Skip to main content

Pinned Post

Battle of Iwo Jima Facts, Significance, Photos, & Map

 Battle of Iwo Jima Date 19 February – 26 March 1945 (1 month and 1 week) Location  Iwo Jima, Volcano Islands, Japan Result  American victory USAAF fighter aircraft able to escort B-29's on missions to Japan. Americans gain an emergency landing base for damaged aircraft returning from missions on Japan. Belligerents  United States  Japan Commanders and leaders U.S. Navy: Chester W. Nimitz Raymond A. Spruance Marc A. Mitscher William H. P. Blandy U.S. Marine Corps: Holland M. Smith Harry Schmidt Graves B. Erskine Clifton B. Cates Keller E. Rockey Tadamichi Kuribayashi † Takeichi Nishi † Sadasue Senda † Rinosuke Ichimaru † Units involved American: Ground units: V Amphibious Corps 3rd Marine Division 4th Marine Division 5th Marine Division 147th Infantry Regiment (separate) Aerial units: Seventh Air Force Naval units: 5th Fleet Joint Expeditionary Force (TF 51) Amphibious Support Force (TF 52) Attack Force (TF 53) Expeditionary Troops (TF 56) Fast Carrier Force (T...

Parthenon Definition, History, Architecture, Columns, Greece, & Facts

 Parthenon


General information

Type

Temple

Architectural style

Classical

Location

Athens, Greece

Construction started

447 BC

Completed

432 BC

Destroyed

Partially on 26 September 1687

Height

13.72 m (45.0 ft)

Other dimensions

Cella: 29.8 by 19.2 m (98 by 63 ft)

Technical details

Material

Pentelic Marble

Size

69.5 by 30.9 m (228 by 101 ft)

Floor area

238 ft. long by 111 ft. wide 

Design and construction

Architect

Iktinos, Callicrates

Other designers

Phidias (sculptor)


Parthenon, temple that dominates the hill of the Acropolis at Athens. It was built in the mid-5th century bce and dedicated to the Greek goddess Athena Parthenos (“Athena the Virgin”). The temple is generally considered to be the culmination of the development of the Doric order, the simplest of the three Classical Greek architectural orders.

The Acropolis

The Parthenon was part of a magnificent rebuilding program directed by the Athenian statesman Pericles, following the sack of the Acropolis during the Greco-Persian Wars (492–449 bce). The project was to include, among other things, the Propylaea, the gateway to the sacred precinct; the Erechtheum, a shrine to the agricultural deities, especially Erichthonius; and the Temple of Athena Nike, an architectural symbol of the harmony with which the Dorian and Ionian peoples lived under the government of Athens. The Parthenon was to be the chief shrine to Athena and also the treasury of the Delian League, a confederacy of ancient Greek states under the leadership of Athens, founded in 478 bce. According to some sources, Pericles misappropriated surplus funds from the league to pay for the new buildings.


The architecture

Work on the Parthenon began in 447 bceunder the architects Ictinus and Callicrates with the supervision of the sculptor Phidias. The building was completed by 438, and that same year a great gold and ivory statue of Athena, made by Phidias for the interior, was dedicated. Work on the exterior decoration of the building continued until 432 bce.

Although the rectangular white marble Parthenon has suffered damage over the centuries, including the loss of most of its sculpture, its basic structure has remained intact. A colonnade of fluted baseless columns with square capitals stands on a three-stepped base and supports an entablature, or roof structure, consisting of a plain architrave, or band of stone; a frieze of alternating triglyphs (vertically grooved blocks) and metopes (plain blocks with relief sculpture, now partly removed); and, at the east and west ends, a low triangular pediment, also with relief sculpture (now mostly removed). The colonnade, consisting of 8 columns on the east and west and 17 on the north and south, encloses a walled interior rectangular chamber, or cella, originally divided into three aisles by two smaller Doric colonnades closed at the west end just behind the great cult statue. The only light came through the east doorway, except for some that might have filtered through the marble tiles in the roof and ceiling. Behind the cella, but not originally connected with it, is a smaller square chamber entered from the west. The east and west ends of the interior of the building are each faced by a portico of six columns. Measured by the top step of the base, the building is 101.34 feet (30.89 metres) wide and 228.14 feet (69.54 metres) long.

