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Serpent Column

The Serpent Column (Ancient Greek: Τρικάρηνος Ὄφις Τrikarenos Οphis "Three-headed Serpent";[1] Turkish: Yılanlı Sütun "Serpentine Column"), also known as the Serpentine Column, Plataean Tripod or Delphi Tripod, is an ancient bronze column at the Hippodrome of Constantinople (known as Atmeydanı "Horse Square" in the Ottoman period) in what is now Istanbul, Turkey. It is part of an ancient Greek sacrificial tripod, originally in Delphi and relocated to Constantinople by Constantine the Great in 324. It was built to commemorate the Greeks who fought and defeated the Persian Empire at the Battle of Plataea (479 BC). The serpent heads of the 8-metre (26 ft) high column remained intact until the end of the 17th century (one is on display at the nearby Istanbul Archaeology Museums).[2]

Serpent Column
The Serpent Column in Istanbul
LocationHippodrome of Constantinople (today Sultanahmet Square, Istanbul, Turkey)
Location of Serpent Column in Istanbul

History edit

 
 
The Serpent Column: left, drawing of 1574 showing the column with the three serpent heads; right, the current state
 
A part of one of the heads is located in the Istanbul Archaeology Museum
 
Ottoman miniature from the Surname-i Vehbi, showing the Column with the three serpent heads, but the bowl already missing, in a celebration at the Hippodrome in 1582

The Serpentine Column has one of the longest literary histories of any object surviving from Greek and Roman antiquity. Together with its original golden tripod and cauldron (both long missing), it constituted a trophy, or offering reminding of a military victory, dedicated to Apollo at Delphi. This offering was made in the spring of 478 BC, several months after the defeat of the Persian army in the Battle of Plataea (August 479 BC) by those Greek city-states in alliance against the Persian invasion of mainland Greece, during the Greco-Persian Wars. Among the writers who allude to the Column in the ancient literature are Herodotus, Thucydides, pseudo-Demosthenes, Diodorus Siculus, Pausanias the traveller, Cornelius Nepos and Plutarch. The removal of the column by the Emperor Constantine to his new capital, Constantinople, is described by Edward Gibbon, citing the testimony of the Byzantine historians Zosimus, Eusebius, Socrates, and Sozomenus.

Battle of Plataea edit

 
Western print, illustrating Aubry de la Mottraye, 1727

When the Persians invaded Greece under Xerxes in 480 BC, they were initially victorious at the Battle of Thermopylae, and the Battle of Artemisium in August. The Greeks defeated the Persian navy at the Battle of Salamis in September. After Salamis, Xerxes withdrew from Greece, but left a land force in Thrace, under the command of general Mardonius. He retook Athens in the spring of 479 BC and the war continued. On learning that a Spartan force was coming from the Peloponnese, Mardonius set fire to Athens again and removed his force to a strategic position in Boeotia, north of the river Asopus. The Greeks under the leadership of Pausanias, Regent of Sparta,[a] drew up on high ground in defensive positions south of the river Asopus and above the plain of Plataea. After days of skirmishing and changes of position on the Greek side, Mardonius launched a full attack. The result of the complex battle was complete victory for the Spartans, under the leadership of Pausanias. Mardonius was killed and the Persians fled in confusion led by Artabazus, the Persian second in command.

The Greek victories at Plataea and contemporaneous naval battle at Mycale brought the invasion of Greece to an end. The Persian Empire would never again launch an attack on mainland Greece. Following these victories, Athens established itself as the head of the Delian League, reaching its height under the leadership of Pericles.

Dedication edit

After describing the Greek victory at Plataea, in 479 BC, Herodotus recounts the collection of rich spoils, by the Helots, (the Spartan underclass), who had taken part in the battle, and then records the decision of the Greek cities to dedicate an offering to Apollo at Delphi:[1][3]

Having brought all the loot together, they set apart a tithe for the god of Delphi. From this was made and dedicated that tripod which rests upon the bronze three-headed serpent, nearest to the altar.

— Herodotus Histories 9.81.1

The bronze column consisting of three intertwined snakes,[1] was intended to commemorate the 31 Greek city-states that participated in the battle. A golden tripod topped the column, made by Persian weapons, and the whole monument was dedicated to the god Apollo and was placed next to the altar of Apollo at Delphi.

In the same chapter, Herodotus records that dedications were also made to Zeus at Olympia and to Poseidon at the Isthmus. It is significant that precedence was given to Apollo at Delphi, despite the ambiguities in the responses of the Delphic oracle about the outcome of the invasion, and a suspicion that Delphi was sympathetic to the Persians.

