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- The Golden Age of Greece
-
- The ancient statues and pottery of the Golden Stone Age of Greece were much
- advanced in spectacular ways. The true facts of ZeusÆs main reason for his statue. The
- great styles of the Kouros and the Kore. The story of The Blinding of Polphemus,
- along with the story of Cyclops. The Dori and Ionic column stone temples that were
- built in Greece that had an distinctive look. The true colors of the vase, Aryballos. The
- vase that carried liquids from one place to another. The Lyric Poetry that was originally
- a song to be sung to the accompaniment of the lyre.
- Zeus was considered, according to Homer, the father of the gods and of mortals.
- He did not create either gods or mortals; he was their father in the sense of being the
- protector and ruler both of the Olympian family and of the human race. He was lord of
- the sky, the rain god, and the cloud gatherer, who wielded the terrible thunderbolt. His
- breastplate was the aegis, his bird the eagle, his tree the oak. Zeus presided over the
- gods on Mount Olympus in Thessaly. His principal shrines were at Dodona, in Epirus,
- the land of the oak trees and the most ancient shrine, famous for its oracle, and at
- Olympia, where the Olympian Games were celebrated in his honor every fourth year.
- The Nemean games, held at Nemea, northwest of Argos, were also dedicated to Zeus.
- Zeus was the youngest son of the Titans Cronus and Rhea and the brother of the deities
- Poseidon, Hades, Hestia, Demeter, and Hera. According to one of the ancient myths of
- the birth of Zeus, Cronus, fearing that he might be dethroned by one of his children,
- swallowed them as they were born. Upon the birth of Zeus, Rhea wrapped a stone in
- swaddling clothes for Cronus to swallow and concealed the infant god in Crete, where
- he was fed on the milk of the goat Amalthaea and reared by nymphs. When Zeus grew
- to maturity, he forced Cronus to disgorge the other children, who were eager to take
- vengeance on their father. Zeus henceforth ruled over the sky, and his brothers Poseidon
- and Hades were given power over the sea and the underworld, respectively. The earth
- was to be ruled in common by all three. Beginning with the writings of the Greek poet
- Homer, Zeus is pictured in two very different ways. He is represented as the god of
- justice and mercy, the protector of the weak, and the punisher of the wicked. As
- husband to his sister Hera, he is the father of Ares, the god of war; Hebe, the goddess of
- youth; Hephaestus, the god of fire; and Eileithyia, the goddess of childbirth. At the same
- time, Zeus is described as falling in love with one woman after another and resorting to
- all kinds of tricks to hide his infidelity from his wife. Stories of his escapades were
- numerous in ancient mythology, and many of his offspring were a result of his love
- affairs with both goddesses and mortal women. It is believed that, with the development
- of a sense of ethics in Greek life, the idea of a lecherous, sometimes ridiculous father
- god became distasteful, so later legends tended to present Zeus in a more exalted light.
- His many affairs with mortals are sometimes explained as the wish of the early Greeks to
- trace their lineage to the father of the gods. Zeus's image was represented in sculptural
- works as a kingly, bearded figure. The most celebrated of all statues of Zeus was
- Phidias's gold and ivory colossus at Olympia.
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- The standing nude youth (kouros), the standing draped girl (kore), and the seated
- woman. All emphasize and generalize the essential features of the human figure and
- show an increasingly accurate comprehension of human anatomy. The youths were
- either sepulchral or votive statues. Examples are Apollo (Metropolitan Museum), an
- early work; Strangford Apollo from Lφmnos (British Museum, London), a much later
- work; and the Anavyssos Kouros (National Museum, Athens). More of the musculature
- and skeletal structure is visible in this statue than in earlier works. The standing, draped
- girls have a wide range of expression, as in the sculptures in the Acropolis Museum,
- Athens. Their drapery is carved and painted with the delicacy and meticulousness
- common to the details of sculpture of this period.
- The Blinding of Polyphemus. Polyphemus, a Cyclops, the son of Poseidon, god
- of the sea, and of the nymph Tho÷sa. During his wanderings after the Trojan War, the
- Greek hero Odysseus and his men were cast ashore on Polyphemus's island home, Sicily.
