T e m p l e o f A t h e n a a t T r o y
Troy (reconstruction)
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The Temple of Athena at Troy (Ilion)
Name and Location
The lands between the Dardanelles, the Sea of Marmara and the Edremit Bay were called Troas or Troad in ancient times. Archologists discovered many ancient sites in this particular corner of Asia Minor. The most important of all is Troy which probably either took is name from the area or gave its name to the region. It may well be possible that this well known ancient settlement mentioned in the Iliad as Troia, Ilion or Ilios took these names from the two kings, Tros and Ilos.
Map of Troad and Phrygia
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Aerial view of Troy
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The Mycenaean Temple of Athena:
The earliest settlement at Troy was in the
Early Bronze Age at ca. 3000 B.C.E. This small fortified settlement was
destroyed by fire and was followed by Troy II (2500-2200 B.C.E.). Settlement
continued throughout the Bronze Age at the site. The latest prehistoric
levels are Troy VI (1800-1275 B.C.E.) and Troy VII (1275-1100 B.C.E.) and
scholars debate which of these levels represent the city of Priam and scene
of the Trojan War.
The settlement of the Mycenaeans in mainland
Greece in places unprotected by the sea forced them to build citadels rather
than palaces. Their penchant for monumental architecture, encouraged by
the military character of their buildings and their taste for symmetry,
was expressed in the central megaton with its columns and pillars.
Megaron
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Most probably the Mycenaean Temple of Athena
follows these principles. The facade testifies the Mycenaean taste for
symmetry and sobriety. The base consists of cut-stone blocks with irregular
joints; these support courses of unfired brick held together by ties of
wood; which help stabilize the building and inject rhythm into the facade.
The entrance has a covered vestibule (promos), entirely fronted
with wood and framed by the walls of the domos (main chamber). Windows
with wooden grilles admitted daylight into the domos.
Troy VI (reconstruction)
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Inside the main chamber is the cultic statue
of the Goddess and the Palladium, that ancient sacred image of Pallas which,
as one version has it, fell from heaven.
The cultic statue of Athena
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According to one description, the Palladium,
carries in the right hand a raised lance, in the left a distaff and spindle,
showing the duality of aspects of the Goddess. Coins from Troy show the
statue equipped in this way in accordance with ancient tradition.
The Palladium
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Often the duality exists also in the number
of chosen maidservants of the Goddess. On the oldest representation, the
Mycenaean painted plate, one sees two devotees or priestesses, and we know
of two maidens who were designated for sacrifice and - provided they escaped
- were consecrated to Athena. So it was with the two virgins who, in these
archaic times, were sent from Lokri to Troy as atonement for the crime
which Aias committed against the Palladium. The Trojan men meanwhile, waited
and lay in ambush, and spying the maidens killed them. The Lokrians then
had to send two other virgins to replace the ones sacrificed. If the Lokrian
maidens remained unrecognized and reached the Temple of Athena, they became
maidservants of the Goddess. They kept the temple cleaned up, went about
barefooted and wearing only one garment, and were allowed to do this only
at night. Moreover, they were allowed neither to step in front of the Goddess
nor to leave the Temple. This second ordinance is not transmitted to us
very clearly.
The Trojan War
But the most important event related with
the Mycenaean Temple of Athena at Troy is the War of Troy narrated by Homer
in the Iliad and the Odyssey.
This war started because the Trojan Paris
had preferred the Goddess Aphrodite to the Goddesses Hera and Athena. When
Paris kidnaped Helen and took her to Troy these latter two Goddesses supported
the Greeks against the Trojans.
During this war, after the Goddess Athena
wounded the God Aries and he ran to Mt. Olympus, the Trojans were forced
to return to the city. At that moment of crisis, one of the brothers of
Hector, expert in discussing the will of the Gods, instigated him to go,
as soon as possible, to the city and give advice to the queen, their mother,
to offer to the Goddess Athena the most beautiful robe she had and to implore
mercy to the Goddess, with fervent prayers. Hector understood the wisdom
of the advice and rushed to the palace.
He spoke to her, and his mother, entering
the palace, called her servants, and sent them to reunite all the noble
women of the city. Herself descended to the scented room where were the
robes completely embroided... Hecuba chooses one of those robes to offer
to Athena, the most beautiful by its embroidery, and the biggest; it shone
as a star, even though it was hidden under all the others. She walked to
the Temple followed by many noble women.
