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Stoa Poikile

The Stoa Poikile (Ancient Greek: ἡ ποικίλη στοά, hē poikílē stoá) or Painted Portico was a Doric stoa (a covered walkway or portico) erected around 460 BC on the north side of the Ancient Agora of Athens. It was one of the most famous sites in ancient Athens, owing its fame to the paintings and war-booty displayed within it and to its association with ancient Greek philosophy, especially Stoicism.

Plan of the Agora at the end of the Classical Period (ca. 300 BC); the Stoa Poikiles is number 11.
Plan of the Ancient Agora of Athens in the Roman Imperial period (ca. 150 AD).

History edit

The stoa is frequently mentioned in literary and epigraphical sources.[1] It was built by one Peisianax, a cousin of Pericles, in the 460s BC,[2] and it was therefore originally known as the "Peisianactean Stoa" (ἡ Πεισιανάκτειος στοά, hē Peisianákteios stoá).[3] Inside the stoa, there were a set of paintings on tablets, by Polygnotus (who painted his portion for free), Micon, and perhaps Panaenus (a younger relative of Phidias). The sources disagree on which painter produced which painting.[4][5] Demosthenes, Aeschines, and other authors point to the painting of the Battle of Marathon as a key memorial of Athens' ancestral valour.[6] Bronze shields captured from the Spartans at the Battle of Sphacteria in 425 BC and from the siege of Scione in 421 BC were set up in the stoa, where they could still be seen in the 2nd century AD.[7]

According to Diogenes Laertius, was the site where the oligarchic government of the Thirty Tyrants "made away with" 1400 Athenian citizens in 403 BC. It is unclear whether this means that the stoa was where they sentenced them to death or where they were actually executed.[8]

At the beginning of the Eleusinian Mysteries, the hierophant and the dadouch made an announcement that all non-initiates must keep out of the way.[9] Sources from the mid-fourth century BC mention its use as a law court and as the venue for official arbitrations.[10]

From the fourth century BC onwards, philosophers often taught in the stoa. The homeless Cynic philosopher Crates spent his time there.[11] His student, Zeno of Citium, was particularly closely associated with the stoa, where he taught from around 300 BC until his death c. 262 BC. The philosophical school that he founded was named Stoicism as a result.[8] The late third-century BC comedian Theognetus refers to "trifling arguments from the Poikile Stoa" in a joke about philosophers.[12] Some philosophers spoke to their followers while walking up and down the stoa,[13] but there were benches where people could sit and listen to lectures. There was also an area - probably the steps - where beggars customarily sat.[8] The second century AD epistolographer Alciphron refers to "the unshod, cadaverous people who spend their time in the Poikile" and to "chattering philosophers making trouble there."[14] Lucian presents philosophers teaching and debating there in several works.[15] In the Imperial period, it was also a site of street entertainment; the second-century AD novelist Apuleius reports watching sword swallowers and gymnasts there.[11]

A gate over the street to the west was added in the Hellenistic period, which was joined to the west side of the stoa. The stoa apparently survived the Herulian Sack of 267 AD intact. In a letter of 396 AD, Synesius mentions that the paintings had been removed by a Roman governor, apparently not long before.[16][17] The building was still standing in the fifth century AD when the "late Roman stoa" was built to the west; this building rested against the Stoa Poikile's west wall.[18] Debris over the remains suggest that it went out of use and was quarried for building material in the sixth century AD.[19]

Description edit

 
Ruins of the western end of the Stoa Poikile, seen from the southwest.
 
The excavated area of the northwest corner of the Agora, from the south. At right, the Stoa Poikile; in the lower foreground, the Hellenistic gate; at left, the Temple of Aphrodite Urania.