- The enormous giant penned the Greeks in his cave and began to devour them. Odysseus
- then gave Polyphemus some strong wine and when the giant had fallen into a drunken
- stupor, bored out his one eye with a burning stake. The Greeks then escaped by clinging
- to the bellies of his sheep. Poseidon punished Odysseus for blinding Polyphemus by
- causing him many troubles in his subsequent wanderings by sea. In another legend,
- Polyphemus was depicted as a huge, one-eyed shepherd, unhappily in love with the sea
- nymph Galatea. Cyclops, giants with one enormous eye in the middle of the forehead. In
- Hesiod, the three sonsùArges, Brontes, and Steropesùof Uranus and Gaea, the
- personifications of heaven and earth, were Cyclopes. The Greek hero Odysseus was
- trapped with his men in the cave of the Cyclops Polyphemus, a son of Poseidon, god of
- the sea. In order to escape from the cave after the giant devoured several men, Odysseus
- blinded him.
- Dori and Ionic Columns. Aware of Egyptian temples in stone, Greeks in the 7th
- century began to build their own stone temples in a distinctive style. They used
- limestone in Italy and Sicily, marble in the Greek islands and Asia Minor, and limestone
- covered with marble on the Greek mainland. Later they built chiefly in marble. The
- temples were rectangular and stood on a low, stepped terrace in an enclosure where
- rituals were performed. Small temples had a two-columned front porch, sometimes with
- a portico before it. Larger temples, with front and back porches, might have a six-
- columned portico before each porch or be entirely surrounded by a colonnade. The
- colonnade supported an entablature, or lintel, under the gabled, tiled roof.
- Architects developed two orders, or styles of columns, the Doric and the Ionic
- (see Column). Doric columns, which had no bases and whose capitals consisted of a
- square slab over a round cushion shape, were heavy and closely spaced to support the
- weight of the masonry. Their heaviness was relieved by the tapered and fluted shaft. On
- the entablature, vertical triglyphs were carved over every column, leaving between them
- oblongùlater squareùmetopes, which were at first painted and later filled with painted
- reliefs. The Doric style originated on the mainland and became widespread. The Doric
- temples at Syracuse, Paestum, Selinus, Acragas, Pompeii, Tarentum (Taranto),
- Metapontum, and Corcyra (KΘrkira) still exist. Especially notable is the Temple of
- Poseidon at Paestum (450 BC).
- Columns in the Ionic style, which began in Ionia (Asia Minor) and the Greek
- islands, are more slender, more narrowly fluted, and spaced farther apart than Doric
- columns. Each rests on a horizontally fluted round base and terminates in a capital
- shaped like a flat cushion rolled into volutes at the sides. The entablature, lighter than in
- the Doric style, might have a frieze. Examples of Ionic temples are in Ephesus near
- modern Izmir, Turkey, in Athens (the Erechtheum), and (some traces) in Naucratis,
- Egypt. There are three standard types of columns in Greek classical architecture. The
- oldest is the Doric, which is the widest, has no base, and is topped by a simple abacus
- with an echinus directly underneath it. The Ionic column has a base and a capital made
- of scroll-shaped volutes directly beneath the abacus. The most elaborate column is the
- Corinthian. It has the most complex base, and the capital is made of layers of carved
- acanthus leaves ending in volutes. All three columns have fluted shafts.
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- The Aryballos was a very colorful vase. The black figure technique and the very
- Eastern-looking panther are characteristic of the Orientalizing style. Also characteristic
- are the flower like decorations, which are blobs of paint scored with lines. The
- musculature and features of the panther are also the result of scoring. The most
- characteristic shape was that of the aryballos, a polychromed container for carrying
- liquids. The Corinthian artist developed a miniature style that made use of a wide
- variety of eastern motifs-sphinxes, winged human figures, floral designs-all of them
- arranged in bands covering almost the entire surface of the vase. White, yellow, and
- purple were often used to highlight details, produced a bold and striking effect. The
- small size of the pot mad them ideal for exporting. The vases are well made, the figures
- lively, and the style instantly recognizable as Corinthian-an important factor for
- commercial success.
- Lyric Poetry. The lyric was originally a song to be sung to the accompaniment
- of the lyre. Two main types of lyrics were composed in ancient Greece: the personal and
- the choral lyric. The personal lyric was developed on the island of Lesbos (modern
- LΘsvos). The poet and musician Terpander, who was born on Lesbos but lived much of
- his life in Sparta, introduced the seven-string lyre and set the poems of Homer to music.