The Parthenon with restoration scaffolding, on the Acropolis, Athens.


The Parthenon embodies an extraordinary number of architectural refinements, which combine to give a plastic, sculptural appearance to the building. Among them are an upward curvature of the base along the ends and repeated in the entablature; an imperceptible delicate convexity (entasis) of the columns as they diminish in diameter toward the top; and a thickening of the four corner columns to counteract the thinning effect of being seen at certain angles against the sky.

The sculptures

The sculpture decorating the Parthenon rivaled its architecture in careful harmony. The metopes over the outer colonnade were carved in high relief and represented mythical battles that alluded to the Greco-Persian Wars, in which the Greeks ultimately triumphed but not without losses of their own. On the east metopes, Gigantomachy, a battle between gods and giants, is depicted; on the south, Centauromachy, a battle between Lapiths, legendary people of Thessaly, and centaurs; and, on the west, probably Amazonomachy, a battle between Athenians and Amazons. The sculptures on the north are almost all lost, but they portrayed the defeat of Troy by the Greeks. The two pediments feature complex compositions of sculptures carved in the round. On the east, the only remaining groups are witnesses to the birth of Athena. On the right, three female figures, probably goddesses, sit together, one resting against the lap of another. The shapes of their bodies are clearly visible beneath swirling fabric, and their positions become increasingly reclined as the sculptures reach the narrow points of the triangular pediment. On the west pediment is Athena’s contest with the sea god Poseidon for domination of the region around Athens. On the interior of the Parthenon there is a continuous low-relief frieze around the top of the exterior cella wall, likely representing the Panathenaic procession of citizens honouring Athena. It begins on the west end with officials and young men mounting their horses and citizens loosely grouped. The pedestrians become more crowded, and the cavalcade seemingly picks up speed with horses at full gallop toward the east end, where the frieze culminates with a priest and priestess of Athena flanked by two groups of seated gods. The entire work is a marvel of composition and clarity, which was further enhanced by colour and bronze accessories.

Female figures, interpreted as (left to right) Hestia, Dione, and her daughter Aphrodite or (right to left) Thalassa (the Sea), resting against Gaia (the Earth), and an unknown figure, section of the east pediment of the Parthenon at Athens, 438–432 BCE; part of a collection sometimes called the Elgin Marbles in the British Museum, London.


Later history, sculpture controversy, and restoration

The careful placement of precisely cut masonry ensured that the Parthenon remained essentially intact for over two millennia. Some of the sculptures were removed when the building was converted to a Byzantine church, including Phidias’s colossal statue. By the 7th century, certain structural alterations in the inner portion had also been made during the building’s transformation into a Roman Catholic cathedral. The Turks seized the Acropolis in 1458, and two years later they adopted the Parthenon as a mosque, without material change except for the raising of a minaret at the southwest corner. During the bombardment of the Acropolis in 1687 by Venetians fighting the Turks, a powder magazine located in the temple blew up, destroying the centre of the building. The Venetians then inadvertently smashed several sculptures while attempting to remove them as loot. In 1801–03 a large part of the sculpture that remained was removed, with Turkish permission, by the British nobleman Thomas Bruce, Lord Elgin, and sold in 1816 to the British Museum in London. (See Elgin Marbles.) Other sculptures from the Parthenon were displayed in the Louvre Museum in Paris, in Copenhagen, and elsewhere, but many are still in Athens. The Greek government has frequently demanded the return of the marbles, but the British Museum—claiming among other reasons that it has saved the marbles from certain damage and deterioration—has not acceded, and the issue remains controversial. The Acropolis Museum in Athens, which is adjacent to the ancient site, was completed in 2008; a large space in the museum is devoted to the Parthenon, and the pieces removed by Elgin are represented by veiled plaster casts.