The stoa was located at the northwest corner of the Agora, on the left (north) side of the Panathenaic Way as one entered the Agora. To the west was a narrow north–south street.[20] On the other side of that street was an altar and (in the Roman period) a temple, probably dedicated to Aphrodite Urania. To the north was a Classical Commercial Building.[21] To the south was the drain that conveyed the Eridanus. To the southwest, on the other side of the Panathenaic Way, were the Stoa Basileios, the Leokorion, and the Altar of the Twelve Gods.[22] Another north–south street probably bounded the eastern edge of the stoa and somewhere further east was the Stoa of the Herms.[23]

The stoa was oriented so that it extended from south-west to north-east.[24] The northern (back) wall is 1.40 metres wide and has been uncovered for a length of 10.40 metres. The total length of the stoa is unknown,[25] but at least 46 metres would be proportionate with the stoa's depth. It probably extended all or most of the way to the next north–south street, which enters the agora about 55 metres to the east.[26] The west side-wall was 12.6 metres long and (at the level of the foundations) 2.68 metres thick. The foundation consisted of three steps of hard, fine-grained poros of very fine workmanship, joined very precisely with iron double-T clamps sealed in place with lead.[20] The steps show substantial wear from use as seating.[27] An upside-down kalos graffito indicates that the blocks were reused from some earlier context.[28] The southern side of the stoa was the main façade. There were four steps and a Doric colonnade,[29] with an intercolumniation of 1.998 metres.[30] Above this was a triglyph frieze of poros, which was 0.718 metres high. The triglyphs were 0.384 metres wide; the metopes, which consisted of marble panels that slotted in between the triglyphs, were 0.615 metres wide. This frieze continued around the west and east sides of the stoa.[30] Inside, there was an interior colonnade of narrow Ionic columns with poros shafts and marble capitals, which supported the ridge of the roof.[31][notes 1] This makes it the earliest known building at Athens to combine the Doric and Ionic orders.[32] A set of rough poros blocks running along the inside of the back wall probably supported a bench running along the back wall.[33]

The packing of the foundation consisted of poros chips and red earth which contained numerous sherds of pottery that date alost exclusively to the 460s BC, indicating that this was the date of construction.[2]

By the second century AD, bronze statues of Hermes Agoraeus, Solon, Seleucus, and others stood in front of the stoa.[34]

Paintings edit

The stoa contained four famous paintings, which have not survived, but are mentioned by many authors, particularly the 2nd-century AD travel writer Pausanias. These paintings were probably on wooden boards on the back wall of the stoa and depicted:[35]

A scholiast states that the stoa contained "many paintings", and other paintings are mentioned by various authors, including a painting by Apollodorus or Pamphilus of the Heracleidae and Alcmene supplicating the Athenians for protection from Eurystheus,[9] a picture of the tragedian Sophocles playing the lyre,[38] and a battle at Phlius.[1]

The set of paintings sharply juxtaposes mythical and historical events, so that the mythical victories of Theseus over the Amazons and of the Greeks over Troy contrast with the (presumably) historic battle of Oenoe, apparently the first important Athenian victory over Sparta, and the Athenian victory over the Persians at Marathon. This contrast is a theme in the art and literature of Athens from the fifth century BC onwards.[39]

Battle of Marathon edit

The painting of the Battle of Marathon displayed the confidence and identity of the Athenians in the wake of the Persian Wars. Of this painting Pausanias says:

At the end of the painting are those who fought at Marathon; the Boeotians of Plataea and the Attic contingent are coming to blows with the foreigners. In this place neither side has the better, but the center of the fighting shows the foreigners in flight and pushing one another into the morass, while at the end of the painting are the Phoenician ships, and the Greeks killing the foreigners who are scrambling into them. Here is also a portrait of the hero Marathon, after whom the plain is named, of Theseus represented as coming up from the under-world, of Athena and of Heracles. The Marathonians, according to their own account, were the first to regard Heracles as a god. Of the fighters the most conspicuous figures in the painting are Callimachus, who had been elected commander-in-chief by the Athenians, Miltiades, one of the generals, and a hero called Echetlus, of whom I shall make mention later.

— Pausanias 1.15.3.[40]
 
Reconstruction of the painting of the Battle of Marathon in the Stoa Poikile, after Carl Robert, Hallisches Winckelmannsprogramm (1895).

