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The Acropolis Columns and Buildings. The Acropolis and Agora General Overview Get to know the Acropolis with Rick Steves!

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Presentation on theme: "The Acropolis Columns and Buildings. The Acropolis and Agora General Overview Get to know the Acropolis with Rick Steves!"— Presentation transcript:

1 The Acropolis Columns and Buildings

2 The Acropolis and Agora General Overview Get to know the Acropolis with Rick Steves! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xP- FsX0QW88 As you watch, come up with one question you have about the Acropolis,

3 Background Athena vs. Poseidon Test –Poseidon: Struck earth with trident Created well, salt water sprang forth = naval power –Athena – Olive tree = peace and prosperity Athena won (obviously)

4 Order of Greek Columns Doric, Ionic, Corinthian

5 Making Thinking Visible https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nrRJkzXl4a4 As you watch this video, assign each type of column an animal and explain why you chose that animal.

6 Doric Style – Archaic Age Sturdy Top (capital) is plain Columns – thick and chunky! Larger-than-life, masculine, heroic view of Greece Mainland Greece, colonies in southern Italy and Sicily

7 The Parthenon – Doric Columns

8 Cornice Pediment Frieze of alternating triglyphs and metopes – low relief structure Architrave Capital

9 Pediment – High Relief

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11 East Pediment Parthenon Sculptures British Museum, London

12 Trigloph and Mytope Friezes

13 Ionic Style – Classical Age Thinner, more elegant Top (capital) decorated with a simple scroll More flutes Eastern Greece and the islands

14 Temple of Athena Nike – Ionic Columns

15 Cornice Frieze Architrave Capital

16 Corinthian Style – Hellenistic Age Seldom used in Greek world Roman temples Top (capital) very elaborate –Decorated with acanthus leaves

17 Temple of Zeus, Athens – Corinthian Columns

18 Acropolis (“acro” = “high” & “polis” = “city”) City on the hill, 230’ over Athens, over 2000 years old

19 Human genius Reflect a form of life Attitude that put man at the center of the world Beauty and proportion divine

20 Propylaea Gateway to the Sacred Way – the procession to the gods –No stairs, just cuts to make the climb easier; Romans added stairs

21 Propylaea

22 Temple of Nike

23 Ionic Columns – Scroll Capital

24 Statue of Athena Nike Cult statue of Athena Nike –Wood –Helmet in left hand –Pomegranate (fertility) in right Originally winged victory goddess –Nike Apteros (wingless victory); never fly away

25 The Winged Victory of Samothrace Nike of Samothrace –Marble –Greek goddess Nike (victory) –Discovered 1863 –Represents Greek fascination with the cult of Nike

26 Parthenon

27 The Mighty Parthenon!

28 All temples were designed to be seen only from the outside. Visitors never went inside and could glimpse interior statues only from the outside.

29 The idealism of the Greek way of living, the attention to detail, as well as the understanding of a mathematically explained harmony in the natural world were concepts that in every Athenian’s eyes set them apart from the barbarians. These ideals are represented in the perfect proportions of the building, in its intricate architectural elements, and in the anthropomorphic statues that adorned it.

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31 The Elgin Marbles The British Museum, London How the Brits got pieces of the Acropolis for CHEAP!

32 The buildings of the Acropolis suffered significant damage during the 1687 siege by the Venetians in the Morean War The Parthenon, which was being used as a gunpowder magazine, was hit by artillery fire and severely damaged.

33 Thomas Bruce, the 7 th Earl of Elgin, British Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire from 1799- 1803, obtained a controversial permit from the Ottoman authorities to remove pieces from the Acropolis.

34 From 1801-1812, Elgin’s agents removed about half of the surviving sculptures from the Parthenon, as well as sculptures from the Proplylaea and Erechtheum.

35 The marbles were transported by sea to Britain. In Britain, the acquisition of the marbles was supported by some, while others compared Elgin’s actions to vandalism or looting.

36 Following a public debate in parliament and subsequent exoneration of Elgin’s actions, the marbles were purchased by the British government in 1816 and put on display in the British Museum.

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38 Current Parthenon Restoration Started in 1975 and thought to be completed in 10 years Previous restoration efforts in 1898 included replacement of iron clamps; Greek Architect Nicholas Balanos did not add the lead coating that the ancient Greeks had used to prevent corrosion Iron swelled and cracked marble Restoration continues today

39 Erechtheum – dedicated to Athena and Poseidon

40 Athena – left side Poseidon – right side Sacred Snake –Spirit of Cecrops –Well-being essential to safety of the city –Fed honey- cakes by priestesses

41 This olive tree is said to be a descendant from the one Athena planted.

42 Porch of Caryatids –Sculpted figures serving as an architectural support in the place of columns

43 Caryatid Porch of Erechtheum

44 A Closer Look https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X872rmThCF8#t=238 How do the Caryatids represent a change from the old way of thinking to the new way of thinking that is being brought in during the Hellenistic Period?

45 Odeon of Herodes Atticus; 161 AD; Roman

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47 Aeropagus – Mars Hill

48 Paul at Areopagus “New teaching” (Acts 17:19) Not official judicial procedure –Echoes the trial of Socrates –Proclaiming new deities and leading the populace to question its beliefs in the traditional gods Leonoard Porter, "Saint Paul Preaching on the Areopagus" 2010, oil on linen, 12" x 19"

49 Exit Ticket On the front of the notecard, write the question you asked while watching the video at the beginning of the presentation. On the back of the notecard, write the answer. If your question was not answered, leave it blank.


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