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Athena Promachos

Coordinates: 37°58′18″N 23°43′33″E / 37.97167°N 23.72583°E / 37.97167; 23.72583
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Idealised view of the Acropolis with the bronze Athena Promachos carrying a great spear in her right hand (rather than with an owl as indicated from copies and coins), by the painter Leo von Klenze in 1846, who portrayed the great statue of Athena Promachos as visible from far away, as reported in ancient texts.

The Athena Promachos (Ἀθηνᾶ Πρόμαχος, "Athena who fights in the front line") was a colossal bronze statue of Athena sculpted by Pheidias, which stood between the Propylaea[1] and the Parthenon on the Acropolis of Athens. Athena was the tutelary deity of Athens and the goddess of wisdom and warriors. Pheidias also sculpted two other figures of Athena on the Acropolis, the huge gold and ivory ("chryselephantine") cult image of Athena Parthenos in the Parthenon and the Lemnian Athena.

The designation Athena Promachos is not attested before a dedicatory inscription of the early fourth century CE;[2] Pausanias (1.28.2) referred to it as "the great bronze Athena" on the Acropolis.

History

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The Athena Promachos was one of the earliest recorded works by Pheidias and was originally a well-known and famous Athenian landmark.[3] According to the Greek traveler and geographer, Pausanias, the top of Athena's helmet as well as the tip of her spear could be seen by sailors and anyone approaching Athens from Attica, at Sounion.[4] It originally stood between the Erechtheion and the Propylaea.[1]

Similar Depictions. Illustration of the chryselephantine (gold and ivory) Athena Parthenos from Harper's Weekly, 1892
Greek coin depicting the statue.

Erected around 456 BCE, the Athena Promachos was either to memorialize the Battle of Marathon or the Greco-Persian Wars which is possibly what the dedicatory inscription refers to; this inscription also mentions that the trophies won in the Persian War were once placed around the pedestal of the statue.[5] It took somewhere near nine years to construct.[3] According to the Greek Byzantine historian Niketas Choniates, the Athena Promachos stood at around 9 metres (30 ft) tall.[3] It is known that the statue was to be a 'thanks' after war but there are many disagreements about which war.[3] It has also been suggested that the Athena Promachos may have been a cult statue.[1] For a long time there was speculation if the Athena Promachos even existed, however most scholars now agree that it did as there is proof from Roman coins that depict it.[6]

Surviving accounts for the creation process for the sculpture cover nine years, but the dates are not identifiable, because the names of officials are missing.[7] The sculpture may have commemorated Kimon's defeat of the Persians at the Eurymedon in 467 BCE or the peace of Kallias in approximately 450 or 449 BCE.[8]

Made entirely of bronze, the Athena Promachos was spoken of as both 'the bronze Athena' and 'the great bronze Athena,' in ancient times.[3] The term 'Promachos' meaning 'fighting before' or 'in front of' was not originally used when referring to the statue; this nickname came later, most notably being used by Zosimus.[3]

Athena Promachos stood overlooking her city for approximately 1000 years, until shortly after 465 CE,[9] when the sculpture was transported to Constantinople (capital of the Eastern Roman Empire) as a trophy in the "Oval Forum", which became the last bastion and safe haven for many surviving Greek bronze sculptures under the protection of the Eastern Empire's Imperial court. Niketas Choniates documented a riot taking place in the Forum of Constantine in Constantinople in 1203 CE where a large, bronze, statue of Athena was destroyed by a "drunken crowd" which is now thought to have been the Athena Promachos.[3]

Similar Depictions. Reconstruction of Pheidias' Athena Lemnia.
Similar Depictions. Athena Varvakeion, Roman copy of the chryselephantine Athena Parthenos by Pheidias.
Statue in situ

Of surviving models thought to represent the type, the two outstanding ones are the Athena Elgin, a small bronze statuette in the Metropolitan Museum of Art,[10] who bears an owl in her outstretched hand (as among some coin types), and the Athena Medici torso in the Musée du Louvre,[11] of which there are a number of replicas.

Iconography

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The engravings on the shield which Athena is holding were originally drafted by the great Greek painter, Parrhasius (painter) of Ephesus. Although he drafted them, the engravings were physically done by an engraver named Mys. The engravings were not done during the time the statue was being made but actually added after.[3] A 'molding pit' from the fifth century BCE was found near the south side of the Acropolis and it is thought that the statue was made in a nearby workshop.[3]

Niketas gives a vivid description of the Athena Parthenos:

The goddess wore an ankle-length garment tightly belted at the waist and over it an aegis, complete with gorgoneion. Her neck was uncovered. On her head she wore a helmet with a horse-hair crest and her hair could be seen escaping from beneath the helmet on to her forehead. At the back, the hair was plaited. Her left hand held the folds of her dress, while the right was outstretched towards the south.[3]

Similar depictions

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Coinage depictions

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The very first specific archaistic Athena Promachos coin image was depicted on coins that were issued by Alexander the Great in 326.[6] One side of this coin depicts Heracles while the other side shows the god, Zeus, with Athena by his knee ready to fight with her spear in her right hand and a shield held in her left. Around ten years later, the Athena Promachos appears on coins issued by Ptolemy in Alexandria before taking the title of king around 315 BCE.[6]

Attic coins from the second and third centuries CE show the only known images of Phidias' Athena Promachos. On one side is the depiction of the view of the Acropolis from the north. Between the Propylaia and the Erechtheion, there is large female statue of Athena facing towards the west. As these images place the statue of the Athena Promachos in this specific location, there is no doubt that it existed.[3]

There is another group of provincial Roman coins that depict the bust of Athena alone. In this depiction she is wearing a Corinthian helmet with a "wave" of hair upon her forehead.[3] These coins date from the first half of the second century CE to the second half of the third century CE and are considered to be the most common. Since more coinage depictions of Athena wearing a Corinthian helmet have been found as opposed to those that depict her with an Attic helmet, it is thought that the Corinthian were a more popular representation.[3]

Notes

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  1. ^ a b c Gaifman, Milette (2006-04-01). "Statue, Cult and Reproduction". Art History. 29 (2): 258–279. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8365.2006.00501.x. ISSN 1467-8365.
  2. ^ Birte Lundgreen, "A Methodological Enquiry: The Great Bronze Athena by Pheidias" The Journal of Hellenic Studies 117 (1997, pp. 190-197) p 198. Lundgreen usefully assembles the literature.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Athena Promachos". Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies. 56. 2013.
  4. ^ Spivey, Nigel (2017). The Classical World: The Foundations of the West and the Enduring Legacy of Antiquity. Pegasus Books.
  5. ^ Raubitschek, A. E., and Gorham P. Stevens
  6. ^ a b c Havelock, Christine Mitchell (1980). "The Archaistic Athena Promachos in Early Hellenistic Coinages". American Journal of Archaeology. 84 (1): 41–50. doi:10.2307/504393. JSTOR 504393. S2CID 192951085.
  7. ^ Stewart; Lundgreen 1997:191
  8. ^ Walsh 1981
  9. ^ Lundgreen 1997:190.
  10. ^ MMA acc. no. 50.11.1. Height 0.149 m.
  11. ^ MA 3070. Height 2.6 m.

References

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37°58′18″N 23°43′33″E / 37.97167°N 23.72583°E / 37.97167; 23.72583