Temples of Paestum
From Archiplanet
| Temples of Paestum |
| Designer | unknown |
| Location | Paestum, near Naples |
| Date | -530 to -460 |
| Building Type | temple |
| Climate | mediterranean |
| Context | originally urban |
| Architectural Style | Ancient Greek - Archaic Doric |
| Street Address | |
| Notes | the Basilica, the Temple of Poseidon, the Temple of Ceres. influential in late 1700's. |
| At Great Buildings | http://www.GreatBuildings.com/buildings/Temples_of_Paestum.html |
Contents |
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| UNESCO World Heritage Sites | |
| Name | Cilento and Vallo di Diano National Park with the Archaeological sites of Paestum and Velia, and the Certosa di Padula |
| UNESCO State Party | Italy |
| Region | Europe and North America |
| Type | Cultural |
| Criteria | iii, iv |
| UNESCO Site ID | 842 |
| Year of Listing | 1998 |
| Building Details |
Commentary
When the ruins of Paestum were 'rediscovered' by 'antiquaries'chiefly Johann Joachim Winckelmannin the 1750s, "the ruins [were] then made widely known, and an enthusiastic appreciation of Greek art and architecture was also sparked...Because of Paestum, the Classic Revival was born with Greece, not Rome, ascendant."
Deborah Fritz from G. E. Kidder Smith. Looking at Architecture. p16.
The three Paestum temples are all in the Archaic Doric style of heavy columns with capitals that are squat, or as Goethe termed them, 'oppressive.' By the time the Parthenon was finished (438 B.C.), columns were elegantly slender, capitals had an alert, load-bearing profile, and refinement attended every detail. Moreover, they were carved from Parian marble; Paestum's now crudely exposed shellstone shafts, it is only fair to say, were originally covered with lime stucco. As in Greece proper, the temples at Paestum face easterly so that the rising sun will awaken the statue within."
G. E. Kidder Smith. Looking at Architecture. p16.
Details
"The southernmost of the temples, the Basilica, was built about 530 B.C., with the Temple of Poseidon dating from about 460 B.C. The third, farther north...is the Temple of Ceres, from about 510 B.C. The Basilica is unusual in that it has nine columns across the ends and a row of columns down the middle of the interior."
G. E. Kidder Smith. Looking at Architecture. p16.
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Paestum
| Paestum | ||||
| Country: | Italy | |||
| Region: | Campania | |||
| Province: | 20px Salerno | |||
| Municipality: | 20px Capaccio | |||
| Population: | 981 | |||
| Coordinates: | ||||
| Time zone: | CET, UTC+1 | |||
| Elevation: | 6 amsl | |||
| Postal code: | 84047 | |||
| Dialing code: | (+39) 0828 | |||
| Gentilic: | pestani / poseidonati / posidonici | |||
| Website | Paestum | |||
Paestum is the classical Roman name of a major Graeco-Roman city in the Campania region of Italy. It is located in the north of Cilento, near the coast about 85 km SE of Naples in the province of Salerno, and belongs to the commune of Capaccio, officially also named Capaccio-Paestum.
Geography
Paestum is situated close to the tyrrhenian coast on the road linking Agropoli to Battipaglia. Its population is mainly located in the quarters surrounding the ancient Graeco-Roman ruins, as Santa Venere (to the south, near the hamlet of Licinella), Andreoli (north) and Torre di Paestum (west, by the sea). The town also has a railway station on the Naples-Salerno-Reggio Calabria line.
History
Founded around the end of the 7th century BCThe earliest Greek pottery found at Paestum sites dates ca 600 BC. Greco, "Qualche riflessioni ancora sulle origini di Poseidionia DialArch 1 (1979) pp53-54. by colonists from the Greek city of Sybaris, and originally known as Poseidonia. Outside of archaeological evidence very little is known about Paestum during its first centuries. Archaeological evidence indicates that the city was expanding with the building of roads, temples and other features of a growing city. Coinage, architecture and molded votive figurines all attest to close relations maintained with Metaponto in the sixth and fifth centuries. It is not until the end of the fifth century BC that the city is mentioned, when according to Strabo the city was conquered by the Lucani. From the archaeological evidence it appears that the two cultures, Greek and Oscan, were able to get together and thrive. What is known is it later became the Roman city of Paestum in 273 BC after the Graeco-Italian Poseidonians sided with the loser, Pyrrhus, in war against Rome during the first quarter of the third century BC.