Hellenistic gate edit

 
Late Roman column base on top of the west pier of the Hellenistic gate

In the Hellenistic period a gate was built over the north–south street, which abutted on the stoa's west wall and aligned perfectly with its front anta.[41] The foundations of this gate are formed of poros blocks and consist of two large piers, with a 2.5 metre gap of hard-packed gravel for traffic.[41] Only two blocks from the superstructure (a higher quality poros) survive.[41] It is not possible to reconstruct its appearance, but it must have been a large and "imposing" structure.[42] Pottery found in the packing of the road ranges from 325 BC to a little after 300 BC, indicating that it was constructed around 300 BC.[43] The conglomerate foundations of a monument base stand in front of the west pier.[44]

This gate is mentioned by Pausanias, who says that it had a trophy on top commemorating the Athenian cavalry victory over Pleistarchus.[45]

The structure was demolished before or during the construction of the Late Roman Stoa in the 5th century AD. The west pier wasthen used as the base for a columnar monument; the Ionic base is still in situ on top of it.[44]

Excavations edit

The stoa was uncovered as part of the Agora excavations undertaken by the American School of Classical Studies. In 1949, Homer A. Thompson found a set of architectural fragments of a stoa that had been reused in a Late Antique wall to the west of the Stoa of Attalos. These consisted of a Doric entablature and Oinic interior columns of mid-fifth century BC date.[46] In 1970 Lucy Shoe Meritt identified these as fragments of the Stoa Poikile.[47] The foundations of the stoa were discovered during new American excavations in the northwestern corner of the Agora at 13 Hadrianou Street, which took place between 1980 and 1982 under the leadership of T. Leslie Shear, Jr. [de].[48] The excavation of the stoa was supervised by Ione Mylonas Shear [de] and Margaret Miles in 1981 and by John McK. Camp [de] in 1982.[49] Only the western corner of the stoa was excavated. This discovery disproved Shoe Meritt's theory, since the measurements of the foundations do not match the architectural fragments from the Late Antique wall.[50] Architectural fragments that do fit the foundations were found scattered around the northwest corner of the Agora.[27]

Notes edit

  1. ^ The capitals are similar to those of the Temple of Athena at Sounion (later the Southeast Temple), but with a reduced fascia between the echinus and volutes and without a cyma reversa profile for the echinus: Shear 1984, pp. 11–12

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Wycherley 1957, p. 31.
  2. ^ a b Shear 1984, pp. 13–14.
  3. ^ Scholiast on Demosthenes 20.112; Shoe Meritt 1970, pp. 255–256; Davies 1971, pp. 376–378 for the family relationship.
  4. ^ Shoe Meritt 1970, p. 256.
  5. ^ Wycherley 1957, pp. 31, 37.
  6. ^ Wycherley 1957, pp. 32, 35, 37.
  7. ^ a b Wycherley 1957, p. 40.
  8. ^ a b c Wycherley 1957, p. 36.
  9. ^ a b Wycherley 1957, p. 34.
  10. ^ Wycherley 1957, pp. 31, 35, 45.
  11. ^ a b Wycherley 1957, p. 33.
  12. ^ Wycherley 1957, p. 35.
  13. ^ Wycherley 1957, p. 38.
  14. ^ Wycherley 1957, p. 32.
  15. ^ Wycherley 1957, pp. 38–39.
  16. ^ "Synesius, Letter 054 – Livius". www.livius.org.
  17. ^ Wycherley 1957, p. 44.
  18. ^ Shear 1984, pp. 15–16.
  19. ^ Shear 1984, pp. 16–17.
  20. ^ a b Shear 1984, p. 5.
  21. ^ Camp 1999, pp. 274–281.
  22. ^ Shear 1984, pp. 2–5.
  23. ^ Shear 1984, p. 17.
  24. ^ Shear 1984, p. 7.
  25. ^ Shear 1984, pp. 5–7.
  26. ^ Shear 1984, pp. 17–18.
  27. ^ a b Shear 1984, p. 8.
  28. ^ Shear 1984, p. 14.
  29. ^ Shear 1984, pp. 7–8.
  30. ^ a b Shear 1984, p. 9.
  31. ^ Shear 1984, pp. 9–10.
  32. ^ Shear 1984, p. 11.
  33. ^ Shear 1984, pp. 12–13.
  34. ^ Wycherley 1957, p. 39-40.
  35. ^ Wycherley 1957, pp. 31, 42–43.
  36. ^ Francis & Vickers 1985, pp. 99–113.
  37. ^ Wycherley 1957, p. 81.
  38. ^ Wycherley 1957, p. 42.
  39. ^ Shear 1984, pp. 18–19.
  40. ^ "Perseus Under Philologic: Paus.%201.15.3".
  41. ^ a b c Shear 1984, p. 19.
  42. ^ Shear 1984, pp. 22–23.
  43. ^ Shear 1984, p. 21.
  44. ^ a b Shear 1984, p. 20.
  45. ^ Shear 1984, pp. 21–22.
  46. ^ Thompson 1950, pp. 327–329.
  47. ^ Shoe Meritt 1970, p. 233.
  48. ^ Shear 1984, p. 1.
  49. ^ Shear 1984, p. 5 n. 4.
  50. ^ Shear 1984, p. 9 n. 8.