Pausanias' inscription edit

Pausanias, full of arrogance over his victory at Plataea and the subsequent ease with which he punished the Theban leaders for their support of the Persians, ordered a dedication on the column ascribing victory to himself alone. Later, it was discovered he had been in negotiations with the Persians and the Helots of Sparta to stage a rebellion, and set himself up as Tyrant. Although his treachery was, at first, disbelieved in Sparta, it was eventually confirmed by the Ephors of Sparta through his personal slave, and he was killed. Thucydides describes[4] the Spartan suspicion that Pausanias was at the point of committing treason and going over to the Persians, citing the Serpentine column affair as evidence. Pausanias provided other causes for suspicion in his disregard of laws, his admiration of the Persians, and his dissatisfaction with the status-quo. Upon examination of the rest of his behaviour, the Spartans recalled that when the tripod at Delphi was first erected, Pausanias had thought fit, of his own accord, to have a diptych engraved upon it with the inscription:

‘Pausanias, commander-in-chief of the Greeks,
when he had destroyed the army of the Medes,
dedicated this memorial to Phoebus (Apollo).’

The Lacedaemonians, at once, removed the diptych from the tripod and engraved the names of the cities, who had joined together against the Persians and set up the offering.

Pseudo-Demosthenes[5] gives a significantly different account of the train of events. In a speech, "Against Neaira", the orator recalls the conduct of Pausanias after the defeat of the Persians in the battle of Plataea over the Serpentine column: "Pausanias, King of the Lacedaemonians, caused a diptych to be inscribed on the tripod at Delphi, [which those Greeks, who had fought as allies in the battle of Plataea and in the naval engagement at Salamis had together made from the spoils taken from the Barbarians and had set up in honour of Apollo as a memorial to their bravery], as follows: 'Pausanias, commander-in-chief of the Greeks, when he had destroyed the army of the Medes dedicated this memorial to Phoebus (Apollo)', as if the work and the offering were his alone, and not from the allies together. The Greeks were enraged and the Plataeans obtained leave to bring a suit, on behalf of the allies, against the Lacedaemonians for 1,000 talents at the Amphictyonic council;[b] and they compelled the Lacedaemonians to erase the inscription and inscribe the names of those cities which had shared in the work".

The orator goes on to argue that this action rankled the Lacedaemonians and was a strong motive, 50 years later, in their influencing the Theban night attack on Plataea in 431 BC, which was the first action in the Peloponnesian war described in Thucydides book 2.

Diodorus Siculus, writing in the 1st century BC, says that a couplet composed by the poet Simonides, replaced Pausanias’ haughty personal dedication:[6][dubious ]

The saviours of Greece at large dedicated this,
having delivered the cities from wretched servitude.

Classical and Roman history edit

In the second century AD, Pausanias, the travel writer, noticed the monument at Delphi:[7] "The Greeks together, from the spoils taken at the battle of Plataea, dedicated a gold tripod set on a bronze serpent. The bronze part of the offering was preserved there, even at my time, but the Phocian leaders did not leave the gold in place in the same way." The Phocian General Philomelus took the treasures in 354 BC to pay for mercenaries during the Third Sacred War, an act of extreme sacrilege, which resulted in the expulsion of Phocians from the Amphictyonic league, by Philip II of Macedon, and to the imposition on them of a fine of 400 talents.[3]

Even at the time of Pausanias’ visit, the Sacred Way, leading up to the temple of Apollo, was lined on both sides with monuments, statues and treasuries commemorating important events in Greek History. "Closest to the altar", as Herodotus says, was the Serpentine column, the base of which has been found, as has the base of the altar, which was dedicated by the Chians.[8] Above these loomed the great bronze statue of Apollo, and, on the architrave of the temple, shields commemorating a Greek victory over the Gauls. Pausanias also mentions [9] the offering to Zeus at Olympia, [paragraph above] and listed the names of the cities engraved upon it.

Byzantine history edit

Constantine the Great moved the Serpent Column to Constantinople to decorate the spina (central line) of the Hippodrome of Constantinople, where it still stands today.

According to W. W. How and J. Wells, it was converted into a triple-mouthed fountain by a later Emperor, and was seen and described by travellers from 1422 onwards.[citation needed]

Many Ottoman miniatures show the serpent heads were intact in the early decades following the Turkish conquest of the city.[10]

Ottoman period edit

 
Depiction of the Hippodrome in 1536, by the Ottoman miniaturist Matrakci Nasuh
 
The text of the Hünername, written in the 1580s, claims that Patriarch Gennadios visited Mehmed II to tell him that if he damaged the Serpent Column the city would be infested with snakes, and a miniature was painted showing the patriarch giving this warning as the sultan throws his mace at a jaw." Miniature from the Hünername.

