chatziaslani 96 three of the sanctuary s four walls nearly collapsed and three fifths of the sculptures from the frieze fell Nothing of the roof apparently remained in place Six columns from the south side fell eight from the north as well as whatever remained from the eastern porch except for one column The columns brought down with them the enormous marble architraves triglyphs and metopes About three hundred people were killed in the explosion which showered marble fragments over nearby Turkish defenders 121 and sparked fires that destroyed many homes 96 The southern side of the Parthenon which sustained considerable damage in the 1687 explosion Accounts written at the time conflict over whether this destruction was deliberate or accidental one such account written by the German officer Sobievolski states that a Turkish deserter revealed to Morosini the use to which the Turks had put the Parthenon expecting that the Venetians would not target a building of such historic importance Morosini was said to have responded by directing his artillery to aim at the Parthenon 96 121 Subsequently Morosini sought to loot sculptures from the ruin and caused further damage in the process Sculptures of Poseidon and Athena s horses fell to the ground and smashed as his soldiers tried to detach them from the building s west pediment 104 123 In 1688 the Venetians abandoned Athens to avoid a confrontation with a large force the Turks had assembled at Chalcis at that time the Venetians had considered blowing up what remained of the Parthenon along with the rest of the Acropolis to deny its further use as a fortification to the Turks but that idea was not pursued 121 Once the Turks had recaptured the Acropolis they used some of the rubble produced by this explosion to erect a smaller mosque within the shell of the ruined Parthenon 124 For the next century and a half parts of the remaining structure were looted for building material and especially valuable objects 125 The 18th century was a period of Ottoman stagnation so that many more Europeans found access to Athens and the picturesque ruins of the Parthenon were much drawn and painted spurring a rise in philhellenism and helping to arouse sympathy in Britain and France for Greek independence Amongst those early travellers and archaeologists were James Stuart and Nicholas Revett who were commissioned by the Society of Dilettanti to survey the ruins of classical Athens They produced the first measured drawings of the Parthenon published in 1787 in the second volume of Antiquities of Athens Measured and Delineated In 1801 the British Ambassador at Constantinople the Earl of Elgin obtained a questionable firman edict from the Sultan whose existence or legitimacy has not been proved to this day to make casts and drawings of the antiquities on the Acropolis to demolish recent buildings if this was necessary to view the antiquities and to remove sculptures from them citation needed Independent Greece Edit When independent Greece gained control of Athens in 1832 the visible section of the minaret was demolished only its base and spiral staircase up to the level of the architrave remain intact 126 Soon all the medieval and Ottoman buildings on the Acropolis were destroyed The image of the small mosque within the Parthenon s cella has been preserved in Joly de Lotbiniere s photograph published in Lerebours s Excursions Daguerriennes in 1842 the first photograph of the Acropolis 127 The area became a historical precinct controlled by the Greek government In the later 19th century the Parthenon was widely considered by Americans and Europeans to be the pinnacle of human architectural achievement and became a popular destination and subject of artists including Frederic Edwin Church and Sanford Robinson Gifford 128 129 Today it attracts millions of tourists every year who travel up the path at the western end of the Acropolis through the restored Propylaea and up the Panathenaic Way to the Parthenon which is surrounded by a low fence to prevent damage citation needed Life size pediment sculptures from the Parthenon in the British Museum Dispute over the marbles Edit Main article