Bibliography edit

  • Thompson, Homer A. (1950). "Excavations in the Athenian Agora: 1949". Hesperia: The Journal of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens. 19 (4): 313–337. doi:10.2307/146840. ISSN 0018-098X. JSTOR 146840.
  • Wycherley, R. E. (1957). The Athenian Agora III: Literary and Epigraphical Testimonia. Princeton, NJ: American School of Classical Studies at Athens.
  • Jeffery, L. H. (1965). "The Battle of Oinoe in the Stoa Poikile: A Problem in Greek Art and History". The Annual of the British School at Athens. 60: 41–57. ISSN 0068-2454. JSTOR 30103146.
  • Shoe Meritt, Lucy (1970). "The Stoa Poikile". Hesperia. 39 (4): 233–264.
  • Davies, John Kenyon (1971). Athenian Propertied Families, 600-300 B.C. Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0-19-814273-7.
  • Harrison, Evelyn B. (1972). "The South Frieze of the Nike Temple and the Marathon Painting in the Painted Stoa". American Journal of Archaeology. 76 (4): 353–378. doi:10.2307/502871. ISSN 0002-9114. JSTOR 502871.
  • Massaro, Vin (1978). "Herodotos' Account of the Battle of Marathon and the Picture in the Stoa Poikile". L'Antiquité Classique. 47 (2): 458–475. ISSN 0770-2817. JSTOR 41651323.
  • Shear, T. Leslie (1984). "The Athenian Agora: Excavations of 1980-1982". Hesperia: The Journal of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens. 53 (1): 5–19. doi:10.2307/147938. ISSN 0018-098X. JSTOR 147938.
  • Francis, E. D.; Vickers, Michael (1985). "The Oenoe Painting in the Stoa Poikile, and Herodotus' Account of Marathon". The Annual of the British School at Athens. 80: 99–113. ISSN 0068-2454. JSTOR 30102822.
  • Francis, E. D.; Vickers, Michael (1985b). "The Marathon Epigram in the Stoa Poikile". Mnemosyne. 38 (3/4): 390–393. ISSN 0026-7074. JSTOR 4431432.
  • de Angelis, Francesco (1996). "La battaglia di Maratona nella Stoa poikile". ASNP. 1: 119–171.
  • Camp, John McK. (1999). "Excavations in the Athenian Agora 1996 and 1997". Hesperia: The Journal of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens. 68 (3): 255–283. doi:10.2307/148490. ISSN 0018-098X. JSTOR 148490.
  • Todini, Lellida (2008). "Παλαιά τε καὶ καινά. Erodoto e il ciclo figurativo della Stoà Poikile". Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte. 57 (3): 255–262. ISSN 0018-2311. JSTOR 25598434.
  • Luginbill, Robert D. (2014). "The Battle of Oinoe, the Painting in the Stoa Poikile, and Thucydides' Silence". Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte. 63 (3): 278–292. ISSN 0018-2311. JSTOR 24432809.