Ahmed Bican, from Gallipoli, gave a short description of the Column in his Dürr-i Meknûn, written around the time of the Fall of Constantinople. He states that it is a hollow bronze of intertwined snakes, three-headed, a talisman for the citizens against snake bites.[11]

Between fifty and one hundred years after the Turkish conquest of Constantinople, the jaw of one of the three serpent heads was documented missing. The accepted version states that Mehmed II shattered it upon entering the city in triumph as its conqueror.[12] Edward Gibbon recounts a version of this event:

The conqueror gazed in satisfaction and wonder on the strange though splendid appearance of the domes and palaces, so dissimilar from the style of Oriental architecture. In the hippodrome, his eye was attracted by the twisted column of the three serpents, and, as a trial of his strength, he shattered with his iron mace or battleaxe the under-jaw of one of these monsters, which in the eyes of the Turks were the idols or talismans of the city.[13]

Other Ottoman writers attributed the lost jaw to Selim II, Suleiman II or Murad IV, all said to have struck off the jaw to show their strength.[14]

The column is quite extensively described along with a dissertation about its history by Petrus Gyllius, who visited Constantinople in 1550. No mention about any damage of the column.[15] The column is then described by Pietro Della Valle, who visited Constantinople in 1614. Again no mention about damages, but he reports the folkloristic tale about the column as a talisman.[16]

Later, at the end of the 17th century, all three of the serpent heads were destroyed. Silahdar Findiklili Mehmed Aga relates in Nusretname ("The Book of Victories") that the heads simply fell off on the night of October 20, 1700.[17] The upper jaw of one of the heads is on display at the Istanbul Archaeology Museum.

Excavation edit

 
Drawing of the inscriptions, 1907
 
Replica of the Serpent Column erected at Delphi, 2015

Marcus N. Tod says the level of the ground was raised in 1630, and the inscribed portion of the monument was then hidden. The base of the column was excavated in 1855, under the supervision of Charles Thomas Newton. Fifteen of the serpents’ coils had been hidden and the inscription, beginning at the 13th coil and ending at the 3rd was revealed. It was deciphered by C. Frick in 1856, by Ernst Fabricius in 1886 and by others since.

The 13th coil carries the Laconic inscription:

"Those who fought the war", followed on coils 12 to 3 by the names of 31 city states. This contains eight cities not named in Herodotus, book 9.28 as being present at the battle of Plataea, and excludes Pale, in Cephalonia, which Herodotus did include. In the aforementioned paragraph Pausanias lists the names on the offering to Zeus at Olympia, which exclude four cities inscribed on the Serpentine column. Perhaps this is a simple oversight by a copyist. Although the cities inscribed on the column exclude other cities mentioned by Herodotus as participating in the war, it is clear that the memorial relates to the Great Persian War as a whole, not just the battle of Plataea. Coils 12 and 13 have been scarred and dented by sabre cuts, which made the inscriptions difficult to decipher. The dedication, said by Diodorus to have been composed by Simonides, has not been found. One of the serpent heads survives in the Museum of Antiquities, Istanbul. This head has its under-jaw missing, in line with the story of Mehmet II striking it off.

In 2015 a bronze cast copy of the serpent column was made and set up in the Archaeological Site of Delphi.

Inscription edit

On the coils of the column, an inscription was written that mentioned the Greek city states that had fought the war. They are more or less arranged according to the number of soldiers and/or money they had contributed to the force that had assembled at Plataea.

Greek City States Who Fought at Plataea
Coil State Number of Men
Twelfth coil Lacedaemonians 10,000
Athenians 8,000
Corinthians 5,000
Eleventh coil Tegeans 1,500
Sicyonians 3,000
Aeginetans 500
Tenth coil Megarians 3,000
Epidaurians 700
Orchomenians 600
Ninth coil Phliasians 1,000
Troezenians 1,000
Hermionians 300
Eighth coil Tirynthians 200?
Plataeans 600
Thespians 1,800
Seventh coil Mycenaeans 200?
Ceans -
Melians -
Tenians -
Sixth coil Naxians -
Eretrians 300?
Chalcidians 400
Fifth coil Styrians 300?
Eleans -
Potideaeans 300
Fourth coil Leucadians 400?
Anactorians 400?
Cythnians -
Siphnians -
Third coil Ambraciots 500
Lepreans 200

Herodotus adds the Styreans, Mantineans, Crotoniats, Cephalonians, Lemnians, and Seriphians.

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Pausanias was regent to his cousin, King Pleistarchus, son of Leonidas, who was still a minor.
  2. ^ The Amphictyonic Council was a meeting of 12 city states with responsibility over the sanctuary at Delphi.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Τρικάρηνος ὄφις ὁ χάλκεος, i.e. "the bronze three-headed serpent"; see Herodotus (1920). "9.81.1". Histories. with an English translation by A. D. Godley. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

    συμφορήσαντες δὲ τὰ χρήματα καὶ δεκάτην ἐξελόντες τῷ ἐν Δελφοῖσι θεῷ, ἀπ᾽ ἧς ὁ τρίπους ὁ χρύσεος ἀνετέθη ὁ ἐπὶ τοῦ τρικαρήνου ὄφιος τοῦ χαλκέου ἐπεστεὼς ἄγχιστα τοῦ βωμοῦ...

