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Orchomenus (Boeotia)

Orchomenus (Ancient Greek: Ὀρχομενός Orchomenos), the setting for many early Greek myths, is best known today as a rich archaeological site in Boeotia, Greece, that was inhabited from the Neolithic through the Hellenistic periods. It is often referred to as "Minyan Orchomenus", to distinguish it from a later city of the same name in Arcadia.

Orchomenos
Ορχομενός
The Acropolis of Orchomenus
Orchomenos
Location within the region
Coordinates: 38°29′N 22°59′E / 38.483°N 22.983°E / 38.483; 22.983
CountryGreece
Administrative regionCentral Greece
Regional unitBoeotia
Area
 • Municipality415.9 km2 (160.6 sq mi)
 • Municipal unit230.098 km2 (88.841 sq mi)
 • Community43.431 km2 (16.769 sq mi)
Population
 (2021)[1]
 • Municipality9,381
 • Density23/km2 (58/sq mi)
 • Municipal unit
7,105
 • Municipal unit density31/km2 (80/sq mi)
 • Community
4,285
 • Community density99/km2 (260/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+3 (EEST)

Ancient history edit

 
Fortification walls on the acropolis

According to the founding myth of Orchomenos, its royal dynasty was established by the Minyans, who had followed their eponymous leader Minyas from coastal Thessaly to settle the site.

In the Bronze Age, during the fourteenth and thirteenth centuries BC, Orchomenos became a rich and important centre of civilisation in Mycenaean Greece and a rival to Thebes. The palace with its frescoed walls and the great beehive tomb show the power of Orchomenos in Mycenaean Greece. A massive hydraulic undertaking drained the marshes of Lake Kopaïs, making it a rich agricultural area.[2] Like many sites around the Aegean Sea, Orchomenos was burned and its palace destroyed in c. 1200 BC during the Bronze Age Collapse.

Orchomenos is mentioned among the Achaean cities sending ships to engage in the Trojan War in Homer's "Catalogue of Ships" in the Iliad: together with Aspledon, they contributed thirty ships and their complement of men.

Orchomenos seems to have been one of the city-states that joined the Calaurian maritime League in the seventh century BC.[3] Although their rivals Thebes confirmed their supremacy by the end of the century reflected by inscriptions, Orchomenos joined the Theban-led Boeotian League in c. 600 BC.[4]

Classical Orchomenos was known for its sanctuary of the Charites or Graces, the oldest in the city[5] (the 9th century Byzantine monastery church of Panagia Skripou probably occupies the same spot[6]). Here the Charites had their earliest veneration, in legend instituted by Eteocles; musical and poetical agonistic games, the Charitesia,[7] were held in their honour, in the theatre that was discovered in 1972.[8] The Agrionia, a festival of the god Dionysus, involved the ritual pursuit of women by a man representing Dionysus. Orchomenos struck its coinage from the mid-sixth century.

In 480–479 BC, the Orchomenians joined their neighbouring rivals the Thebans to turn back the invading forces of Xerxes in the Greco-Persian Wars. In mid-century, Orchomenos sheltered the oligarchic exiles who freed Boeotia from Athenian control. In the fourth century the traditional rivalry with Thebes made Orchomenos an ally of Agesilaus II and Sparta against Thebes, in 395 and again in 394 BC. The Theban revenge after their defeat of Sparta in the Battle of Leuctra (371 BC) was delayed by the tolerant policies of Epaminondas:[9] the Boeotian League sacked Orchomenos in 364 BC. Although the Phocians rebuilt the city in 355 BC, the Thebans destroyed it again in 349.

The broad plain between Orchomenos and the acropolis of Chaeronea witnessed two battles of major importance in Classical antiquity. In 338 BC, after a whirlwind march south into central Greece, Philip II of Macedon defeated Thebes and Athens on the plain of Chaironeia during the first Battle of Chaeronea, establishing Macedonian supremacy over the city-states, and demonstrated the prowess of Philip's young son Alexander the Great. During Alexander's campaign against Thebes in 335 BC, Orchomenos took the side of the Macedonians. In recompense, Philip and Alexander rebuilt Orchomenos, when the theatre and the fortification walls, visible today, were constructed.

The second Battle of Chaeronea occurred when Roman Republican forces under the later Dictator Sulla defeated those of King Mithridates VI of Pontus near Chaeronea, in 86 BC during the First Mithridatic War. This Second Battle of Chaeronea was followed by the Battle of Orchomenus, when Archelaus' forces were completely destroyed.