When they arrived at the Temple of Athena,
on the acropolis, the doors of the Temple were opened by Teano of beautiful
faces, daughter of Cises, and wife of Antenor, tamer of horses: It was
she who the Trojans had made priestess of Athena. All of them, with a long
cry, raised their hands to Athena. Teano took the robe and placed it over
the knees of Athena of beautiful hair; then, supplicating, she requested
to the Daughter of the Great Zeus:
-Venerated Athena, preserver of the cities,
divine between the Goddesses, break the spear of Diomedes, and concede
us that he himself fall in front of the doors of our city, so that we can
immediately immolate to You, in Your Temple, twelve young cows, each one
year old, if You have pity of the city, of the Trojan women and of their
children.
This was their prayer; but Pallas Athena turned Her
head. Iliad 6
As we saw before, the maidservants are two
virgins offered by the Lokri, but the priestess is a married woman elected
by the city.
But Troy didn't fall due to victory in battle.
At a certain moment the Greeks took acknowledgment that there was inside
the Temple of Athena a very sacred statue of Pallas Athena, the Palladium,
and there was a general belief that while the Trojans kept it under their
power the city of Troy could not be taken by the attackers. Having in mind
this belief, the two greatest Greek chiefs still alive, Ulysses and Diomedes,
decide to try to steal the Palladium.
In a very dark night, Diomedes climbs the
wall of the city with the help of Ulysses and when he finds the Palladium
inside of the Temple he takes it out and brings it to the camp.
Diomedes with the Palladium
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With this great stimulus the Greeks decide
not to wait more time and to get some way to finish the war. Ulysses,
with his cleverness (metis) imagines the wooden horse device as
an offering to appease Goddess Athena from the stealing of the Palladium.
The Trojan Horse
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The Trojans don't suspect the trick and
push the wooden horse through the doors of the city until the Temple of
Athena is reached. Thinking the war is over and the graces of Athena are
again given to them, they return in peace to their homes, which never happened
in the last ten years.
During the night the Greek warriors leave
the Wooden horse, open the doors of the city and Troy is completely destroyed.
The warriors leave the Wooden horse
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But the Greeks victory was also the cause
of their destruction. Cassandra, one of the daughters of king Priam,
was a prophetess. She warned the Trojans that the Greeks were hidden inside
the wooden horse but they didn't believe her. When the Greeks sacked the
city, Cassandra went to the Temple of Athena, seized the cult statue of
the Goddess and implored Her protection. Ajax (not Ajax the Great) pulled
her from the statue and dragged her out of the sanctuary were she was violated.
Ajax seizes Cassandra
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Not a single Greek protested against this sacrilege. The wrath of Athena
was without limits. She went to Her uncle Poseidon:
-I ask your help for my revenge!- She said.
-Give to the Greeks a very biter return to Greece. Shall the waters wave
in wild turmoil under their ships! Shall the dead flood the bays and pile
on the beaches and on the reefs!
Poseidon promptly agreed to fulfill the wish
of Athena. The terrible storm that fell over the Greek fleet returning
to Greece, destroyed the great majority of the ships.
When Aeneas escaped from the ruins of Troy,
he took with him the Palladium to Italy and later to Rome itself, where
it became known as "the luck of the city", faithfully guarded by the college
of Vestal virgins.
The Archaic Temple of Athena:
Following the end of the Late bronze Age
there was a 400 year hiatus at the site until it was resettled at ca. 700
B.C.E. by Greek colonialists, possibly from Lesbos or Tenedos. The Early
Iron Age city (Troy VIII) was founded with the name Ilion.
It is not known when the Archaic Temple
of Athena at Troy was built, nor what was its style, but the principal
order of Greek architecture found in Asia Minor and the Aegean Islands
was the Ionic one. These stone buildings did little more than reproduce
the proportions and elements of earlier wooden structures. The order is
characterized by the lack of gratuitous ornament and this formal purity;
only its scroll-shaped capitals, retains a hint of oriental decoration.
Most probably the Archaic Temple of Athena
followed these principles. It was a prostyle temple, the columns were at
one end of the building only, creating the pronaos (the antechamber)
with the door to the naos or cela (the inner sanctum). The
facade had a plain tympanum and a continuous frieze. The columns were slender
and stand on ringed bases; they had twenty-four flutes and culminate in
a scrolled capital.
C.a. 546 B.C.E. following the Persian conquest
of all Ionia, Troy fell under Persian domination. In 480 B.C.E. Xerxes
halted at Troy to sacrifice a thousand oxen before crossing the Hellespont
into Greece.
Troy only left Persian control when the
liberation of Asia Minor by Alexander the Great in 334 B.C.E.
At that date Alexander the Great went to
Troy immediately after crossing into Asia Minor to make an offering to
Goddess Athena in the Temple. There he promised to build a new Temple to
the Goddess and left his armor as a gift to Her.