During the invasion of Italy by Hannibal the city remained faithful to Rome and afterwards was granted special favours such as the minting of its coinage. The city continued to prosper during the Roman imperial period, but started to go into decline between the 4th and 7th centuries. It was abandoned during the Middle Ages and its ruins only came to notice again in the 18th century, following the rediscovery of the Roman cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum. The decline and desertion were probably due to changes in local land drainage patterns, leading to swampy malarial conditions (this is difficult to picture, with the present aridity; the site is now left to lizards and a few tourists).
On September 9, 1943, Paestum was the location of the landing beaches of the U.S. 36th Infantry Division during the Allied invasion of Italy. German forces resisted the landings from the outset, causing heavy fighting within and around the town. Combat persisted around the town for nine days before the Germans withdrew to the north.
Overview
[[wikipedia:File:Map of Paestum 1732 .JPG|thumb|left|Map of Paestum by Costantino Gatta, 1732]] The main features of the site today are the standing remains of three major temples in Doric style, dating from the first half of the 6th century BC. These were dedicated to Hera and Athena, although they have traditionally been identified as a basilica and temples of Neptune and Ceres, owing to 18th-century mis-attribution.
The city of Paestum covers an area of approximately 120 hectares. It is only the 25 hectares that contain the three main temples that have been excavated. The other 95 hectares remain on private land and have not been excavated. The city is surrounded by defensive walls that still stand. The walls are approximately 4750 m long, 5 – 7 m thick and 15 m high. Positioned along the wall are 24 square and round towers. There may have been up to 28 but some of them were destroyed during the construction of highway in 18th century that effectively cuts the site in two.
The modern town of Paestum, directly to the north of the archaeological site, is a popular seaside resort. In the region of Paestum there are long, sandy beaches.
Historic buildings
The temple of Hera, built around 550 BC by Greek colonists, is the oldest surviving temple in Paestum. Eighteenth-century archaeologists named it "The Basilica" because they mistakenly believed it to be a Roman building. A basilica in Roman times was a civil building, not a religious one. Inscriptions revealed that the goddess worshiped here was Hera. Later, an altar was unearthed in front of the temple, in the open-air site usual for a Greek altar; the faithful could attend rites and sacrifices without entering the cella.
Just south of the city walls, at a site still called Santa Venera, a series of small terracotta offertory molded statuettes of a standing female nude wearing the polos headdress of Anatolian and Syrian goddesses, which were dated to the first half of the sixth century BC, were found in the sanctuary; other similar ones have been excavated at other Paestum sanctuaries during excavations in the 1980s, but the figure is highly unusual in the Western Mediterranean.Rebecca Miller Ammerman, "The Naked Standing Goddess: A Group of Archaic Terracotta Figurines from Paestum", American Journal of Archaeology 95.2 (April 1991), pp. 203-230. The open-air temenos was established at the start of Greek occupation: a temple on the site was not built until the early fifth century. A nude goddess is a figure alien to Greek culture before Praxiteles' famous Cnidian Aphrodite in the fourth century: iconographic analogies must be sought in Phoenician Astarte and the Cypriote Aphrodite. "In places where the Greeks and Phoenicians came in contact with one another, there is often an overlapping in the persona of the two deities," Rebecca Miller Ammerman has explained (Ammerman 1991), in identifying the cult at the site as that of Phoenician Astarte or Cypriot Aphrodite. In Roman times, inscriptions make clear, the cult was reserved to Venus.
The nearby temple, the second temple of Hera, was built in about 450 BC. It has been in the past variously thought of as a temple dedicated to Poseidon. There are visible on the east side the remains of two altars, one large and one smaller. The smaller one is a Roman addition, built when they cut through the larger one to build a road to the forum. It is also possible that the temple was originally dedicated to both Hera and Zeus; some offertory statues found around the larger altar are thought to demonstrate this identification.
In the central part of the complex is the Roman Forum, thought to have been built on the site of the preceding Greek agora. On the north side of the forum is a small Roman temple, dated to around 200 BC. It was dedicated to the Capitoline Triad, Jupiter, Juno and Minerva.