Orchomenos remained a small town until Late Roman times when the theatre was still in use, and continued afterwards.

Archaeology edit

 
Map of Orchomenus[10]
 
The Tomb of Minyas
 
The theatre

Round houses (two to six metres in diameter) from the Early Bronze Age (2800–1900 BC) were discovered (Kunze 1931; Treuil 1983).[citation needed]

Most excavations have focussed on the early and Mycenean areas of the lower town, while the later Hellenistic city on the acropolis remains largely unexplored.

In 1880–86, Heinrich Schliemann's excavations (H. Schliemann, Orchomenos, Leipzig 1881) revealed the tholos tomb he called the "Tomb of Minyas", a Mycenaean monument that equalled the "Tomb of Atreus" at Mycenae itself. In 1893, A. de Ridder excavated the temple of Asklepios and some burials in the Roman necropolis. In 1903–05, a Bavarian archaeological mission under Heinrich Bulle and Adolf Furtwängler conducted successful excavations at the site. Research continued in 1970–73 by the Archaeological Service under Theodore Spyropoulos, uncovering the Mycenaean palace, a prehistoric cemetery, the theatre and other structures.[citation needed]

The Tomb of Minyas is one of the greatest burial monuments of the Mycenaean period.[11] The tomb was probably built for the members of the royal family of Orchomenos in 1250 BC and was plundered in antiquity. The monument was visible for many centuries after its original use and even became a place of worship in the Hellenistic period. It was probably a famous landmark until at least the second century AD, when Pausanias visited Orchomenos and described the tholos in detail.[12] It had a dromos thirty metres long. Its entrance was built of dark grey Levadeia marble and had a wooden door. The lintel, still in place today, is six metres long and weighs several tons. The entrance and the chamber were decorated with bronze rosettes as shown by the attachment holes on the walls and the ceiling of the side chamber is decorated with spirals and floral motifs in relief. In the centre of the Tholos, a rectangular burial monument dates to the Ηellenistic period (323–30 BC). It was partially restored by the architect-archaeologist A. Orlandos. In 1994, the Hellenic Ministry of Culture undertook restoration work consisting mainly of drainage and strengthening of the walls of the side chamber.

The Mycenaean palace to the east of the Tholos tomb and lying partially underneath the church is only partially excavated and consists of three wings, some of which were decorated with frescoes. The palace was destroyed c. 1200 BC.

The fortification walls of Orchomenos were built in the 2nd half of the 4th century BC under the Macedonians and crown the east end of mount Akontion.

The theatre was built around the end of the 4th century BC. The cavea, with seats for the spectators, the orchestra and part of the scena are all preserved. It was in use until late Roman times (4th century AD).

Art and sculpture edit

 
Kouros of the Orchomenos-Thera group, BM B 474, London

Orchomenos gives its name to a period of sculpture of archaic Kouroi, the Orchomenos-Thera group of 590–570 BC. This period witnessed a lull in Attica, but activity was more vigorous in Boeotia, especially from the Ptoon sanctuary and Orchomenos (NAMA 9).

The characteristics of this style are: the ear is still carved in one plane, but less stylised. Eyes are not so large as before and more rounded. Mouth is horizontal but no longer always in one plane. The slight protrusions of flanks are sometimes prolonged into a girdle-like ridge, the sculptor occasionally marks the anterior spine of the crest. Shoulder blades are now separate raised planes. The erector spinae sometimes indicated as raised planes. Arms are generally joined to body. The depression over great trochanter is generally omitted. Shin sometimes curves inwards. Left flank is occasionally placed slightly forward.

Minyan ware is a term that was coined to describe a certain type of pottery that was found here.

Later history edit

 
Byzantine church of the Panagia at Skripou

Opposite the ancient theatre is the 9th-century Byzantine church of the Dormition of the Virgin Mary (Panagia) of Skripou.[13] Well-preserved inscriptions date the church securely to 873/4, naming its sponsor as the Protospatharios Leon, who served as a senior official of the emperor Basil I during the period of his joint reign with his sons Constantine and Leo.[14]

The modern municipality of Orchomenos was formed in the local government reform of 2011 by the merger of the following two former municipalities, which became municipal units, each subdivided into local communities:[15]

  • Akraifnia (Akraifnio, Kastro, Kokkino)
  • Orchomenos (Agios Dimitrios, Agios Spyridonas, Dionysos, Karya, Loutsio, Orchomenos, Pavlos, Pyrgos)

