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But when I saw the sacred house of Artemis that towers
to the clouds, the [other Wonders] were placed in the shade, for the Sun
himself has never looked upon its equal outside Olympus.
Antipater of Sidon
Is it simply a temple? How
could it take its place among other unique structures such as the Pyramid,
the Hanging Gardens, and the Colossus of Rhodes? For the people who actually
visited it, the answer was simple. It was not just a temple... It was the
most beautiful structure on earth... It was built in honor of the Greek
goddess of hunting, wild nature, and fertility. That was the Temple of
Artemis at
Ephesus.
Location
The ancient city of
Ephesus near the modern town of
Selcuk, about 50 km south of
Izmir (Smyrna) in
Turkey.
History
Although the foundation of
the temple dates back to the seventh century BC, the structure that earned a
spot in the list of Wonders was built around 550 BC. Referred to as the
great marble temple, or temple D, it was sponsored by the Lydian king
Croesus and was designed by the Greek architect Chersiphron. It was
decorated with bronze statues sculpted by the most skilled artists of their
time: Pheidias, Polycleitus, Kresilas, and Phradmon.
The temple served as both a
marketplace and a religious institution. For years, the sanctuary was
visited by merchants, tourists, artisans, and kings who paid homage to the
goddess by sharing their profits with her. Recent archeological excavations
at the site revealed gifts from pilgrims including statuettes of Artemis
made of gold and ivory... earrings, bracelets, and necklaces... artifacts
from as far as
Persia
and India.
On the night of 21 July 356
BC, a man named Herostratus burned the temple to ground in an attempt to
immortalize his name. He did indeed. Strangely enough,
Alexander the
Great was born the same night. The historian
Plutarch
later wrote that the goddess was "too busy taking care of the birth of
Alexander to send help to her threatened temple". Over the next two decades,
the temple was restored and is labeled "temple E" by archeologists. And when
Alexander the Great conquered
Asia Minor, he helped
rebuild the destroyed temple.
When St Paul visited
Ephesus to preach Christianity in the first century AD, he was confronted by
the Artemis' cult who had no plans to abandon their goddess. And when the
temple was again destroyed by the Goths in AD 262, the Ephesians vowed to
rebuild. By the fourth century AD, most Ephesians had converted to
Christianity and the temple lost its religious glamor. The final chapter
came when in AD 401 the Temple of Artemis was torn down by St John
Chrysostom. Ephesus was later deserted, and only in the late nineteenth
century has the site been excavated. The digging revealed the temple's
foundation and the road to the now swampy site. Attempts were recently made
to rebuilt the temple, but only a few columns have been re-erected.
Description
The foundation of the
temple was rectangular in form, similar to most temples at the time. Unlike
other sanctuaries, however, the building was made of marble, with a
decorated façade overlooking a spacious courtyard. Marble steps surrounding
the building platform led to the high terrace which was approximately 80 m
(260 ft) by 130 m (430 ft) in plan. The columns were 20 m (60 ft) high with
Ionic capitals and carved circular sides. There were 127 columns in total,
aligned orthogonally over the whole platform area, except for the central
cella or house of the goddess.
The temple housed many
works of art, including four ancient bronze statues of Amazons sculpted by
the finest artists at the time. When St Paul visited the city, the temple
was adorned with golden pillars and silver statuettes, and was decorated
with paintings. There is no evidence that a statue of the goddess herself
was placed at the center of the sanctuary, but there is no reason not to
believe so.
The early detailed
descriptions of the temple helped archeologists reconstruct the building.
Many reconstructions such as that by
H.F.
von Erlach depicted the façade with a four-column porch which never
existed.
More accurate reconstructions may give us an idea about the general
layout of the temple. However, its true beauty lies in the architectural and
artistic details which will forever remain unknown.
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