External links edit

  • "Stoa Poikile". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • Stoa Poikile on the page of the Agora Excavations, American School of Classical Studies in Athens
  • Agora inv. 7554 (the kalos graffito), on the page of the Agora Excavations, American School of Classical Studies in Athens

37°58′35″N 23°43′23″E / 37.9763°N 23.7230°E / 37.9763; 23.7230

stoa, poikile, ancient, greek, ποικίλη, στοά, poikílē, stoá, painted, portico, doric, stoa, covered, walkway, portico, erected, around, north, side, ancient, agora, athens, most, famous, sites, ancient, athens, owing, fame, paintings, booty, displayed, within,. The Stoa Poikile Ancient Greek ἡ poikilh stoa he poikile stoa or Painted Portico was a Doric stoa a covered walkway or portico erected around 460 BC on the north side of the Ancient Agora of Athens It was one of the most famous sites in ancient Athens owing its fame to the paintings and war booty displayed within it and to its association with ancient Greek philosophy especially Stoicism Plan of the Agora at the end of the Classical Period ca 300 BC the Stoa Poikiles is number 11 Plan of the Ancient Agora of Athens in the Roman Imperial period ca 150 AD Contents 1 History 2 Description 2 1 Paintings 2 1 1 Battle of Marathon 2 2 Hellenistic gate 3 Excavations 4 Notes 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksHistory editThe stoa is frequently mentioned in literary and epigraphical sources 1 It was built by one Peisianax a cousin of Pericles in the 460s BC 2 and it was therefore originally known as the Peisianactean Stoa ἡ Peisianakteios stoa he Peisianakteios stoa 3 Inside the stoa there were a set of paintings on tablets by Polygnotus who painted his portion for free Micon and perhaps Panaenus a younger relative of Phidias The sources disagree on which painter produced which painting 4 5 Demosthenes Aeschines and other authors point to the painting of the Battle of Marathon as a key memorial of Athens ancestral valour 6 Bronze shields captured from the Spartans at the Battle of Sphacteria in 425 BC and from the siege of Scione in 421 BC were set up in the stoa where they could still be seen in the 2nd century AD 7 According to Diogenes Laertius was the site where the oligarchic government of the Thirty Tyrants made away with 1400 Athenian citizens in 403 BC It is unclear whether this means that the stoa was where they sentenced them to death or where they were actually executed 8 At the beginning of the Eleusinian Mysteries the hierophant and the dadouch made an announcement that all non initiates must keep out of the way 9 Sources from the mid fourth century BC mention its use as a law court and as the venue for official arbitrations 10 From the fourth century BC onwards philosophers often taught in the stoa The homeless Cynic philosopher Crates spent his time there 11 His student Zeno of Citium was particularly closely associated with the stoa where he taught from around 300 BC until his death c 262 BC The philosophical school that he founded was named Stoicism as a result 8 The late third century BC comedian Theognetus refers to trifling arguments from the Poikile Stoa in a joke about philosophers 12 Some philosophers spoke to their followers while walking up and down the stoa 13 but there were benches where people could sit and listen to lectures There was also an area probably the steps where beggars customarily sat 8 The second century AD epistolographer Alciphron refers to the unshod cadaverous people who spend their time in the Poikile and to chattering philosophers making trouble there 14 Lucian presents philosophers teaching and debating there in several works 15 In the Imperial period it was also a site of street entertainment the second century AD novelist Apuleius reports watching sword swallowers and gymnasts there 11 A gate over the street to the west was added in the Hellenistic period which was joined to the west side of the stoa The stoa apparently survived the Herulian Sack of 267 AD intact In a letter of 396 AD Synesius mentions that the paintings had been removed by a Roman governor