    Having brought all the loot together, they set apart a tithe for the god of Delphi. From this was made and dedicated that tripod which rests upon the bronze three-headed serpent, nearest to the altar...

    See also τρικάρηνος, ὄφις. Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; A Greek–English Lexicon at the Perseus Project.
  2. ^ Istanbul Governor's official website – The Serpent Column. web page 2007-08-02 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ a b Folio Society edition of the History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire 1984 & 1990.
  4. ^ Translated from Thucydides, Book 1.132.
  5. ^ Translated from pseudo-Demosthenes, "Against Neaira" 97 [Apollodorus?].
  6. ^ Translated from Diodorus Siculus, book 11.33.2.
  7. ^ Translated from Pausanias, Description of Greeks, book 10.13.9.
  8. ^ A Commentary on Herodotus, How & Wells, Oxford at the Clarendon Press, first published 1912.
  9. ^ Selections of Greek Historical Inscriptions, Marcus N Tod, Oxford at the Clarendon Press, 1933.
  10. ^ Mavrovitis, Jason C. (2000). "The Atmeidan, or Hippodrome in Constantinople" – web page
  11. ^ Laban Kaptein (ed.), Ahmed Bican, Dürr-i meknûn, p. 186 and § 7.110). Asch 2007. ISBN 978-90-902140-8-5
  12. ^ Menage 1964, pp. 169–70.
  13. ^ Gibbon, Op. cit., Chapter 68
  14. ^ Rolf Strootman. "The Serpent Column: The Persistent Meanings of a Pagan Relic in Christian and Islamic Constantinople". Utrecht University. p. 440.
  15. ^ Gyllius 1729, pp. 111–112.
  16. ^ della Valle 1843, pp. 30–31.
  17. ^ Menage 1964, pp. 172–73.

Sources edit

Ancient sources edit

  • Herodotus (1920). The Histories. with an English translation by A. D. Godley. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. At the Perseus Project of Tufts University.
  • Diodorus Siculus (1967). Library. in Twelve Volumes with an English Translation by C. H. Oldfather. Cambridge, Mass.; London.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) At the Perseus Project of Tufts University.

Modern sources edit

  • Gyllius, P. (1729). The antiquities of Constantinople: with a description of its situation, the conveniencies of its port, its publick buildings, the statuary, sculpture, architecture, and other curiosities of that city: with cuts explaining the chief of them: in four books. London.
  • della Valle, P. (1843). Viaggi di Pietro della Valle, il pellegrino: descritti da lui medesimo in lettere familiari all'erudito suo amico Mario Schipano, divisi in tre parti cioè: La Truchia, La Persia, e l'India, colla vita dell'autore. Brighton: G. Gancia.
  • Menage, V.L. (1964). "The Serpent Column in Ottoman Sources". Anatolian Studies. Anatolian Studies, Vol. 14. 14: 169–73. doi:10.2307/3642472. JSTOR 3642472. S2CID 191577344.

Further reading edit

  • Volume 4 of the Cambridge Ancient History
  • G.B.Grundy, The Great Persian War [library of US Congress, catalogue card number: 71-84875]
  • Broken Bits of Byzantium (1891), by C. G. Curtis and Mary A. Walker, Part II, as referred to in Broken Bits of Byzantium by J. Freely in, Istanbul 1, Myth to Modernity, Selected Themes, p. 23-24.
  • William Custis West, Greek Public Monuments of the Persian Wars, chapter III: Panhellenic monuments of the Persian Wars in General 2014-08-19 at the Wayback Machine, no. 25: Gilded tripod supported by column of three entwined serpents, dedicated at Delphi.
  • Thomas F. Madden, The Serpent Column of Delphi in Costantinople: Placement, Purposes, and Mutilations, Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies 16 (1992), pp. 111–45.
  • The serpent column and the covenant of Plataia in Benjamin Dean Meritt, H. T. Wade-Gery, Malcolm Francis McGregor, The athenian tribute lists, vol. III, The American School of Classical Studies at Athens, Princeton, New Jersey, 1950, pp. 95–105.
  • Paul Stephenson, The Serpent Column: A Cultural Biography, Oxford University Press 2016.

