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AP®︎/College Art History
Course: AP®︎/College Art History > Unit 4
Lesson 3: Ancient Greece- The classical orders
- The Athenian Agora and the experiment in democracy
- Anavysos Kouros
- Peplos Kore from the Acropolis
- Making Greek vases
- Niobid Painter, Niobid Krater
- Polykleitos, Doryphoros (Spear Bearer)
- Polykleitos, Doryphoros (Spear-Bearer)
- Parthenon (Acropolis)
- The Parthenon
- Who owns the Parthenon sculptures?
- Phidias, Parthenon sculptures (pediments, metopes and frieze)
- "Plaque of the Ergastines" fragment from the frieze on the east side of the Parthenon
- Victory (Nike) Adjusting Her Sandal, Temple of Athena Nike (Acropolis)
- Grave Stele of Hegeso
- Winged Victory (Nike) of Samothrace
- Great Altar of Zeus and Athena at Pergamon
- Alexander Mosaic from the House of the Faun, Pompeii
- Apollonius, Seated Boxer
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Parthenon (Acropolis)
The Parthenon, a magnificent marble temple dedicated to Athena, symbolizes the birth of democracy and architectural refinement. Located in Athens, it combines Doric and Ionic elements, featuring intricate sculptures and mathematical precision. Its history includes transformations into a Greek Orthodox church, Roman Catholic church, and mosque, with damage from wars and controversial removal of sculptures by Lord Elgin. Speakers: Dr. Beth Harris and Dr. Steven Zucker. Created by Steven Zucker and Beth Harris.
Want to join the conversation?
- Atit is mentioned that these buildings were "burned down." Can we get a better idea how somebody would burn these stone buildings down? Did they have big flowing curtains or carpets, works of art? What would have existed in these stone structures that could burn? 5:35(23 votes)
- As I understand it, while marble is itself not flammable, it can lose its structural integrity when heated in a fire and as you guessed, there are always other things that can burn.(28 votes)
- Did the Parthenon have a roof? Or was it open to the sky?(14 votes)
- Inside the ring of columns that still exists today was a rectangular room. The roof covered the whole temple (including the columns) and you can still see the start of the triangular roof (Pediment) at each end.
In fact, someone has rebuilt the Parthenon, full size, in Nashville, Tennesse (Don't ask me why) but it gives a good impression of what it would have looked like back in antiquity. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parthenon_%28Nashville%29(19 votes)
- I heard that most sculptors in Ancient Greece were slaves because this type of labour was considered inappropriate for free people. Is it true? An if it is true, were the architects and sculptors of Parthenon slaves too?
It is really disturbing thought for me, if those who built such perfection for the city of Athens were treated like a slaves. I hope they weren't.(6 votes)- You can't be sure about anything in the ancient world, you can suggest a theory but you can rarely be sure about it specially for the works that doesn't have context, for example for many years we've been told that the people who build the pyramids were slaves BUT according to evidence of the Workers Cemetery discovered in 1999, the workers ate quite a lot of beef, fish, bread and beer.(2 votes)
- How exactly did the Greeks get their math so accurate? Carving multi ton columns to within a fraction of an inch is an amazing feat. And would be so even today. The fact that they could build this with what they had is unbelievable.(5 votes)
- I know, right?! And I thought I was good at math! 😆(3 votes)
- I was reading some other stuff to try and figure out... so basically nobody knows what happened to the Statue of Athena that used to be inside Pantheon? How do they know what it would have looked like? Probably like other statues of her from that time?(2 votes)
- There are copies of the figure. The most famous extant sculpture is in the National Archaeological Museum in Athens: https://www.flickr.com/photos/profzucker/12261048155/in/set-72157639959123074(6 votes)
- Around: what are gilt lyres and gilt masks? 7:08(3 votes)
- Gilt means covered in gold. A lyre is an instrument similar to a harp.(4 votes)
- What does Acropolis mean? The suffix -polis is to do with a city, so what is acro- ?(1 vote)
- You are correct, 'polis' means city or city-state. 'Akron' means summit or upper place, thus acropolis means 'citadel' or 'upper city'. In functioning as a citadel, the acropolis of a Greek city would provide refuge in times of danger. The Athenian acropolis also became the location of the city's main (poliadic) cult, that of Athena Parthenos.(7 votes)
- I know that after the defeat of the Persians (x2), the Greeks entered a new age of creation/artworks. Regarding the Parthenon, were there any sculptures that adorned the building in relation to their victories, particularly the Battle at Marathon?(3 votes)
- I don't really understand about the distance of the columns, is it that the column at the edges have a larger distance than the rest? Thank you.(1 vote)
- Are you asking about the 'corner conflict' / corner contraction in the Doric order? If so, this has to do with the aesthetics of the alignment of the Doric frieze (composed of triglyphs and metopes) and the columns themselves. Theoretically there should be one triglyph plaque aligned perfectly with each column and one in the middle of each intercolumnar space. This becomes a problem at the corners, however. Various strategies in antiquity were proposed. The three main schools of thought: A) In the Archaic period, make the corner triglyph broader; B) in the Classical period, shorten the corner intercolumniation; C) Vitruvius proposed (in the 1st c. BCE) the best solution would be to place a half metope at the corner outside the outermost triglyph. You can read more on the Classical period approach to the corner conflict in J. Neils, The Parthenon: From Antiquity to the Present, (Cambridge University Press, 2005).(3 votes)