apparently not long before 16 17 The building was still standing in the fifth century AD when the late Roman stoa was built to the west this building rested against the Stoa Poikile s west wall 18 Debris over the remains suggest that it went out of use and was quarried for building material in the sixth century AD 19 Description edit nbsp Ruins of the western end of the Stoa Poikile seen from the southwest nbsp The excavated area of the northwest corner of the Agora from the south At right the Stoa Poikile in the lower foreground the Hellenistic gate at left the Temple of Aphrodite Urania The stoa was located at the northwest corner of the Agora on the left north side of the Panathenaic Way as one entered the Agora To the west was a narrow north south street 20 On the other side of that street was an altar and in the Roman period a temple probably dedicated to Aphrodite Urania To the north was a Classical Commercial Building 21 To the south was the drain that conveyed the Eridanus To the southwest on the other side of the Panathenaic Way were the Stoa Basileios the Leokorion and the Altar of the Twelve Gods 22 Another north south street probably bounded the eastern edge of the stoa and somewhere further east was the Stoa of the Herms 23 The stoa was oriented so that it extended from south west to north east 24 The northern back wall is 1 40 metres wide and has been uncovered for a length of 10 40 metres The total length of the stoa is unknown 25 but at least 46 metres would be proportionate with the stoa s depth It probably extended all or most of the way to the next north south street which enters the agora about 55 metres to the east 26 The west side wall was 12 6 metres long and at the level of the foundations 2 68 metres thick The foundation consisted of three steps of hard fine grained poros of very fine workmanship joined very precisely with iron double T clamps sealed in place with lead 20 The steps show substantial wear from use as seating 27 An upside down kalos graffito indicates that the blocks were reused from some earlier context 28 The southern side of the stoa was the main facade There were four steps and a Doric colonnade 29 with an intercolumniation of 1 998 metres 30 Above this was a triglyph frieze of poros which was 0 718 metres high The triglyphs were 0 384 metres wide the metopes which consisted of marble panels that slotted in between the triglyphs were 0 615 metres wide This frieze continued around the west and east sides of the stoa 30 Inside there was an interior colonnade of narrow Ionic columns with poros shafts and marble capitals which supported the ridge of the roof 31 notes 1 This makes it the earliest known building at Athens to combine the Doric and Ionic orders 32 A set of rough poros blocks running along the inside of the back wall probably supported a bench running along the back wall 33 The packing of the foundation consisted of poros chips and red earth which contained numerous sherds of pottery that date alost exclusively to the 460s BC indicating that this was the date of construction 2 By the second century AD bronze statues of Hermes Agoraeus Solon Seleucus and others stood in front of the stoa 34 Paintings edit The stoa contained four famous paintings which have not survived but are mentioned by many authors particularly the 2nd century AD travel writer Pausanias These paintings were probably on wooden boards on the back wall of the stoa and depicted 35 A Battle at Oenoe 1 which is otherwise unknown but perhaps took place during the First Peloponnesian War author unknown 7 36 The Amazonomachy attributed to Micon or Panaenus by different sources 1 The Sack of Troy band trial of Ajax the Lesser by Polygnotus 37 The Battle of Marathon by far the most frequently mentioned which different sources attribute to Micon Polygnotus or Panaenus 1 A scholiast states that the stoa contained many paintings and other paintings are mentioned by various authors including a painting by Apollodorus or Pamphilus of the Heracleidae and Alcmene supplicating the Athenians for protection from Eurystheus 9 a picture of the tragedian