External links edit

  • Encyclopædia Britannica Online – Ancient Greek Civilization – The Persian Wars
  • Byzantium 1200 | Delphi Tripod computer reconstruction
  • I.M.Varvitsiotis, "The forgotten three-headed snake" 2008-09-26 at the Wayback Machine
  • "Epigraphic Sources for Early Greek Writing" 2009-07-18 at the Wayback Machine
  • The Atmeidan, or Hippodrome – in Constantinople
  • Reconstruction of the tripod of Plataea
  • Phokian Script: The Serpent Column 2009-07-18 at the Wayback Machine
  • [1]

41°00′20.33″N 28°58′30.43″E / 41.0056472°N 28.9751194°E / 41.0056472; 28.9751194

serpent, column, ancient, greek, Τρικάρηνος, Ὄφις, Τrikarenos, Οphis, three, headed, serpent, turkish, yılanlı, sütun, serpentine, column, also, known, serpentine, column, plataean, tripod, delphi, tripod, ancient, bronze, column, hippodrome, constantinople, k. The Serpent Column Ancient Greek Trikarhnos Ὄfis Trikarenos Ophis Three headed Serpent 1 Turkish Yilanli Sutun Serpentine Column also known as the Serpentine Column Plataean Tripod or Delphi Tripod is an ancient bronze column at the Hippodrome of Constantinople known as Atmeydani Horse Square in the Ottoman period in what is now Istanbul Turkey It is part of an ancient Greek sacrificial tripod originally in Delphi and relocated to Constantinople by Constantine the Great in 324 It was built to commemorate the Greeks who fought and defeated the Persian Empire at the Battle of Plataea 479 BC The serpent heads of the 8 metre 26 ft high column remained intact until the end of the 17th century one is on display at the nearby Istanbul Archaeology Museums 2 Serpent ColumnThe Serpent Column in IstanbulLocationHippodrome of Constantinople today Sultanahmet Square Istanbul Turkey Location of Serpent Column in Istanbul Contents 1 History 1 1 Battle of Plataea 1 2 Dedication 1 3 Pausanias inscription 1 4 Classical and Roman history 1 5 Byzantine history 1 6 Ottoman period 2 Excavation 3 Inscription 4 See also 5 Footnotes 6 References 7 Sources 7 1 Ancient sources 7 2 Modern sources 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp nbsp The Serpent Column left drawing of 1574 showing the column with the three serpent heads right the current state nbsp A part of one of the heads is located in the Istanbul Archaeology Museum nbsp Ottoman miniature from the Surname i Vehbi showing the Column with the three serpent heads but the bowl already missing in a celebration at the Hippodrome in 1582The Serpentine Column has one of the longest literary histories of any object surviving from Greek and Roman antiquity Together with its original golden tripod and cauldron both long missing it constituted a trophy or offering reminding of a military victory dedicated to Apollo at Delphi This offering was made in the spring of 478 BC several months after the defeat of the Persian army in the Battle of Plataea August 479 BC by those Greek city states in alliance against the Persian invasion of mainland Greece during the Greco Persian Wars Among the writers who allude to the Column in the ancient literature are Herodotus Thucydides pseudo Demosthenes Diodorus Siculus Pausanias the traveller Cornelius Nepos and Plutarch The removal of the column by the Emperor Constantine to his new capital Constantinople is described by Edward Gibbon citing the testimony of the Byzantine historians Zosimus Eusebius Socrates and Sozomenus Battle of Plataea edit Main article Battle of Plataea nbsp Western print illustrating Aubry de la Mottraye 1727When the Persians invaded Greece under Xerxes in 480 BC they were initially victorious at the Battle of Thermopylae and the Battle of Artemisium in August The Greeks defeated the Persian navy at the Battle of Salamis in September After Salamis Xerxes withdrew from Greece but left a land force in Thrace under the command of general Mardonius He retook Athens in the spring of 479 BC and the war continued On learning that a Spartan force was coming from the Peloponnese Mardonius set fire to Athens again and removed his force to a strategic position in Boeotia north of the river Asopus The Greeks under the leadership of Pausanias Regent of Sparta a drew up on high ground in defensive positions south of the river Asopus and above the plain of Plataea After days of skirmishing and changes of position on the Greek side Mardonius launched a full attack The result of the complex battle was complete victory for the Spartans under the leadership of Pausanias Mardonius was killed and the Persians fled in confusion led by Artabazus the Persian second in command The Greek victories at Plataea and contemporaneous naval battle at Mycale brought the invasion of Greece to an end The Persian Empire would never again launch an attack on mainland Greece Following these victories Athens established itself as the head of the Delian League reaching its height under the leadership of Pericles Dedication edit After describing the Greek victory at Plataea in 479 BC Herodotus recounts the collection of rich spoils by the Helots the Spartan underclass who had taken part in the battle and then records the decision of the Greek cities to dedicate an offering to Apollo at Delphi 1 3 Having brought all the loot together they set