- When the Parthenon was used as a church and then as a mosque, did they call it something like the Church of St Somebody?(2 votes)
Video transcript
(lively piano music) Voiceover: We're looking at the Parthenon. This is a huge marble temple
to the goddess Athena. Voiceover: We're on the
top of a rocky outcropping in the city of Athens very high up overlooking the city, overlooking the Aegean Sea. Voiceover: Athens was just
one of many Greek city states and almost everyone had an acropolis. That is had a fortified
hill within its city because these were warring states. Voiceover: In the 5th Century Athens was the most powerful city state and that's the period that
the Parthenon dates to. Voiceover: This precinct
became a sacred one rather than a defensive one. This building has had tremendous influence not only because it becomes the symbol of the birth of democracy, but also because of its extraordinary architectural refinement. The period when this was
built in the 5th century is considered the high classical moment and for so much of western history we have measured our later achievements against this perfection. Voiceover: It's hard not to recognize so many buildings in the west. There's certainly an association especially to buildings in Washington D.C. and that's not a coincidence. Voiceover: Because this is
the birthplace of democracy it was a limited democracy but democracy nevertheless. Voiceover: There was a series of reforms in the 5th century in Athens that allowed more and more people to participate in the government. Voiceover: We think
that the city of Athens had between 300 and 400,000 inhabitants and only about 50,000 were
actually considered citizens. If you were a woman,
obviously if you were a slave you were not participating in this democratic experiment. Voiceover: This is a very
limited idea of democracy. Voiceover: This building
is dedicated to Athena and in fact the city
itself is named after her and of course there's a myth. Two gods vying for the honor of being the patron of this city. Voiceover: Those two gods
are Poseidon and Athena. Poseidon is the god of the sea and Athena has many aspects. She's the goddess of wisdom, she is associated with war. A kind of intelligence about creating and making things. Voiceover: Both of these gods gave the people of this city a gift and then they had to choose. Poseidon strikes a rock and from it springs forth the saltwater of the sea. This had to do with the
gift of naval superiority. Voiceover: Athena offered
in contrast an olive tree. The idea of the land of
prosperity, of peace. The Atheneans chose Athena's gift. There actually is site
here on the acropolis where the Atheneans believed you could see the mark of the trident from Poseidon where he struck the ground and also the tree that Athena offered. Voiceover: Actually the modern Greeks have replanted an olive
tree in that space. Let's talk about the building. It is really what we think of when we think of a Greek temple but the style is specific. This is a Doric temple. Voiceover: Although it has Ionic elements which we'll get to. Voiceover: The Doric features
are really easy to identify. You have massive columns
with shallow broad flutes the vertical lines. Those columns go down directly into the floor of the temple which is called the stylobate and at the top the
capitals are very simple. There's a little flare that rises up to a
simple rectangular block called an abacus. Just above that are triglyphs and metopes. Voiceover: It's important to say that this building was covered with sculpture. There were sculpture in the metopes, there were sculpture in the pediments and in an unprecedented way a frieze that ran all the way around
four sides of the building just inside this outer row
of columns that we see. Now this is an Ionic feature. Art historians talk about
how this building combines Doric elements with Ionic elements. Voiceover: In fact there
were four Ionic columns inside the west end of the temple. Voiceover: When the citizens of Athens walked up the sacred way perhaps for religious
procession or festival. They encountered the west end and they walked around it either on the north or south sides to the east and the entrance. Right above the entrance in
the sculptures of the pediment they could see the story
of Athena and Poseidon vying to be the patron
of the city of Athens. On the frieze just inside
they saw themselves perhaps at least in one interpretation involved in the Panathenaic Procession, the religious procession in
honor of the goddess Athena. This was a building that you walked up to, you walked around and inside was this gigantic sculpture of Athena. Voiceover: These were all
sculptures that we believe were overseen by the
great sculptor Phidias and one of my favorite
parts are the metopes. Carved with scenes that showed the Greeks battling various enemies either directly or metaphorically. The Greeks battling the Amazons, the Greeks against the Trojans, the Lapiths against the Centaurs, and the Gigantomachy. The Greek gods against the titans. Voiceover: All of these battles signified the ascendancy of Greece and of the Atheneans of their triumphs. Civilization over barbarism, rational thought over chaos. Voiceover: You've just hit on the very meaning of this building. This is not the first temple