Elgin Marbles The dispute centres around those of the Parthenon Marbles removed by Thomas Bruce 7th Earl of Elgin from 1801 to 1803 which are in the British Museum 14 A few sculptures from the Parthenon are also in the Louvre in Paris in Copenhagen and elsewhere while more than half are in the Acropolis Museum in Athens 19 130 A few can still be seen on the building itself The Greek government has campaigned since 1983 for the British Museum to return the sculptures to Greece 130 The British Museum has consistently refused to return the sculptures 131 and successive British governments have been unwilling to force the museum to do so which would require legislation Talks between senior representatives from Greek and British cultural ministries and their legal advisors took place in London on 4 May 2007 These were the first serious negotiations for several years and there were hopes that the two sides might move a step closer to a resolution 132 In December 2022 the British newspaper The Guardian published a story with quotes from Greek government officials that suggested negotiations to return the marbles were underway and a credible solution was being discussed 133 Four pieces of the sculptures have been repatriated to Greece 3 from the Vatican and 1 from a museum in Sicilly 134 Restoration Edit Restoration works in 2022 An organized effort to preserve and restore buildings on the Acropolis began in 1975 when the Greek government established the Committee for the Conservation of the Acropolis Monuments ESMA That group of interdisciplinary specialist scholars oversees the academic understanding of the site to guide restoration efforts 135 The project later attracted funding and technical assistance from the European Union An archaeological committee thoroughly documented every artefact remaining on the site and architects assisted with computer models to determine their original locations Particularly important and fragile sculptures were transferred to the Acropolis Museum A crane was installed for moving marble blocks the crane was designed to fold away beneath the roofline when not in use 136 In some cases prior re constructions were found to be incorrect These were dismantled and a careful process of restoration began 137 Originally various blocks were held together by elongated iron H pins that were completely coated in lead which protected the iron from corrosion Stabilizing pins added in the 19th century were not so coated and corroded Since the corrosion product rust is expansive the expansion caused further damage by cracking the marble 138 In 2019 Greece s Central Archaeological Council approved a restoration of the interior cella s north wall along with parts of others The project will reinstate as many as 360 ancient stones and install 90 new pieces of Pentelic marble minimizing the use of new material as much as possible The eventual result of these restorations will be a partial restoration of some or most of each wall of the interior cella 139 See also EditPalermo Fragment Ancient Greek architecture List of Ancient Greek temples National Monument of Scotland Edinburgh Walhalla temple Regensburg Exterior modelled on the Parthenon but the interior is a hall of fame for distinguished Germans Parthenon Nashville Full scale replica Stripped Classicism Temple of HephaestusReferences Edit a b Parthenon Archived 5 March 2011 at the Wayback Machine Academic reed edu Retrieved on 4 September 2013 a b The Parthenon Archived 2 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine Ancientgreece com Retrieved on 4 September 2013 Penprase Bryan E 2010 The Power of Stars How Celestial Observations Have Shaped Civilization Springer Science amp Business Media p 221 ISBN 978 1 4419 6803 6 Retrieved 8 March 2017 Sakoulas Thomas The Parthenon Ancient Greece org Retrieved 15 December 2020 Wilson Benjamin Franklin 1920 The Parthenon at Athens Greece and at Nashville Tennessee Nashville Tennessee Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed Archived from the original on 6 June 2021 Retrieved 11 November 2020 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Barletta Barbara A 2005 The