- Most of his poems were nomes, or liturgical hymns, written in honor of a god, especially
- of Apollo, and sung by a single performer to the accompaniment of the lyre. The
- surviving fragments of his work are of doubtful authenticity. Terpander was followed
- later in the 7th century BC by the great poets of Lesbos. Alcaeus treated political,
- religious, and personal themes in his lyrics and invented the Alcaic strophe. Sappho, the
- greatest woman poet of ancient Greece, invented the Sapphic strophe and wrote also in
- other lyric forms. Her poems of love and friendship are among the most finely wrought
- and passionate in the Western tradition. The Lesbian poets, as well as a number of later
- lyric poets from other Greek cities, composed their poems in the Aeolic dialect. In the
- 6th century BC the playful lyrics of the poet Anacreon on wine and love were written in
- various lyric meters. Subsequent verse similar in tone and theme was known as
- anacreontic. The choral lyric was first developed in the 7th century BC by poets who
- wrote in the Dorian dialect. Dominant in the region around Sparta, the Dorian dialect
- was used even in later times, when poets in many other parts of Greece were writing
- choral lyrics. The Spartan poets first wrote choral lyrics for songs and dances in public
- religious celebrations. Later they wrote choral lyrics also to celebrate private occasions,
- such as a victory at the Olympian Games. The earliest choral lyric poet is said to have
- been Thaletas, who in the 7th century BC reputedly came from Crete to Sparta in order
- to quell an epidemic with paeans, or choral hymns addressed to Apollo. He was
- followed by Terpander, who wrote both personal and choral lyrics; by Alcman, most of
- whose poems were partheneia, processional choral hymns sung by a chorus of young
- girls and partly religious in character and lighter in tone than the paeans; and in the late
- 7th century by Arion. Arion is said to have invented both the dithyramb, or hymn to
- Dionysus, and the tragic mode, which was used extensively in Greek drama. Later great
- writers of choral lyrics include Sicilian poet Stesichorus, a contemporary of Alcaeus,
- who introduced the triadic form of choral ode, consisting of a series of groups of three
- stanzas; Ibycus of Rhegium, author of a large extant fragment of a triadic choral ode and
- of erotic personal lyrics; Simonides of Ceos, whose choral lyrics included epinicia, or
- choral odes in honor of victors at the Olympian Games, encomia, or choral hymns that
- celebrated particular persons, and dirges, as well as personal lyrics, including epigrams;
- and Bacchylides of Ceos, a nephew of Simonides, who wrote both epinicia, of which 13
- are extant, and dithyrambs, of which 5 are extant.
- The ancient statues and pottery of the Golden Stone Age of Greece were much
- advanced in spectacular ways. The statue of Zeus was done for a very good reason.
- The statue represents being the lord of the sky, the rain god and the cloud gatherer.
- When I look at this statue, I see a whole bunch of different things, for example, I see a
- statue that has great muscular shapes which to me it represents that he had power over
- some town or group of people. I personally would be afraid of a statue that looks like
- Zeus. The Kore and the Kouros both emphasize and generalize the essential features of
- the human figure and show an increasingly accurate comprehension of human anatomy.
- The youths were either sepulchral or votive statues. The Blinding of Polyphemus, the
- son of Poseidon, god of the sea, and of the nymph Thoosa. Odysseus gave Polyphemus
- some strong wine and when the giant had fallen into a drunken stupor, bored out his one
- eye with a burning stake. The Dori and Ionic columns were rectangular and stood on a
- low, stepped terrace in an enclosure where rituals were performed. These columns were
- very much done with a great deal of intelligence. I personally do not understand how
- the people of the Golden Age had such intelligence in the columns for where they can
- build one or two to hold up a building, and it now still stands. ItÆs incredible. The
- Aryballos are a very colorful vase. They Golden Age folks had great artistic talent to
- dray out on a vase the beautiful colors and drawings that it has. The Vase has an
- organizing style. The vase were used for carrying liquids. Vases like the Aryballos are
- now worth a fortune, why? Well, it took a great deal of time and talent to make these
- vases. The vases are probably worth about one million a piece. The height of the vases
- are varied, depending on the designs that were put on it. I think that the people of the
- Golden Age were very talented. The objects that we have from back then is very
- remarkable. The objects are had a great deal of time put into each of them. The pottery
- for example was what had really gotten to me because of the art that were drawn on it
- and the why they used there colors. I think that if It wasnÆt people like the Golden Age
- people who had drew these great objects, we would be way behind on the art that we
- have today. I like to look at it like our fathers before us that are teaching us what we
- know now. I must say, living in the nineties are much more better, relaxing, stress less,
- and more of a easy life now than before. I that god that I am here now with the
- knowledge that I know now. If I was a Nejeh in the Golden Age, I would probable
- commit suicide, if I wasnÆt killed by someone else. I can not complain. We have it
- good, we must thank God for being where we are.
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