The municipality has an area of 415.914 km2, the municipal unit Orchomenos 230.098 km2, the community Orchomenos 43.431 km2.[16] The seat of the municipality is in the town Orchomenos.[15]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Αποτελέσματα Απογραφής Πληθυσμού - Κατοικιών 2021, Μόνιμος Πληθυσμός κατά οικισμό" [Results of the 2021 Population - Housing Census, Permanent population by settlement] (in Greek). Hellenic Statistical Authority. 29 March 2024.
  2. ^ Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece By Nigel Wilson ISBN 9781136788000
  3. ^ Thomas Kelly, "The Calaurian Amphictiony" American Journal of Archaeology 70.2 (April 1966:113–121)
  4. ^ Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece By Nigel Wilson, ISBN 9781136788000
  5. ^ , Pausanias 5.172–80
  6. ^ J. G. Frazer's note on Pausanias, 1898.
  7. ^ A. Schachter, Cults of Boiotia I, (1981), pp 140–44, provides the most complete modern account of the Charitesia.
  8. ^ Schachter 1981; John Buckler, "The Charitesia at Boiotian Orchomenos" The American Journal of Philology 105.1 (Spring 1984), pp. 49–53.
  9. ^ John Buckler, The Theban Hegemony 371–362 B. C. (Harvard University Press) 1980.
  10. ^ Travels In Northern Greece, William Martin Leake (1777–1860)
  11. ^ "Ministry of Culture and Sports | Tholos tomb of Minyas".
  12. ^ Description of Greece (9, 38, 2–3)
  13. ^ Maria Soteriou, Ὁ ναός τῆς Σκριποῦς Βοιωτίας", Ἀρχαιολογική Ἐφημερίς 1931, pp. 119–157.
  14. ^ Corpus Inscriptionum Graecarum 8685; Oscar Prieto-Domínguez, "On the Founder of the Skripou Church," Greek, Roman and Byzantine Studies 53 (2013), pp. 166–191.
  15. ^ a b "ΦΕΚ B 1292/2010, Kallikratis reform municipalities" (in Greek). Government Gazette.
  16. ^ "Population & housing census 2001 (incl. area and average elevation)" (PDF) (in Greek). National Statistical Service of Greece.

References edit

  • Orchomenos
  • (Dartmouth College) Orchomenos 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine

External links edit

orchomenus, boeotia, other, uses, orchomenus, arcadia, orchomenus, ancient, greek, Ὀρχομενός, orchomenos, setting, many, early, greek, myths, best, known, today, rich, archaeological, site, boeotia, greece, that, inhabited, from, neolithic, through, hellenisti. For other uses see Orchomenus Arcadia Orchomenus Ancient Greek Ὀrxomenos Orchomenos the setting for many early Greek myths is best known today as a rich archaeological site in Boeotia Greece that was inhabited from the Neolithic through the Hellenistic periods It is often referred to as Minyan Orchomenus to distinguish it from a later city of the same name in Arcadia Orchomenos OrxomenosMunicipalityThe Acropolis of OrchomenusOrchomenosLocation within the regionCoordinates 38 29 N 22 59 E 38 483 N 22 983 E 38 483 22 983CountryGreeceAdministrative regionCentral GreeceRegional unitBoeotiaArea Municipality415 9 km2 160 6 sq mi Municipal unit230 098 km2 88 841 sq mi Community43 431 km2 16 769 sq mi Population 2021 1 Municipality9 381 Density23 km2 58 sq mi Municipal unit7 105 Municipal unit density31 km2 80 sq mi Community4 285 Community density99 km2 260 sq mi Time zoneUTC 2 EET Summer DST UTC 3 EEST Contents 1 Ancient history 2 Archaeology 3 Art and sculpture 4 Later history 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksAncient history edit nbsp Fortification walls on the acropolis According to the founding myth of Orchomenos its royal dynasty was established by the Minyans who had followed their eponymous leader Minyas from coastal Thessaly to settle the site In the Bronze Age during the fourteenth and thirteenth centuries BC Orchomenos became a rich and important centre of civilisation in Mycenaean Greece and a rival to Thebes The palace with its frescoed walls and the great beehive tomb show the power of Orchomenos in Mycenaean Greece A massive hydraulic undertaking drained the marshes of Lake Kopais making it a rich agricultural area 2 Like many sites around the Aegean Sea Orchomenos was burned and its palace destroyed in c 1200 BC during the Bronze Age Collapse Orchomenos is mentioned among the Achaean cities sending ships to engage in the Trojan War in Homer s Catalogue of Ships in the Iliad together with Aspledon they contributed thirty ships and their complement of men Orchomenos seems to have been one of the city states that joined the Calaurian maritime League in the seventh century BC 3 Although their rivals Thebes confirmed their supremacy by the end of the century reflected by inscriptions Orchomenos joined the Theban led Boeotian League in c 600 BC 4 Classical Orchomenos was known for its sanctuary of the Charites or Graces the oldest in the city 5 the 9th century Byzantine monastery church of Panagia Skripou probably occupies the same spot 6 Here the Charites had their earliest veneration in legend instituted by Eteocles musical and poetical agonistic games the Charitesia 7 were held in their honour in the theatre that was discovered in 1972 8 The Agrionia a festival of the god Dionysus involved the ritual pursuit of women by a man representing Dionysus Orchomenos struck its coinage from the mid sixth century In 480 479 BC the Orchomenians joined their neighbouring rivals the Thebans to turn back the invading forces of Xerxes in the Greco Persian Wars In mid century Orchomenos sheltered the oligarchic exiles who freed Boeotia from Athenian control In the fourth century the traditional rivalry with Thebes made Orchomenos an ally of Agesilaus II and Sparta against Thebes in 395 and again in 394 BC The Theban revenge after their defeat of Sparta in the Battle of Leuctra 371 BC was delayed by the tolerant policies of Epaminondas 9 the Boeotian League sacked Orchomenos in 364 BC Although the Phocians rebuilt the city in 355 BC the Thebans destroyed it again in 349 The broad plain between Orchomenos and the acropolis of Chaeronea witnessed two battles of major importance in Classical antiquity In 338 BC after a whirlwind march south into central Greece Philip II of Macedon defeated Thebes and Athens on the plain of Chaironeia during the first Battle of Chaeronea establishing Macedonian supremacy over the city states and demonstrated the prowess of Philip s young son Alexander the Great During Alexander s campaign against Thebes in 335 BC Orchomenos took the side of the Macedonians In recompense Philip and Alexander rebuilt Orchomenos when the theatre and the fortification walls visible today were constructed The second Battle of Chaeronea occurred when Roman Republican forces under the later Dictator Sulla defeated those of King Mithridates VI of Pontus near Chaeronea in 86 BC during the First Mithridatic War This Second Battle of Chaeronea was followed by the Battle of Orchomenus when Archelaus forces were completely destroyed Orchomenos remained a small town until Late Roman times when the theatre was still in use and continued afterwards Archaeology edit nbsp Map of Orchomenus 10 nbsp The Tomb of Minyas nbsp The theatre Round houses two to six metres in diameter from the Early Bronze Age 2800 1900 BC were discovered Kunze 1931 Treuil 1983 citation needed Most excavations have focussed on the early and Mycenean areas of the lower town while the later Hellenistic city on the acropolis remains largely unexplored In 1880 86 Heinrich Schliemann s excavations H Schliemann Orchomenos Leipzig 1881 revealed the tholos tomb he called the Tomb of Minyas a Mycenaean monument that equalled the Tomb of Atreus at Mycenae itself In 1893 A de Ridder excavated the temple of Asklepios and some burials in the Roman necropolis In 1903 05 a Bavarian archaeological mission under Heinrich Bulle and Adolf Furtwangler conducted successful excavations at the site Research continued in 1970 73 by the Archaeological Service under Theodore Spyropoulos uncovering the Mycenaean palace a prehistoric cemetery the theatre and other structures citation needed The Tomb