apart a tithe for the god of Delphi From this was made and dedicated that tripod which rests upon the bronze three headed serpent nearest to the altar Herodotus Histories 9 81 1 The bronze column consisting of three intertwined snakes 1 was intended to commemorate the 31 Greek city states that participated in the battle A golden tripod topped the column made by Persian weapons and the whole monument was dedicated to the god Apollo and was placed next to the altar of Apollo at Delphi In the same chapter Herodotus records that dedications were also made to Zeus at Olympia and to Poseidon at the Isthmus It is significant that precedence was given to Apollo at Delphi despite the ambiguities in the responses of the Delphic oracle about the outcome of the invasion and a suspicion that Delphi was sympathetic to the Persians Pausanias inscription edit Pausanias full of arrogance over his victory at Plataea and the subsequent ease with which he punished the Theban leaders for their support of the Persians ordered a dedication on the column ascribing victory to himself alone Later it was discovered he had been in negotiations with the Persians and the Helots of Sparta to stage a rebellion and set himself up as Tyrant Although his treachery was at first disbelieved in Sparta it was eventually confirmed by the Ephors of Sparta through his personal slave and he was killed Thucydides describes 4 the Spartan suspicion that Pausanias was at the point of committing treason and going over to the Persians citing the Serpentine column affair as evidence Pausanias provided other causes for suspicion in his disregard of laws his admiration of the Persians and his dissatisfaction with the status quo Upon examination of the rest of his behaviour the Spartans recalled that when the tripod at Delphi was first erected Pausanias had thought fit of his own accord to have a diptych engraved upon it with the inscription Pausanias commander in chief of the Greeks when he had destroyed the army of the Medes dedicated this memorial to Phoebus Apollo The Lacedaemonians at once removed the diptych from the tripod and engraved the names of the cities who had joined together against the Persians and set up the offering Pseudo Demosthenes 5 gives a significantly different account of the train of events In a speech Against Neaira the orator recalls the conduct of Pausanias after the defeat of the Persians in the battle of Plataea over the Serpentine column Pausanias King of the Lacedaemonians caused a diptych to be inscribed on the tripod at Delphi which those Greeks who had fought as allies in the battle of Plataea and in the naval engagement at Salamis had together made from the spoils taken from the Barbarians and had set up in honour of Apollo as a memorial to their bravery as follows Pausanias commander in chief of the Greeks when he had destroyed the army of the Medes dedicated this memorial to Phoebus Apollo as if the work and the offering were his alone and not from the allies together The Greeks were enraged and the Plataeans obtained leave to bring a suit on behalf of the allies against the Lacedaemonians for 1 000 talents at the Amphictyonic council b and they compelled the Lacedaemonians to erase the inscription and inscribe the names of those cities which had shared in the work The orator goes on to argue that this action rankled the Lacedaemonians and was a strong motive 50 years later in their influencing the Theban night attack on Plataea in 431 BC which was the first action in the Peloponnesian war described in Thucydides book 2 Diodorus Siculus writing in the 1st century BC says that a couplet composed by the poet Simonides replaced Pausanias haughty personal dedication 6 dubious discuss The saviours of Greece at large dedicated this having delivered the cities from wretched servitude Classical and Roman history edit In the second century AD Pausanias the travel writer noticed the monument at Delphi 7 The Greeks together from the spoils taken at the battle of Plataea dedicated a gold tripod set on a bronze serpent The bronze part of the offering was preserved there even at my time but the Phocian leaders did not leave the gold in place in the same way The Phocian General Philomelus took the treasures in 354 BC to pay for mercenaries during the Third Sacred War an act of extreme sacrilege which resulted in the expulsion of Phocians from the Amphictyonic league by Philip II of Macedon and to the imposition on them of a fine of 400 talents 3 Even at the time of Pausanias visit the Sacred Way leading up to the temple of Apollo was lined on both sides with monuments statues and treasuries commemorating important events in Greek History Closest to the altar as Herodotus says was the Serpentine column the base of which has been found as has the base of the altar which was dedicated by the Chians 8 Above these loomed the great bronze statue of Apollo and on the architrave of the temple shields commemorating a Greek victory over the Gauls Pausanias also mentions 9 the offering to Zeus at Olympia paragraph above and listed the names of the cities engraved upon it Byzantine history edit Constantine the Great moved the Serpent Column to Constantinople to decorate the