Sophocles playing the lyre 38 and a battle at Phlius 1 The set of paintings sharply juxtaposes mythical and historical events so that the mythical victories of Theseus over the Amazons and of the Greeks over Troy contrast with the presumably historic battle of Oenoe apparently the first important Athenian victory over Sparta and the Athenian victory over the Persians at Marathon This contrast is a theme in the art and literature of Athens from the fifth century BC onwards 39 Battle of Marathon edit The painting of the Battle of Marathon displayed the confidence and identity of the Athenians in the wake of the Persian Wars Of this painting Pausanias says At the end of the painting are those who fought at Marathon the Boeotians of Plataea and the Attic contingent are coming to blows with the foreigners In this place neither side has the better but the center of the fighting shows the foreigners in flight and pushing one another into the morass while at the end of the painting are the Phoenician ships and the Greeks killing the foreigners who are scrambling into them Here is also a portrait of the hero Marathon after whom the plain is named of Theseus represented as coming up from the under world of Athena and of Heracles The Marathonians according to their own account were the first to regard Heracles as a god Of the fighters the most conspicuous figures in the painting are Callimachus who had been elected commander in chief by the Athenians Miltiades one of the generals and a hero called Echetlus of whom I shall make mention later Pausanias 1 15 3 40 nbsp Reconstruction of the painting of the Battle of Marathon in the Stoa Poikile after Carl Robert Hallisches Winckelmannsprogramm 1895 Hellenistic gate edit nbsp Late Roman column base on top of the west pier of the Hellenistic gateIn the Hellenistic period a gate was built over the north south street which abutted on the stoa s west wall and aligned perfectly with its front anta 41 The foundations of this gate are formed of poros blocks and consist of two large piers with a 2 5 metre gap of hard packed gravel for traffic 41 Only two blocks from the superstructure a higher quality poros survive 41 It is not possible to reconstruct its appearance but it must have been a large and imposing structure 42 Pottery found in the packing of the road ranges from 325 BC to a little after 300 BC indicating that it was constructed around 300 BC 43 The conglomerate foundations of a monument base stand in front of the west pier 44 This gate is mentioned by Pausanias who says that it had a trophy on top commemorating the Athenian cavalry victory over Pleistarchus 45 The structure was demolished before or during the construction of the Late Roman Stoa in the 5th century AD The west pier wasthen used as the base for a columnar monument the Ionic base is still in situ on top of it 44 Excavations editThe stoa was uncovered as part of the Agora excavations undertaken by the American School of Classical Studies In 1949 Homer A Thompson found a set of architectural fragments of a stoa that had been reused in a Late Antique wall to the west of the Stoa of Attalos These consisted of a Doric entablature and Oinic interior columns of mid fifth century BC date 46 In 1970 Lucy Shoe Meritt identified these as fragments of the Stoa Poikile 47 The foundations of the stoa were discovered during new American excavations in the northwestern corner of the Agora at 13 Hadrianou Street which took place between 1980 and 1982 under the leadership of T Leslie Shear Jr de 48 The excavation of the stoa was supervised by Ione Mylonas Shear de and Margaret Miles in 1981 and by John McK Camp de in 1982 49 Only the western corner of the stoa was excavated This discovery disproved Shoe Meritt s theory since the measurements of the foundations do not match the architectural fragments from the Late Antique wall 50 Architectural fragments that do fit the foundations were found scattered around the northwest corner of the Agora 27 Notes edit The capitals are similar to those of the Temple of Athena at Sounion later the Southeast Temple but with a reduced fascia