To the north-west of the forum is the amphitheater. This is of normal Roman pattern, though much smaller than later examples. Only the southern half is visible; in 1930 AD, a road was built across the site, burying the northern half. It is said by local inhabitants that the civil engineer responsible was tried, convicted and received a prison sentence for what was described as wanton destruction of an historic site.
On the highest point of the town, some way from the other temples, is the temple of Athena. It was built in about 500 BC, and was for some time incorrectly thought to have been dedicated to Ceres. The architecture is transitional, being partly in the Ionic mode and partly early Doric. Three mediaeval Christian tombs in the floor show that the temple was at one time used as a Christian church.
All three temples have undergone some renovation and repair in recent years. Close access is allowed, but entry by visitors into the buildings is no longer permitted.
Painted tombs
Paestum is also renowned for its painted tombs, mainly belonging to the period of the Lucanian rule, while only one of them dates to the Greek period. It was found, on 3 June 1968, in a small necropolis some 1,5 km south of the ancient walls. The burial monument was named Tomb of the Diver (Italian: Tomba del tuffatore) after the enigmatic scene, depicted on the covering slab, of a lonely young man diving into a stream of water. It was dated to the first half of the fifth century BC (about 470 BC), the Golden Age of the Greek town. The tomb is painted with the true fresco technique and its importance lies in being "the only example of Greek painting with figured scenes dating from the Orientalizing, Archaic, or Classical periods to survive in its entirety. Among the thousands of Greek tombs known from this time (roughly 700–400 BC), this is the only one to have been decorated with frescoes of human subjects."Holloway. The Tomb of the Diver, cit., p. 365. The remaining four walls of the tombs are occupied by symposium related scenes, an iconography far more familiar from the Greek pottery, than the diving scene.
All the five frescoes are visible in the local National Museum, together with the cycle of Lucanian painted tombs.
Notes
See also
- Architecture of Ancient Greece
- Greek temple
- List of Greco-Roman roofs
- List of archaeological sites sorted by country
References
- A.C. Carpiceci and L. Pennino, Paestum and Velia, Matonti, Salerno, 1995
- R. Ross Holloway. The Tomb of the Diver, in American Journal of Archaeology, Vol. 110, n. 3, July 2006 (pp. 365–388)
External links
cs:Paestum da:Paestum de:Paestum es:Paestum fr:Paestum gl:Paestum hr:Paestum it:Paestum la:Paestum hu:Paestum nl:Paestum ja:パエストゥム no:Paestum pl:Paestum pt:Paestum ru:Пестум sh:Paestum fi:Paestum sv:Paestum zh:帕埃斯图姆
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[edit] References
Helmut Berve and Gottfried Gruben. Greek Temple Theatres and Shrines. photos by Max Hirmer. New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1963. photo of east front of Hera I from the east-north-east, plate 108. photo of Hera II (Temple of Poseidon) from the south-east, plate 116.
Werner Blaser and Monica Stucky. Drawings of Great Buildings. Boston: Birkhauser Verlag, 1983. ISBN 3-7643-1522-9. LC 83-15831. NA2706.U6D72 1983. plan and section drawings, Temple of Poseidon, p22. Available at Amazon.com
Donald Corner and Jenny Young. Slides from photographer's collection. PCD.2260.1012.1841.090. PCD.2260.1012.1841.070
John Julius Norwich, ed. Great Architecture of the World. New York: Random House, 1975. exterior color photo of Temple of Hera Argiva, p59. Reprint edition: Da Capo Press, April 1991. ISBN 0-3068-0436-0. An accessible, inspiring and informative overview of world architecture, with lots of full-color cutaway drawings, and clear explanations. Available at Amazon.com
G. E. Kidder Smith. Looking at Architecture. New York: Harry N. Abrams, Publishers, 1990. ISBN 0-8109-3556-2. LC 90-30728. NA200.S57 1990. details and discussion, p16. photo, p17.
Russell Sturgis. The Architecture Sourcebook. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1984. ISBN 0-442-20831-9. LC 84-7275. NA2840.S78. section drawing, p341.
Doreen Yarwood. The Architecture of Europe. New York: Hastings House, 1974. ISBN 0-8038-0364-8. LC 73-11105. NA950.Y37. perspective drawing of Temple of Hera interior, f47, p23. perspective drawing of Temple of Athena Demeter, f45, p23. perspective drawing of Temple of Hera, f44, p23.
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