of Minyas is one of the greatest burial monuments of the Mycenaean period 11 The tomb was probably built for the members of the royal family of Orchomenos in 1250 BC and was plundered in antiquity The monument was visible for many centuries after its original use and even became a place of worship in the Hellenistic period It was probably a famous landmark until at least the second century AD when Pausanias visited Orchomenos and described the tholos in detail 12 It had a dromos thirty metres long Its entrance was built of dark grey Levadeia marble and had a wooden door The lintel still in place today is six metres long and weighs several tons The entrance and the chamber were decorated with bronze rosettes as shown by the attachment holes on the walls and the ceiling of the side chamber is decorated with spirals and floral motifs in relief In the centre of the Tholos a rectangular burial monument dates to the Hellenistic period 323 30 BC It was partially restored by the architect archaeologist A Orlandos In 1994 the Hellenic Ministry of Culture undertook restoration work consisting mainly of drainage and strengthening of the walls of the side chamber The Mycenaean palace to the east of the Tholos tomb and lying partially underneath the church is only partially excavated and consists of three wings some of which were decorated with frescoes The palace was destroyed c 1200 BC The fortification walls of Orchomenos were built in the 2nd half of the 4th century BC under the Macedonians and crown the east end of mount Akontion The theatre was built around the end of the 4th century BC The cavea with seats for the spectators the orchestra and part of the scena are all preserved It was in use until late Roman times 4th century AD Art and sculpture edit nbsp Kouros of the Orchomenos Thera group BM B 474 London Orchomenos gives its name to a period of sculpture of archaic Kouroi the Orchomenos Thera group of 590 570 BC This period witnessed a lull in Attica but activity was more vigorous in Boeotia especially from the Ptoon sanctuary and Orchomenos NAMA 9 The characteristics of this style are the ear is still carved in one plane but less stylised Eyes are not so large as before and more rounded Mouth is horizontal but no longer always in one plane The slight protrusions of flanks are sometimes prolonged into a girdle like ridge the sculptor occasionally marks the anterior spine of the crest Shoulder blades are now separate raised planes The erector spinae sometimes indicated as raised planes Arms are generally joined to body The depression over great trochanter is generally omitted Shin sometimes curves inwards Left flank is occasionally placed slightly forward Minyan ware is a term that was coined to describe a certain type of pottery that was found here Later history edit nbsp Byzantine church of the Panagia at Skripou Opposite the ancient theatre is the 9th century Byzantine church of the Dormition of the Virgin Mary Panagia of Skripou 13 Well preserved inscriptions date the church securely to 873 4 naming its sponsor as the Protospatharios Leon who served as a senior official of the emperor Basil I during the period of his joint reign with his sons Constantine and Leo 14 The modern municipality of Orchomenos was formed in the local government reform of 2011 by the merger of the following two former municipalities which became municipal units each subdivided into local communities 15 Akraifnia Akraifnio Kastro Kokkino Orchomenos Agios Dimitrios Agios Spyridonas Dionysos Karya Loutsio Orchomenos Pavlos Pyrgos The municipality has an area of 415 914 km2 the municipal unit Orchomenos 230 098 km2 the community Orchomenos 43 431 km2 16 The seat of the municipality is in the town Orchomenos 15 See also editAchaean League Orchomenos a king in Greek mythology Erginus king of Orchomenus Elara and her son Tityos Eurybotadas CephissusNotes edit Apotelesmata Apografhs Plh8ysmoy Katoikiwn 2021 Monimos Plh8ysmos kata oikismo Results of the 2021 Population Housing Census Permanent population by settlement in Greek Hellenic Statistical Authority 29 March 2024 Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece By Nigel Wilson ISBN 9781136788000 Thomas Kelly The Calaurian Amphictiony American Journal of Archaeology 70 2 April 1966 113 121 Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece By Nigel Wilson ISBN 9781136788000 Pausanias 5 172 80 J G Frazer s note on Pausanias 1898 A Schachter Cults of Boiotia I 1981 pp 140 44 provides the most complete modern account of the Charitesia Schachter 1981 John Buckler The Charitesia at Boiotian Orchomenos The American Journal of Philology 105 1 Spring 1984 pp 49 53 John Buckler The Theban Hegemony 371 362 B C Harvard University Press 1980 Travels In Northern Greece William Martin Leake 1777 1860 Ministry of Culture and Sports Tholos tomb of Minyas Description of Greece 9 38 2 3 Maria Soteriou Ὁ naos tῆs Skripoῦs Boiwtias Ἀrxaiologikh Ἐfhmeris 1931 pp 119 157 Corpus Inscriptionum Graecarum 8685 Oscar Prieto Dominguez On the Founder of the Skripou Church Greek Roman and Byzantine Studies 53 2013 pp 166 191 a b FEK B 1292 2010 Kallikratis reform municipalities in Greek Government Gazette Population amp housing census 2001 incl area and average elevation PDF in Greek National Statistical Service of Greece References editHellenic Ministry of Culture Orchomenos Dartmouth College Orchomenos Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine Prieto Dominguez Oscar On the Founder of the Skripou Church Greek Roman and Byzantine Studies 2013 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Orchomenos Boeotia Official website in Greek Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Orchomenus Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Orchomenus Boeotia amp oldid 1213516033 Archaeology, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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