Architecture and Architects of the Classical Parthenon In Jenifer Neils ed The Parthenon From Antiquity to the Present Cambridge University Press p 67 ISBN 978 0 521 82093 6 The Parthenon Plate 1 Fig 17 is probably the most celebrated of all Greek temples Sacks David Parthenon Encyclopedia of the Ancient Greek World David Sacks Facts On File 3rd edition 2015 Accessed 15 July 2022 Beard Mary 2010 The Parthenon Profile Books p 118 ISBN 978 1 84765 063 4 Garfield Leanna 2 June 2017 The 22 most beautiful buildings in the world according to architects Business Insider Archived from the original on 4 June 2017 a b Bury J B Meiggs Russell 1956 A history of Greece to the death of Alexander the Great 3rd ed Oxford Oxford University Press pp 367 369 Robertson Miriam 1981 A Shorter History of Greek Art Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 90 ISBN 978 0 521 28084 6 Davison Claire Cullen Lundgreen Birte 2009 Pheidias The Sculptures and Ancient Sources Vol 105 London Institute of Classical Studies University of London p 209 ISBN 978 1 905670 21 5 Retrieved 10 September 2017 Lord Elgin and the Parthenon Sculptures British Museum Archived from the original on 3 February 2013 a b How the Parthenon Lost Its Marbles History Magazine 28 March 2017 Archived from the original on 17 April 2019 Retrieved 17 April 2019 Reasons of Interventions ysma gr Magazine Smithsonian Unlocking Mysteries of the Parthenon Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved 23 July 2022 Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon par8en wn www perseus tufts edu Retrieved 27 July 2022 Hurwit 200 pp 161 163 a b Parthenon Encyclopaedia Britannica edition needed Whitley The Archaeology of Ancient Greece 352 Francois Queyrel Le Parthenon Un monument dans l Histoire Paris Editions Bartillat 2020 p 199 200 Frame Douglas 2009 Hippota Nestor Hellenic Studies Series 37 Washington DC Center for Hellenic Studies Chapter 9 Quoted in Everlasting Glory in Athens Harvard University The Center for Hellenic Studies 4 March 2021 Accessed 27 July 2022 Ahttps kosmossociety chs harvard edu everlasting glory in athens Archived 27 July 2022 at the Wayback Machine a b Harpocration Valerius Lexicon in decem oratores Atticos letter e ἙKATOMPEDON www perseus tufts edu Plutarch Pericles 13 4 van Rookhuijzen Jan Z 2020 The Parthenon Treasury on the Acropolis of Athens American Journal of Archaeology 124 1 3 35 doi 10 3764 aja 124 1 0003 S2CID 213405037 Kampouris Nick 3 October 2021 The Parthenon Has Had the Wrong Name for Centuries Theory Claims GreekReporter com Retrieved 24 July 2022 Encyclopaedia Britannica 1878 Freely 2004 p 69 Archived 17 November 2022 at the Wayback Machine Some modern writers maintain that the Parthenon was converted into a Christian sanctuary during the reign of Justinian 527 65 But there is no evidence to support this in the ancient sources The existing evidence suggests that the Parthenon was converted into a Christian basilica in the last decade of the sixth century a b Susan Deacy Athena Routledge 2008 p 111 a b Burkert Greek Religion Blackwell 1985 p 143 MC Hellmann L Architecture grecque Architecture religieuse et funeraire Picard 2006 p 118 a b B Nagy Athenian Officials on the Parthenon Frieze AJA Vol 96 No 1 January 1992 p 55 Thucydides 2 13 5 Retrieved 3 August 2020 S Eddy The Gold in the Athena Parthenos AJA Vol 81 No 1 Winter 1977 pp 107 111 Aristotle Athenian Constitution chapter 47 www perseus tufts edu Retrieved 21 July 2022 Aristotle Athenian Constitution chapter 47 Note 1 www perseus tufts edu Retrieved 21 July 2022 B Holtzmann and A Pasquier Histoire de l art antique l art grec Ecole du Louvre Reunion des musees nationaux and Documentation francaise 1998 p 177 Connelly Joan Breton 2014 The Parthenon Enigma a New Understanding of the West s Most Iconic Building and the People Who Made It New York Vintage ISBN 978 0 307 47659 3 Welcome to Joan Breton Connelly Welcome to Joan Breton Connelly Archived from the original on 21 September 2015 Retrieved 18 August 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Joan Breton Connelly The Parthenon Enigma 1 Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine New York Knopf 2014 p 35 Daniel Mendelsohn Deep Frieze Archived 27 August 2014 at the Wayback Machine The New Yorker 14 April 2014 Mary Beard The Latest Scheme for the Parthenon Archived 21 February 2015 at the Wayback Machine The New York Review of Books 6 March 2014 Mary Beard Peter Green Garry Wills The Parthenon Enigma An Exchange Archived 2 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine The New York Review of Books 22 May 2014 Decoding the Parthenon by J J Pollitt The New Criterion Retrieved 18 August 2015 Rethinking the West s Most Iconic Building Bryn Mawr Alumnae Bulletin Archived from the original on 8 September 2015 Retrieved 18 August 2015 Spivey Nigel October 2014 Art and Archaeology PDF Greece amp Rome 61 2 287 290 doi 10 1017 S0017383514000138 S2CID 232181203 Alexander Caroline 23 January 2014 If It Pleases the Gods The New York Times Review ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 18 August 2015 Deep Frieze Meaning The Weekly Standard Retrieved 18 August 2015 Ioanna Venieri Acropolis of Athens Hellenic Ministry of Culture Retrieved 4 May 2007 Hurwit 2005 p 135 Herodotus Histories 8 53 W Dorpfeld Der aeltere Parthenon Ath Mitteilungen XVII 1892 pp 158 189 and W Dorpfeld Die Zeit des alteren Parthenon AM 27 1902 379 416 P Kavvadis G Kawerau Die Ausgabung der Acropolis vom Jahre 1885 bis zum Jahre 1890 1906 NM Tod A Selection of Greek Historical Inscriptions II 1948 no 204 lines 46 51 The authenticity of this is disputed however see also P Siewert Der Eid von Plataia Munich 1972 98 102 Kerr Minott 23 October 1995 The Sole Witness The Periclean Parthenon Reed College Portland Oregon US Archived from the original on 8 June 2007 B H Hill The Older Parthenon AJA XVI 1912 535 58 B Graef E Langlotz Die Antiken Vasen von der Akropolis zu Athen Berlin 1925 33 W Dinsmoor The Date of the Older Parthenon AJA XXXVIII 1934 408 48 W Dorpfeld Parthenon I II III AJA XXXIX 1935 497 507 and W Dinsmoor AJA XXXIX 1935 508 9 a b c Woodford S 2008 The Parthenon Cambridge Cambridge University Press Parthenon Britannica Library Encyclopaedia Britannica 10 September 2021 Accessed 16 July 2022 Senseney John R 2021 The Architectural Origins of the Parthenon Frieze Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians University of California Press 80 1 12 29 doi 10 1525 jsah 2021 80 1 12 S2CID 233818539 American Architect and Architecture American Architect 1892 LacusCurtius Roman Architecture Roof Tiles Smith s Dictionary 1875 penelope uchicago edu Retrieved 8 February 2018 John Julius Norwich Great Architecture of the World 2001 p 63 And in the surviving foundations of the preceding Older Parthenon Penrose Principles of Athenian Architecture 2nd ed ch II 3 plate 9 How Greek Temples Correct Visual Distortion Architecture Revived Penrose op cit pp 32 34 found the difference motivated by economies of labour Gorham P Stevens Concerning the Impressiveness of the Parthenon American Journal of Archaeology 66 3 July 1962 337 338 Archaeologists discuss similarly curved architecture and offer the theory Nova Secrets of the Parthenon PBS http video yahoo com watch 1849622 6070405 permanent dead link Hadingham Evan February 2008 Unlocking Mysteries of the Parthenon Washington DC Smithsonian Magazine p 42 Van Mersbergen Audrey M Rhetorical Prototypes in Architecture Measuring the Acropolis Philosophical Polemic Communication Quarterly Vol 46 1998 George Markowsky January 1992 Misconceptions about the Golden Ratio PDF The College Mathematics Journal 23 1 Archived from the original PDF on 8 April 2008 Retrieved 4 February 2008 Livio Mario 2003 2002 The Golden Ratio The Story of Phi the World s Most Astonishing Number First trade paperback ed New York City Broadway Books pp 74 5 ISBN 0 7679 0816 3 Tarbell F B A History of Ancient Greek Art online book Ellopos net Retrieved 18 April 2009 For comprehensive drawings showing the location of each piece today see The Parthenon in Strolling Through Athens Archived 28 July 2020 at the Wayback Machine City of Athens 2004 pp 112 119 The Parthenon Frieze Greek Ministry of Culture and Sports Acropolis Museum Acropolis Restoration Service Retrieved 26 July 2022 