spina central line of the Hippodrome of Constantinople where it still stands today According to W W How and J Wells it was converted into a triple mouthed fountain by a later Emperor and was seen and described by travellers from 1422 onwards citation needed Many Ottoman miniatures show the serpent heads were intact in the early decades following the Turkish conquest of the city 10 Ottoman period edit nbsp Depiction of the Hippodrome in 1536 by the Ottoman miniaturist Matrakci Nasuh nbsp The text of the Hunername written in the 1580s claims that Patriarch Gennadios visited Mehmed II to tell him that if he damaged the Serpent Column the city would be infested with snakes and a miniature was painted showing the patriarch giving this warning as the sultan throws his mace at a jaw Miniature from the Hunername This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2021 Ahmed Bican from Gallipoli gave a short description of the Column in his Durr i Meknun written around the time of the Fall of Constantinople He states that it is a hollow bronze of intertwined snakes three headed a talisman for the citizens against snake bites 11 Between fifty and one hundred years after the Turkish conquest of Constantinople the jaw of one of the three serpent heads was documented missing The accepted version states that Mehmed II shattered it upon entering the city in triumph as its conqueror 12 Edward Gibbon recounts a version of this event The conqueror gazed in satisfaction and wonder on the strange though splendid appearance of the domes and palaces so dissimilar from the style of Oriental architecture In the hippodrome his eye was attracted by the twisted column of the three serpents and as a trial of his strength he shattered with his iron mace or battleaxe the under jaw of one of these monsters which in the eyes of the Turks were the idols or talismans of the city 13 Other Ottoman writers attributed the lost jaw to Selim II Suleiman II or Murad IV all said to have struck off the jaw to show their strength 14 The column is quite extensively described along with a dissertation about its history by Petrus Gyllius who visited Constantinople in 1550 No mention about any damage of the column 15 The column is then described by Pietro Della Valle who visited Constantinople in 1614 Again no mention about damages but he reports the folkloristic tale about the column as a talisman 16 Later at the end of the 17th century all three of the serpent heads were destroyed Silahdar Findiklili Mehmed Aga relates in Nusretname The Book of Victories that the heads simply fell off on the night of October 20 1700 17 The upper jaw of one of the heads is on display at the Istanbul Archaeology Museum Excavation edit nbsp Drawing of the inscriptions 1907 nbsp Replica of the Serpent Column erected at Delphi 2015Marcus N Tod says the level of the ground was raised in 1630 and the inscribed portion of the monument was then hidden The base of the column was excavated in 1855 under the supervision of Charles Thomas Newton Fifteen of the serpents coils had been hidden and the inscription beginning at the 13th coil and ending at the 3rd was revealed It was deciphered by C Frick in 1856 by Ernst Fabricius in 1886 and by others since The 13th coil carries the Laconic inscription Those who fought the war followed on coils 12 to 3 by the names of 31 city states This contains eight cities not named in Herodotus book 9 28 as being present at the battle of Plataea and excludes Pale in Cephalonia which Herodotus did include In the aforementioned paragraph Pausanias lists the names on the offering to Zeus at Olympia which exclude four cities inscribed on the Serpentine column Perhaps this is a simple oversight by a copyist Although the cities inscribed on the column exclude other cities mentioned by Herodotus as participating in the war it is clear that the memorial relates to the Great Persian War as a whole not just the battle of Plataea Coils 12 and 13 have been scarred and dented by sabre cuts which made the inscriptions difficult to decipher The dedication said by Diodorus to have been composed by Simonides has not been found One of the serpent heads survives in the Museum of Antiquities Istanbul This head has its under jaw missing in line with the story of Mehmet II striking it off In 2015 a bronze cast copy of the serpent column was made and set up in the Archaeological Site of Delphi Inscription editOn the coils of the column an inscription was written that mentioned the Greek city states that had fought the war They are more or less arranged according to the number of soldiers and or money they had contributed to the force that had assembled at Plataea Greek City States Who Fought at Plataea Coil State Number of MenTwelfth coil Lacedaemonians 10 000Athenians 8 000Corinthians 5 000Eleventh coil Tegeans 1 500Sicyonians 3 000Aeginetans 500Tenth coil Megarians 3 000Epidaurians 700Orchomenians 600Ninth coil Phliasians 1 000Troezenians 1 000Hermionians 300Eighth coil Tirynthians 200 Plataeans 600Thespians 1 800Seventh coil Mycenaeans 200 Ceans Melians Tenians Sixth coil Naxians Eretrians 300 Chalcidians 400Fifth coil Styrians 300 Eleans Potideaeans 300Fourth coil Leucadians 400 Anactorians 