to Athena on this site. Just a little bit to the right as we look at the east end there was an older temple to Athena that was destroyed when
the Persians invaded. This was a devastating
blow to the Atheneans. Voiceover: One really can't
overstate the importance of the Persian War for
the Athenean mindset that created the Parthenon. Athens was invaded and beyond that the Persians sacked the acropolis, sacked the sacred site, the temples. Destroyed the buildings. Voiceover: They burned them down. In fact, the Atheneans took a vow that they would never remove the ruins of the old temple to Athena. Voiceover: So they would
remember it forever. Voiceover: But a
generation later they did. Voiceover: They did,
well there was a piece that was established with the Persians and some historians think that that allowed them to reneg on that vow and Pericles, the leader of Athens embarked on this enormous, very expensive building campaign. Voiceover: Historians believe that he was able to fund that because the Atheneans
had become the leaders of what is called the Delian League. An association of Greek city states that paid a kind of tax to help protect Greece against Persia but Pericles dipped into that treasury and built this building. Voiceover: This alliance
of Greek city states, their treasure, their
tax money, their tribute was originally located in Delos hence the Delian League, but Pericles managed to have that treasure moved here to Athens and actually housed in the acropolis. The sculpture of Athena herself which was made of gold and ivory Phidias said if we need money we can melt down the
enormous amount of gold that decorates this sculpture of Athena. Voiceover: Since that sculpture
doesn't exist any longer we know somebody did that. (chuckles) We need to imagine this building not pristine and white but rather brightly colored and also a building that was used. This was a storehouse. It was the treasury and so we have to imagine that it was absolutely
full of valuable stuff. Voiceover: In fact we have records that give us some idea
of what was stored here. We think about temples
or churches or mosques as places where you go in to worship. That's not how Greek religion work. There usually was an altar on the outside where sacrifices were made and the temple was the
house of the god or goddess, but with the Parthenon art historians and
archeologists have not been able to locate an altar outside so we've wondered what was this building? One answer is it was a treasury. Voiceover: It also functions symbolically. It is up on this hill. It commands this extraordinary view from all parts of the city, and so it was a symbol of both
the city's wealth and power. Voiceover: It's a gift to Athena. When you make a gift
to your patron goddess you want visitors to be awed by the image of the
goddess that was inside and of her home. Voiceover: This isn't any goddess. This is the goddess of wisdom so the ability of man
to understand our world and its rules mathematically, and then to express them
in a structure like this is absolutely appropriate. Voiceover: Iktinos is a
supreme mathematician. I mean we know that the Greeks even in the archaic period before this were concerned with ideal proportions. Voiceover: Pythagoras. Voiceover: Or the sculptor Polykleitos and his sculpture of the Doryphoros searching for perfect
proportions and harmony and using mathematics as the basis for thinking that through. Voiceover: We have that here. Voiceover: To an unbelievable degree. Voiceover: What's extraordinary is that it's perfection is an illusion based on a series of subtle distortions that actually correct for the
imperfections of our sight. That is the Greeks recognize that human perception was itself flawed and that they needed to adjust for it in order to give the visual
impression of perfection. Their mathematics and
their building skills were precise enough to
be able to pull this off. Voiceover: Every stone
was cut to fit precisely. Voiceover: When we look a this building we assume it's rectilinear, it's full of right angles, and in fact there's hardly a
right angle in this building. Voiceover: There's another interpretation of these tiny deviations that these deviations give the building a sense of dynamism. The sense of the organic that otherwise it would
seem static and lifeless. The Greeks had used this idea that art historians call entasis before in other buildings. Slight adjustments. For example, columns
bulge toward the center. This is not new but the degree to which it's used here and the subtlety in the way
it's used is unprecedented. Voiceover: For instance
in those Doric columns you can see that there's a taper and you assume that it's a straight line but the Greeks wanted ever so slight a sense of the organic. That the weight of the
building was being expressed in the bulge, the entasis of the column about a third of the way from the bottom. In this case every single column bulges only 11/16th of an inch the entire length of that column. The way that the Greeks pulled this off is they would bring column drums up to the site. They would carefully
carve the base and the top and then they would carve in between. Voiceover: We see this slight
deviation in the columns but we also see it not only vertically but also horizontally in the building. Voiceover: That's right. You assume that the stylobate, the floor of the temple