After Greece gained independence from the Ottoman Empire, efforts were made to restore the Parthenon, but the campaign headed by engineer Nikolaos Balanos proved to have caused more damage, and in 1975 a multi-decade restoration began. Each salvageable piece of marble was returned to its original position, while gaps were filled with new marble from the same quarry the ancient Athenians had used. The time-consuming project lasted more than 40 years.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Miyamoto Musashi-Japanese soldier-artist

 Miyamoto Musashi Utagawa Kuniyoshi: woodcut of Miyamoto Musashi Born Shinmen Bennosuke  1584, Harima Province or Mimasaka Province, Japan Died 13 June 1645 (aged 60–61) Higo Province, Japan Native name 宮本武蔵 Other names Niten Dōraku; Shinmen Musashi no Kami Fujiwara no Wezou Residence Japan Style Hyōhō Niten Ichi-ryū Kenjutsu (二天一流), Enmei-ryu (圓明流), (二天流) Children Mikinosuke (adopted) Kurōtarō (adopted) Iori (adopted) Yoemon (adopted) Daughter of unknown name Notable students Takemura Yoemon; Terao Magonojō; Terao Motomenosuke; Furuhashi Sōzaemon Japanese name Kanji              宮本 武蔵 Hiragana      みやもと むさし Katakana     ミヤモト ムサシ Transcriptions Romanization       Miyamoto Musashi Miyamoto Musashi, original name Miyamoto Masana, artistic name Niten, (born 1584, Mimasaka or Harima, Japan—died June 13, 1645, Higo), famous Japanese soldier-artist of the early Edo (Tokugawa) period (1603–1867). Mus...

Karl Marx Biography, Theory, Beliefs, Children & Communism

 Karl Marx Born Karl Heinrich Marx 5 May 1818 Trier, Prussia, German Confederation Died 14 March 1883 (aged 64) London, England Burial place 17 March 1883, Tomb of Karl Marx, Highgate Cemetery, London, England Nationality Prussian (1818–1845) Stateless (after 1845) Political party Communist Correspondence Committee (until 1847) Communist League (1847–1852) International Workingmen's Association (1864–1872) Spouse(s) Jenny von Westphalen​ (m. 1843; died 1881)​ Children 7, including Jenny, Laura and Eleanor Parents Heinrich Marx (father) Henriette Pressburg (mother) Relatives Louise Juta (sister) Jean Longuet (grandson) Philosophy career Education University of Bonn University of Berlin University of Jena (PhD, 1841) Era 19th-century philosophy Region Western philosophy School Continental philosophy Marxism Thesis Differenz der demokritischen und epikureischen Naturphilosophie  (The Difference Between the Democritean and Epicurean Philosophy of Nature) (1841) Doctoral advisor Br...

Battle of Iwo Jima Facts, Significance, Photos, & Map

 Battle of Iwo Jima Date 19 February – 26 March 1945 (1 month and 1 week) Location  Iwo Jima, Volcano Islands, Japan Result  American victory USAAF fighter aircraft able to escort B-29's on missions to Japan. Americans gain an emergency landing base for damaged aircraft returning from missions on Japan. Belligerents  United States  Japan Commanders and leaders U.S. Navy: Chester W. Nimitz Raymond A. Spruance Marc A. Mitscher William H. P. Blandy U.S. Marine Corps: Holland M. Smith Harry Schmidt Graves B. Erskine Clifton B. Cates Keller E. Rockey Tadamichi Kuribayashi † Takeichi Nishi † Sadasue Senda † Rinosuke Ichimaru † Units involved American: Ground units: V Amphibious Corps 3rd Marine Division 4th Marine Division 5th Marine Division 147th Infantry Regiment (separate) Aerial units: Seventh Air Force Naval units: 5th Fleet Joint Expeditionary Force (TF 51) Amphibious Support Force (TF 52) Attack Force (TF 53) Expeditionary Troops (TF 56) Fast Carrier Force (T...