400 Cythnians Siphnians Third coil Ambraciots 500Lepreans 200Herodotus adds the Styreans Mantineans Crotoniats Cephalonians Lemnians and Seriphians See also editDelian League Ionian Revolt Iron pillar of Delhi List of public art in Istanbul Nehushtan Pausanias general Pericles Serpent symbolism Xerxes I of PersiaFootnotes edit Pausanias was regent to his cousin King Pleistarchus son of Leonidas who was still a minor The Amphictyonic Council was a meeting of 12 city states with responsibility over the sanctuary at Delphi References edit a b c Trikarhnos ὄfis ὁ xalkeos i e the bronze three headed serpent see Herodotus 1920 9 81 1 Histories with an English translation by A D Godley Cambridge Harvard University Press symforhsantes dὲ tὰ xrhmata kaὶ dekathn ἐ3elontes tῷ ἐn Delfoῖsi 8eῷ ἀp ἧs ὁ tripoys ὁ xryseos ἀnete8h ὁ ἐpὶ toῦ trikarhnoy ὄfios toῦ xalkeoy ἐpesteὼs ἄgxista toῦ bwmoῦ Having brought all the loot together they set apart a tithe for the god of Delphi From this was made and dedicated that tripod which rests upon the bronze three headed serpent nearest to the altar See also trikarhnos ὄfis Liddell Henry George Scott Robert A Greek English Lexicon at the Perseus Project Istanbul Governor s official website The Serpent Column web page Archived 2007 08 02 at the Wayback Machine a b Folio Society edition of the History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire 1984 amp 1990 Translated from Thucydides Book 1 132 Translated from pseudo Demosthenes Against Neaira 97 Apollodorus Translated from Diodorus Siculus book 11 33 2 Translated from Pausanias Description of Greeks book 10 13 9 A Commentary on Herodotus How amp Wells Oxford at the Clarendon Press first published 1912 Selections of Greek Historical Inscriptions Marcus N Tod Oxford at the Clarendon Press 1933 Mavrovitis Jason C 2000 The Atmeidan or Hippodrome in Constantinople web page Laban Kaptein ed Ahmed Bican Durr i meknun p 186 and 7 110 Asch 2007 ISBN 978 90 902140 8 5 Menage 1964 pp 169 70 Gibbon Op cit Chapter 68 Rolf Strootman The Serpent Column The Persistent Meanings of a Pagan Relic in Christian and Islamic Constantinople Utrecht University p 440 Gyllius 1729 pp 111 112 della Valle 1843 pp 30 31 Menage 1964 pp 172 73 Sources editAncient sources edit Herodotus 1920 The Histories with an English translation by A D Godley Cambridge Harvard University Press At the Perseus Project of Tufts University Diodorus Siculus 1967 Library in Twelve Volumes with an English Translation by C H Oldfather Cambridge Mass London a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link At the Perseus Project of Tufts University Modern sources edit Gyllius P 1729 The antiquities of Constantinople with a description of its situation the conveniencies of its port its publick buildings the statuary sculpture architecture and other curiosities of that city with cuts explaining the chief of them in four books London della Valle P 1843 Viaggi di Pietro della Valle il pellegrino descritti da lui medesimo in lettere familiari all erudito suo amico Mario Schipano divisi in tre parti cioe La Truchia La Persia e l India colla vita dell autore Brighton G Gancia Menage V L 1964 The Serpent Column in Ottoman Sources Anatolian Studies Anatolian Studies Vol 14 14 169 73 doi 10 2307 3642472 JSTOR 3642472 S2CID 191577344 Further reading editVolume 4 of the Cambridge Ancient History G B Grundy The Great Persian War library of US Congress catalogue card number 71 84875 Broken Bits of Byzantium 1891 by C G Curtis and Mary A Walker Part II as referred to in Broken Bits of Byzantium by J Freely in Istanbul 1 Myth to Modernity Selected Themes p 23 24 William Custis West Greek Public Monuments of the Persian Wars chapter III Panhellenic monuments of the Persian Wars in General Archived 2014 08 19 at the Wayback Machine no 25 Gilded tripod supported by column of three entwined serpents dedicated at Delphi Thomas F Madden The Serpent Column of Delphi in Costantinople Placement Purposes and Mutilations Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies 16 1992 pp 111 45 The serpent column and the covenant of Plataia in Benjamin Dean Meritt H T Wade Gery Malcolm Francis McGregor The athenian tribute lists vol III The American School of Classical Studies at Athens Princeton New Jersey 1950 pp 95 105 Paul Stephenson The Serpent Column A Cultural Biography Oxford University Press 2016 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Serpent Column Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Ancient Greek Civilization The Persian Wars Byzantium 1200 Delphi Tripod computer reconstruction I M Varvitsiotis The forgotten three headed snake Archived 2008 09 26 at the Wayback Machine Epigraphic Sources for Early Greek Writing Archived 2009 07 18 at the Wayback Machine The Atmeidan or Hippodrome in Constantinople Reconstruction of the tripod of Plataea Phokian Script The Serpent Column Archived 2009 07 18 at the Wayback Machine 1 41 00 20 33 N 28 58 30 43 E 41 0056472 N 28 9751194 E 41 0056472 28 9751194 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Serpent Column amp oldid 1187649122, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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