Harris Beth Zucker Steven Parthenon Acropolis Khan Academy Khan Academy Retrieved 27 January 2020 Barringer Judith M 2008 Art myth and ritual in classical Greece Cambridge p 78 ISBN 978 0 521 64647 5 OCLC 174134120 Pollini 2007 pp 212 216 Brommer 1979 pp 23 30 pl 41 Tenth metope from the south facade of the Parthenon retrieved 30 January 2018 Discovery Reveals Ancient Greek Theaters Used Moveable Stages Over 2 000 Years Ago greece greekreporter com De la Croix Horst Tansey Richard G Kirkpatrick Diane 1991 Gardner s Art Through the Ages 9th ed Thomson Wadsworth pp 158 59 ISBN 0 15 503769 2 Connelly Parthenon and Parthenoi 53 80 Connelly The Parthenon Enigma chapters 4 5 and 7 PAUSANIAS DESCRIPTION OF GREECE 1 17 29 Theoi Classical Texts Library www theoi com Retrieved 21 July 2022 Jeffrey M Hurwit Helios Rising The Sun the Moon and the Sea in the Sculptures of the Parthenon American Journal of Archaeology vol 121 no 4 2017 pp 527 58 JSTOR https doi org 10 3764 aja 121 4 0527 Accessed 22 July 2022 The Parthenon Sculptures by Mark Cartwright 2014 World History Encyclopedia The British Museum The Parthenon sculptures Athenians and Eleusinians in the West Pediment of the Parthenon PDF a b statue pediment British Museum The British Museum Palagia Olga 1998 The Pediments of the Parthenon by Olga Palagia ISBN 978 90 04 11198 1 Lapatin Kenneth D S 2001 Chryselephantine Statuary in the Ancient Mediterranean World Oxford OUP p 63 ISBN 978 0 19 815311 5 N Leipen Athena Parthenos a huge reconstruction 1972 Introduction to the Parthenon Frieze National Documentation Centre Greek Ministry of Culture Archived from the original on 28 October 2012 Retrieved 14 August 2012 Freely 2004 p 69 Archived 17 November 2022 at the Wayback Machine According to one authority John Travlos this occurred when Athens was sacked by the Heruli in AD 267 at which time the two tiered colonnade in the cella was destroyed a b c d e f Chatziaslani Kornilia Morosini in Athens Archaeology of the City of Athens Retrieved 14 August 2012 O Donovan Connell Pirates marauders and homos oh my Retrieved 10 December 2015 a b c The Parthenon Acropolis Restoration Service Archived from the original on 28 August 2012 Retrieved 14 August 2012 Freely 2004 p 69 Archived 17 November 2022 at the Wayback Machine Trombley Hellenic Religion and Christianization c 370 529 Archived 17 November 2022 at the Wayback Machine Cremin Aedeen 2007 Archaeologica Frances Lincoln Ltd p 170 ISBN 978 0 7112 2822 1 Stephenson Paul 2022 New Rome Empire in the East Cambridge MA The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press p 177 ISBN 9780674659629 a b c d Freely 2004 p 70 Archived 17 November 2022 at the Wayback Machine a b Hollis 2009 p 21 Hurwit 2000 p 293 Archived 17 November 2022 at the Wayback Machine a b c Kaldellis Anthony 2007 A Heretical Orthodox History of the Parthenon PDF University of Michigan p 3 Archived from the original PDF on 24 August 2009 Hurwit Jeffrey M 19 November 1999 The Athenian Acropolis History Mythology and Archaeology from the Neolithic Era to the Present CUP Archive ISBN 9780521417860 via Google Books E W Bodnar Cyriacus of Ancona and Athens Brussels Berchem 1960 Babinger Franz 1992 Mehmed the Conqueror and His Time Princeton University Press pp 159 160 ISBN 978 0 691 01078 6 Tomkinson John L Ottoman Athens I Early Ottoman Athens 1456 1689 Anagnosis Books Archived from the original on 29 July 2012 Retrieved 14 August 2012 In 1466 the Parthenon was referred to as a church so it seems likely that for some time at least it continued to function as a cathedral being restored to the use of the Greek archbishop Tomkinson John L Ottoman Athens I Early Ottoman Athens 1456 1689 Anagnosis Books Archived from the original on 29 July 2012 Retrieved 14 August 2012 Some time later we do not know exactly when the Parthenon was itself converted into a mosque D Ooge 1909 p 317 The conversion of the Parthenon into a mosque is first mentioned by another anonymous writer the Paris Anonymous whose manuscript dating from the latter half of the fifteenth century was discovered in the library of Paris in 1862 Miller Walter 1893 A History of the Akropolis