The Hellenistic Temple of Athena:
Following the death of Alexander in 323
B.C.E., his general, Lysimachus, his successor in Thrace, had a new Temple
of Athena built in the city. Much of the original settlement area was disturbed
with the construction of the new sanctuary, a theater, palestra, and extended
city walls.
This Hellenistic Temple was partly destroyed
in 85 B.C.E. during Fimbria's sack of Troy.
Maybe after the victory at Zela over Pharnace
(47 B.C.E.) Julius Caesar, who believed himself to be a direct descendant
of king Priam, visits the city, and prayed at the sanctuary.
The Roman Temple of Athena:
In the reign of Augusts (27 B.C.E. - 14
C.E.) the city and the sanctuary of Athena underwent a large rebuilding
program. An odeum, a bouleuterion, and other buildings were added to the
city.
The sanctuary was a vast assemblage of buildings.
Crossing the Propylaea, the Sacred Square and the Stoa was reached. In
the center of the Sacred Square was the large Temple of Athena. The Temple
was of peripteral or dipteral type, surrounded by a single or double exterior
colonnade, the perirtasis (peristyle). Remains found by Schiemann
prove the Temple to be of the Doric order.
Facade sculptures fell the tympanum, and
the plain architrave was crowned by a frieze in which the geometrical form
of the triglyph and the relief's of the metopes were seen to alternate.
Metope and triglyph
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The columns were robust and massive, resting directly on the stylobate
(the "top step" of the Temple base) and culminated in a circular echinus
and square abacus. The shalf had between sixteen and twenty flutes.
In 355 C.E. the site was visited by the
Emperor Julian. He was a king who offers frequent sacrifice and knew the
Homeric poems in detail, a source of enhancement for his own life and writings.
In those writings we meet the piety for the Gods, for whom the Gods are
manifest protectors, "standing beside" him to help him through life. Julian
hints at his youthful encounter with the Gods and his personal "ascent"
to heaven, where They had commissioned his task among men. Julian tells
this because it stands for a serious truth, his own sense of divine company
and guidance, based on a personal Homeric encounter. It is this "company"
which is stressed repeatedly in the speeches to or about him which are
made by the orator Libanius. The Gods, he says, assist Julian in his marches
to war; Zeus is his protector, Athena his "fellow worker". But Libanius
insists on a more personal note: You alone have seen the shapes of the
Gods, a blessed observer of the Blessed Ones... you alone have heard the
voice of the Gods and addressed them in the words of Sophocles, 'O voice
of Athena' or 'O voice of Zeus'...
On the heights of the great mountain behind
Antioch, Julian had indeed seen Zeus himself, while sacrificing in his
honor. The Gods are his "friends and protectors", Libanius insists, "just
as" Athena had once stood by Homer's Achilles in the plains of Troy.
Present state:
The platform for the Temple of Athena, fragments
of its coffered ceiling and fragments of a marble Doric capital can still
be seen on site.
The platform
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Ceiling fragment
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Clickable Plan
Clickable Plan of Troy
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Gallery
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Troad map 495 X 390 12 KB |
Troy map 495 X 390 5 KB |
Troy plan 752 X 638 26 KB |
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Aerial view 983 X 682 174 KB |
Troy VI 659 X 475 79 KB |
Trojan horse 522 X 312 47 KB |
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Fall of Troy 488 X 658 112 KB |
Wooden horse 493 X 662 76 KB |
Megaron 420 X 258 20 KB |
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Schliemann 391 X 221 29 KB |
Temple SE 588 X 396 53 KB |
Temple W 653 X 350 52 KB |
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Ceiling 653 X 608 96 KB |
Metope 539 X 442 58 KB |
Diomedes 261 X 261 15 KB |
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Cassandra 625 X 530 81 KB |
Palladium 435 X 468 70 KB |
Statue 659 X 291 38 KB |
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Altar 614 X 597 120 KB |
Priestess 203 X 448 25 KB |
Tourist Information:
Although by no means the most spectacular archeological site in Turkey, Troy, thanks to Homer, is probably the most celebrated. Known as Truva in Turkish, the remains of the ancient city lie just west of the main road around 20km south of Canakkale. It's a scanty affair on the whole, but if you lower your expectations and use your imagination, you may well be impressed.
Canakkale is without a doubt the most sensible base for seeing Troy, running worthwhile guided tours of the ancient site. Alternatively, fairly frequent dolmuses leave from the station just before the bridge on Ataturk Caddesi, for the half-hour journey through a rolling landscape of olive groves and cotton fields.
The dolmus to the site drops you off just beyond the village, in front of a burgeoning cluster of tourist shops and restaurants.
Other Views:
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Copyright
©1998-2003 Roy George
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