between the echinus and volutes and without a cyma reversa profile for the echinus Shear 1984 pp 11 12References edit a b c d e Wycherley 1957 p 31 a b Shear 1984 pp 13 14 Scholiast on Demosthenes 20 112 Shoe Meritt 1970 pp 255 256 Davies 1971 pp 376 378 for the family relationship Shoe Meritt 1970 p 256 Wycherley 1957 pp 31 37 Wycherley 1957 pp 32 35 37 a b Wycherley 1957 p 40 a b c Wycherley 1957 p 36 a b Wycherley 1957 p 34 Wycherley 1957 pp 31 35 45 a b Wycherley 1957 p 33 Wycherley 1957 p 35 Wycherley 1957 p 38 Wycherley 1957 p 32 Wycherley 1957 pp 38 39 Synesius Letter 054 Livius www livius org Wycherley 1957 p 44 Shear 1984 pp 15 16 Shear 1984 pp 16 17 a b Shear 1984 p 5 Camp 1999 pp 274 281 Shear 1984 pp 2 5 Shear 1984 p 17 Shear 1984 p 7 Shear 1984 pp 5 7 Shear 1984 pp 17 18 a b Shear 1984 p 8 Shear 1984 p 14 Shear 1984 pp 7 8 a b Shear 1984 p 9 Shear 1984 pp 9 10 Shear 1984 p 11 Shear 1984 pp 12 13 Wycherley 1957 p 39 40 Wycherley 1957 pp 31 42 43 Francis amp Vickers 1985 pp 99 113 Wycherley 1957 p 81 Wycherley 1957 p 42 Shear 1984 pp 18 19 Perseus Under Philologic Paus 201 15 3 a b c Shear 1984 p 19 Shear 1984 pp 22 23 Shear 1984 p 21 a b Shear 1984 p 20 Shear 1984 pp 21 22 Thompson 1950 pp 327 329 Shoe Meritt 1970 p 233 Shear 1984 p 1 Shear 1984 p 5 n 4 Shear 1984 p 9 n 8 Bibliography editThompson Homer A 1950 Excavations in the Athenian Agora 1949 Hesperia The Journal of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens 19 4 313 337 doi 10 2307 146840 ISSN 0018 098X JSTOR 146840 Wycherley R E 1957 The Athenian Agora III Literary and Epigraphical Testimonia Princeton NJ American School of Classical Studies at Athens Jeffery L H 1965 The Battle of Oinoe in the Stoa Poikile A Problem in Greek Art and History The Annual of the British School at Athens 60 41 57 ISSN 0068 2454 JSTOR 30103146 Shoe Meritt Lucy 1970 The Stoa Poikile Hesperia 39 4 233 264 Davies John Kenyon 1971 Athenian Propertied Families 600 300 B C Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 814273 7 Harrison Evelyn B 1972 The South Frieze of the Nike Temple and the Marathon Painting in the Painted Stoa American Journal of Archaeology 76 4 353 378 doi 10 2307 502871 ISSN 0002 9114 JSTOR 502871 Massaro Vin 1978 Herodotos Account of the Battle of Marathon and the Picture in the Stoa Poikile L Antiquite Classique 47 2 458 475 ISSN 0770 2817 JSTOR 41651323 Shear T Leslie 1984 The Athenian Agora Excavations of 1980 1982 Hesperia The Journal of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens 53 1 5 19 doi 10 2307 147938 ISSN 0018 098X JSTOR 147938 Francis E D Vickers Michael 1985 The Oenoe Painting in the Stoa Poikile and Herodotus Account of Marathon The Annual of the British School at Athens 80 99 113 ISSN 0068 2454 JSTOR 30102822 Francis E D Vickers Michael 1985b The Marathon Epigram in the Stoa Poikile Mnemosyne 38 3 4 390 393 ISSN 0026 7074 JSTOR 4431432 de Angelis Francesco 1996 La battaglia di Maratona nella Stoa poikile ASNP 1 119 171 Camp John McK 1999 Excavations in the Athenian Agora 1996 and 1997 Hesperia The Journal of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens 68 3 255 283 doi 10 2307 148490 ISSN 0018 098X JSTOR 148490 Todini Lellida 2008 Palaia te kaὶ kaina Erodoto e il ciclo figurativo della Stoa Poikile Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 57 3 255 262 ISSN 0018 2311 JSTOR 25598434 Luginbill Robert D 2014 The Battle of Oinoe the Painting in the Stoa Poikile and Thucydides Silence Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 63 3 278 292 ISSN 0018 2311 JSTOR 24432809 External links edit Stoa Poikile Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Stoa Poikile on the page of the Agora Excavations American School of Classical Studies in Athens Agora inv 7554 the kalos graffito on the page of the Agora Excavations American School of Classical Studies in Athens 37 58 35 N 23 43 23 E 37 9763 N 23 7230 E 37 9763 23 7230 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stoa Poikile amp oldid 1212875780, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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