A Diachronic Examination of the Erechtheion and its Reception |
ABSTRACT
A Diachronic Examination of the Erechtheion and Its Reception” examines the social life of the Ionic temple
on the Athenian Akropolis, which was built in the late 5th century B.C. to house Athens’ most sacred cults and
relics. Using a contextualized diachronic approach, this study examines both the changes to the Erechtheion
between its construction and the middle of the 19th century A.D., as well as the impact the temple had on
the architecture and art of these successive periods.
This approach allows the evidence to shed light on new areas of interest such as the Post-Antique phases
of the building, in addition to affording a better understanding of problems that have plagued the study of
the Erechtheion during the past two centuries.
This study begins with a re-examination of all the pertinent archaeological, epigraphical, and literary evidence,
and proposes a wholly new reconstruction of how the Erechtheion worked physically and ritually in ancient times.
After accounting for the immediate influence of the Erechtheion on subsequent buildings of the Ionic order, an
argument for a Hellenistic rather than Augustan date for the major repairs to the temple is presented.
These repairs are then placed among the significant building projects carried out in Athens by the Hellenistic
kings. While Rome ruled its empire, the Erechtheion continued to exert its own influence. Copies of both the
Erechtheion’s special Ionic order and the maidens of the South Porch were incorporated into several Roman
monuments in Greece, Italy, and Spain.
This study examines the significance of these quotations, and probes the Roman reception of the Erechtheion
in the light of Vitruvius’ opening statements in De Architectura, where the Roman architect calls female
architectural supports “caryatids.”
The surviving architectural evidence, in conjunction with the accounts and depictions of the Erechtheion by
the early travelers to Athens, provide the bases for reconstructing the different phases of the Erechtheion.
After it served as a pagan temple, the Erechtheion was transformed into a pillared hall in Late Antiquity,
a basilica church in the Byzantine period, an elaborate residence in the Frankish period, and finally into
a house for an Ottoman official. During the Venetian bombardment of the Akropolis in 1687, the Erechtheion
was severely damaged. After this event, the building served as a gunpowder magazine, and as a ruin to
be admired for its antiquity. From the 18th century onward, the Erechtheion also served as a model for
Neoclassical buildings all over Europe.
By gauging the aesthetic reception of the Erechtheion by early travelers to Athens, this study attempts
to appreciate the temple’s timeless appeal and its role in the creation of the nascent Greek state’s
national identity.
Below: The Erechtheion over time.
A Diachronic Examination of the Erechtheion and Its Reception” examines the social life of the Ionic temple
on the Athenian Akropolis, which was built in the late 5th century B.C. to house Athens’ most sacred cults and
relics. Using a contextualized diachronic approach, this study examines both the changes to the Erechtheion
between its construction and the middle of the 19th century A.D., as well as the impact the temple had on
the architecture and art of these successive periods.
This approach allows the evidence to shed light on new areas of interest such as the Post-Antique phases
of the building, in addition to affording a better understanding of problems that have plagued the study of
the Erechtheion during the past two centuries.
This study begins with a re-examination of all the pertinent archaeological, epigraphical, and literary evidence,
and proposes a wholly new reconstruction of how the Erechtheion worked physically and ritually in ancient times.
After accounting for the immediate influence of the Erechtheion on subsequent buildings of the Ionic order, an
argument for a Hellenistic rather than Augustan date for the major repairs to the temple is presented.
These repairs are then placed among the significant building projects carried out in Athens by the Hellenistic
kings. While Rome ruled its empire, the Erechtheion continued to exert its own influence. Copies of both the
Erechtheion’s special Ionic order and the maidens of the South Porch were incorporated into several Roman
monuments in Greece, Italy, and Spain.
This study examines the significance of these quotations, and probes the Roman reception of the Erechtheion
in the light of Vitruvius’ opening statements in De Architectura, where the Roman architect calls female
architectural supports “caryatids.”
The surviving architectural evidence, in conjunction with the accounts and depictions of the Erechtheion by
the early travelers to Athens, provide the bases for reconstructing the different phases of the Erechtheion.
After it served as a pagan temple, the Erechtheion was transformed into a pillared hall in Late Antiquity,
a basilica church in the Byzantine period, an elaborate residence in the Frankish period, and finally into
a house for an Ottoman official. During the Venetian bombardment of the Akropolis in 1687, the Erechtheion
was severely damaged. After this event, the building served as a gunpowder magazine, and as a ruin to
be admired for its antiquity. From the 18th century onward, the Erechtheion also served as a model for
Neoclassical buildings all over Europe.
By gauging the aesthetic reception of the Erechtheion by early travelers to Athens, this study attempts
to appreciate the temple’s timeless appeal and its role in the creation of the nascent Greek state’s
national identity.
Below: The Erechtheion over time.