of Athens The American Journal of Archaeology and of the History of the Fine Arts 8 4 546 547 doi 10 2307 495887 JSTOR 495887 Hollis 2009 p 33 Bruno Vincent J 1974 The Parthenon W W Norton amp Company p 172 ISBN 978 0 393 31440 3 D Ooge 1909 p 317 a b Fichner Rathus Lois 2012 Understanding Art 10 ed Cengage Learning p 305 ISBN 978 1 111 83695 5 Stoneman Richard 2004 A Traveller s History of Athens Interlink Books p 209 ISBN 978 1 56656 533 2 Holt Frank L November December 2008 I Marble Maiden Saudi Aramco World 59 6 36 41 Archived from the original on 1 August 2012 Retrieved 3 December 2012 a b T Bowie D Thimme The Carrey Drawings of the Parthenon Sculptures 1971 a b c d Tomkinson John L Venetian Athens Venetian Interlude 1684 1689 Anagnosis Books Archived from the original on 4 October 2013 Retrieved 14 August 2012 Theodor E Mommsen The Venetians in Athens and the Destruction of the Parthenon in 1687 American Journal of Archaeology Vol 45 No 4 October December 1941 pp 544 556 Palagia Olga 1998 The Pediments of the Parthenon 2 ed Brill ISBN 978 90 04 11198 1 Retrieved 14 August 2012 Tomkinson John L Ottoman Athens II Later Ottoman Athens 1689 1821 Anagnosis Books Retrieved 14 August 2012 Grafton Anthony Glenn W Most Salvatore Settis 2010 The Classical Tradition Harvard University Press p 693 ISBN 978 0 674 03572 0 Murray John 1884 Handbook for travellers in Greece Volume 2 Oxford University Press p 317 Neils The Parthenon From Antiquity to the Present 336 the picture was taken in October 1839 Carr Gerald L 1994 Frederic Edwin Church Catalogue Raisonne of Works at Olana State Historic Site Volume I Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 342 343 ISBN 978 0521385404 Collection Ruins of the Parthenon National Gallery of Art Archived from the original on 28 July 2020 Retrieved 28 May 2020 a b Greek Premier Says New Acropolis Museum to Boost Bid for Parthenon Sculptures Archived 21 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine International Herald Tribune The Parthenon sculptures The Trustees statement The British Museum Retrieved 24 January 2020 Talks Due on Elgin Marbles Return Archived 25 January 2021 at the Wayback Machine BBC News Smith Helena 3 December 2022 Greece in preliminary talks with British Museum about Parthenon marbles The Observer Indian Country Today accessed December 27 2022 Acropolis Restoration Service YSMA Retrieved 18 July 2022 Crane Shifts Masonry of Ancient Parthenon in Restoration Program AP NEWS Retrieved 14 May 2022 The Surface Conservation Project pdf file Once they had been conserved the West Frieze blocks were moved to the museum and copies cast in artificial stone were reinstalled in their places Hadingham Evan 2008 Unlocking the Mysteries of the Parthenon Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved 22 February 2008 Sakis Ioannidis 5 May 2019 Parthenon s Inner Sanctum to be Restored Greece Is Retrieved 31 January 2022 Sources EditPrinted sources Edit Burkert Walter 1985 Greek Religion Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 36281 9 Connelly Joan Breton 1 January 1996 Parthenon and Parthenoi A Mythological Interpretation of the Parthenon Frieze PDF American Journal of Archaeology 100 1 53 80 doi 10 2307 506297 JSTOR 506297 S2CID 41120274 Archived from the original PDF on 19 August 2018 Connelly Joan Breton 2014 The Parthenon Enigma A New Understanding of the West s Most Iconic Building and the People who Made It Random House ISBN 978 0 307 47659 3 D Ooge Martin Luther 1909 The Acropolis of Athens Macmillan Frazer Sir James George 1998 The King of the Woods The Golden Bough A Study in Magic and Religion Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 283541 3 Freely John 2004 Strolling Through Athens Fourteen Unforgettable Walks through Europe s Oldest City 2 ed Tauris Parke Paperbacks ISBN 978 1 85043 595 2 Hollis Edward 2009 The Secret Lives of Buildings From the Ruins of the Parthenon to the Vegas Strip in Thirteen Stories Macmillan ISBN 978 0 8050 8785 7 Hurwit Jeffrey M 2000 The Athenian Acropolis History Mythology and Archeology from the Neolithic Era to the Present Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 