is flat but it's not. Rain water would run off it because the edges are
lower than the center. Voiceover: But only very,
very slightly lower. Voiceover: Across the
long side of the temple the center rises only 4 3/8 of an inch and on the short side of the temple on the east and the west side the center rises only by 2 3/8 inches. What happens is it cracks. Our eye would naturally
see a straight line seem as if it rises up at
the corners a little bit so it seems to us to be perfectly flat. The columns are all
leaning in a little bit. Voiceover: You would expect the columns to be equidistant from one another but in fact the columns on the edges are slightly closer to one another than the columns in the
center of each side. Voiceover: Architectural
historians have hypothesized that the reason for this is because the column at the edge is in the sense an orphan. It doesn't have anything past it. Therefore, it would seem
to be less substantial. If we could make that column a little bit closer to the one next to it it might compensate and it would have an even sense of density across the building. Voiceover: Placing of the columns closer together on the
edges create a problem in the levels above. One of the rules of
the Doric Order is that there had to be a triglyph right above the center of a column or in between each column. Voiceover: They also wanted the triglyphs to be at the very edge so one triglyph would abut
against another triglyph at the corner of the building. If in fact you're placing
your columns closer together you can actually solve for that problem. You can avoid the stretch of the metope in between those triglyphs
that would result, but because the columns are
placed so close together they had the opposite problem which is to say that the metopes at the ends of the building
would be too slender. What Phidias has done in concert with Iktinos and
Kallikrates the architects is to create sculptural metopes that are widest in the center just like the spaces between the columns and actually the metopes themselves gradually become thinner as you move to the edges so that you can't really
even perceive the change without measuring. Voiceover: The general
proportions of the building can be expressed mathematically as X equals Y times two plus one. Across the front we see eight columns and along the sides 17 columns. That ratio also governs the spacing between the columns and its relationship to
the diameter of a column. Math is everywhere. Voiceover: If we look at
the plan of the structure we see the exterior
colonnade on all four sides. On the east and west end it's actually a double colonnade and on the long sides, inside the columns a solid masonry wall. You can enter rooms on the east west only. The west has a smaller room with the four Ionic columns within it but the east room was larger and held the monumental
sculpture of Athena. It's interesting. The system that was used to create a volt that was high enough
to enclose a sculpture that was almost 40 feet high was unique. There was a U shape of interior columns at two storeys. They were Doric and they
surrounded the goddess. The sculpture is now lost but the building is almost lost as well. Here we come to one of the great tragedies of western architecture. This building survived
into the 17th century and was in pretty good
shape for 2000 years and it's only in the modern era that it became a ruin. Voiceover: First it was as we know an ancient Greek temple for Athena then it became a Greek orthodox church then a Roman catholic
church and then a mosque. In a war between the Ottomans who were in control of Greece at this moment in history
in the 17th century and the Venetians. The Venetians attacked the Parthenon, the Ottomans used the Parthenon to hold ammunitions, gunpowder. Gunpowder exploded from the inside basically ripping the
guts out of the Parthenon. Voiceover: Then to add insult
to injury in the 18th century, Lord Elgin received permission
from the Turkish government to take sculptures that had
already fallen off the temple and bring them back to England. The [lie] and share of the
great sculptures by Phidias are now in London. Greece recently has built a museum just down the hill from the acropolis specifically intended to
house these sculptures should the British ever release them. Voiceover: Some have argued that Elgin saved the sculptures that would have been further damaged had he not removed them, but what to do about
the future is uncertain. Voiceover: At least one theory states that this building was paid for by plundered treasury
from the Delian League so there's a long history
of contested ownership. Voiceover: As we stand here very high up on the acropolis
overlooking the Aegean Sea, islands beyond and mountains on this glorious day, I can't help but imagine standing inside the Parthenon between those columns which we can't do today. Voiceover: The site is undergoing
tremendous restoration. There are cranes, the scaffolding to maintain the ruin and not let it fall into worst disrepair. Voiceover: But if we could stand there what would it feel like? Voiceover: There is this beautiful balance between the theoretical and the physical. The Greeks thought about mathematics as the way that we could
understand the divine and here it is in our world. Voiceover: There's something
about the Parthenon that is both an offering to Athena, the protector of Athens, but also something that's a monument to human beings, to the Atheneans, to their brilliance, and by extension I
suppose in the modern era human spirit generally. (lively piano music)