42834 7 Hurwit Jeffrey M 2005 The Parthenon and the Temple of Zeus at Olympia In Judith M Barringer Jeffrey M Hurwit Jerome Jordan Pollitt eds Periklean Athens and Its Legacy Problems and Perspectives University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 70622 4 Neils Jenifer 2005 The Parthenon From Antiquity to the Present Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 82093 6 Parthenon Encyclopaedia Britannica 2002 Pelling Christopher 1997 Tragedy and Religion Constructs and Readings Greek Tragedy and the Historian Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 814987 3 Tarbell F B A History of Ancient Greek Art Whitley James 2001 The Archaeology of Democracy Classical Athens The Archaeology of Ancient Greece Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 62733 7 Online sources Edit Greek Premier Says New Acropolis Museum to Boost Bid for Parthenon Sculptures International Herald Tribune 9 October 2006 Archived from the original on 21 February 2007 Retrieved 23 April 2007 Parthenon Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved 5 May 2007 Ioanna Venieri Acropolis of Athens History Acropolis of Athens Odysseys Retrieved 4 May 2007 Nova PBS Secrets of the Parthenon History Acropolis of Athens PBS Retrieved 14 October 2010 Further reading EditBeard Mary The Parthenon Harvard University 2003 ISBN 0 674 01085 X Vinzenz Brinkmann ed Athen Triumph der Bilder Exhibition catalogue Liebieghaus Skulpturensammlung Frankfurt 2016 ISBN 978 3 7319 0300 0 Connelly Joan Breton Connelly The Parthenon Enigma A New Understanding of the West s Most Iconic Building and the People Who Made It Archived 28 July 2020 at the Wayback Machine Knopf 2014 ISBN 0 307 47659 6 Cosmopoulos Michael editor The Parthenon and its Sculptures Cambridge University 2004 ISBN 0 521 83673 5 Holtzman Bernard 2003 L Acropole d Athenes Monuments Cultes et Histoire du sanctuaire d Athena Polias in French Paris Picard ISBN 978 2 7084 0687 2 King Dorothy The Elgin Marbles Hutchinson Random House 2006 ISBN 0 09 180013 7 Osada T ed The Parthenon Frieze The Ritual Communication between the Goddess and the Polis Parthenon Project Japan 2011 2014 Phoibos Verlag Wien 2016 ISBN 978 3 85161 124 3 Queyrel Francois 2008 Le Parthenon un monument dans l histoire Bartillat ISBN 978 2 84100 435 5 Papachatzis Nikolaos D Pausaniou Ellados Periegesis Attika Athens 1974 Tournikio Panayotis Parthenon Abrams 1996 ISBN 0 8109 6314 0 Traulos Ioannis N I Poleodomike ekselikses ton Athinon Athens 1960 ISBN 960 7254 01 5 Woodford Susan The Parthenon Cambridge University 1981 ISBN 0 521 22629 5 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Parthenon Look up parthenon in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Parthenon The Acropolis of Athens The Parthenon official site with a schedule of its opening hours tickets and contact information Hellenic Ministry of Culture The Acropolis Restoration Project Hellenic Ministry of Culture The Parthenon Frieze in Greek UNESCO World Heritage Centre Acropolis Athens Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County The Parthenon Archived 28 January 2013 at the Wayback Machine The Athenian Acropolis by Livio C Stecchini Takes the heterodox view of the date of the proto Parthenon but a useful summary of the scholarship The Friends of the Acropolis Illustrated Parthenon Marbles Dr Janice Siegel Department of Classics Hampden Sydney College Virginia Parthenon description photo album View a digital reconstruction of the Parthenon in virtual reality from SketchfabVideos Edit A Wikimedia video of the main sights of the Athenian Acropolis Secrets of the Parthenon video by Public Broadcasting Service on YouTube Parthenon by Costas Gavras The history of Acropolis and Parthenon from the Greek tv show H Mhxanh toy Xronoy Time machine in Greek on YouTube The Acropolis of Athens in ancient Greece Dimensions and proportions of Parthenon on Youtube Institute for Advanced Study The Parthenon Sculptures Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Parthenon amp oldid 1145014290, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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