Wonder: Statue of Zeus at Olympia
Country: Greece
Region: Olympia
Visitable: No
About:
Country: Greece
Region: Olympia
Visitable: No
About:
This
statue was an ideal representation of the best classical Greek style.
It was made by the famous sculptor Phidias of ivory with gold plating
and it was during several centuries the most beatiful work of art of
the world
Wonder type: Ancient World Wonder
The statue, completed by the classical sculptor Phidias around 432 B.C., sat on a jewel-encrusted wooden throne inside a temple overlooking the city. The 40-foot-tall (12-meter-tall) figure held a scepter in one hand and a small statue of the goddess of victory, Nike, in the other—both made from ivory and precious metals.
The temple was closed when the Olympics were banned as a pagan practice in A.D. 391, after Christianity became the official religion of the Roman Empire.
The statue was eventually destroyed, although historians debate whether it perished with the temple or was moved to Constantinople (now Istanbul) in Turkey and burned in a fire.
It is one of the ancient Seven Wonders of the World that was listed by Herodotus
in his famous list. The statue was 12 meters (39 feet) tall. Herodotus said that
statue occupied a whole room at western of the temple o Zeus in Olympia (about 150
Km west of Athens), the city where Greeks celebrated the original Olympics games.
The statue was made by the Greek sculptor Phidias (who made also the statue of Athena
in the Parthenon) in honor to the king of the Greek gods and it was the most famous
master piece of art of all Greece.
The statue was an ideal representation of the best classical style. It was made
of ivory with gold plating. There are not copies of the statue; therefore we don’t
know its exactly shape. But, the traveler Pausanias made around II century AD a
detailed description of the statue and the throne on it rested. Besides, there are
many Roman coins and engraved gems that represents to the Zeus at Olympia.
According to the description of Pausanías, the statue was wreathed with shoots of
olive and it rested on a wonderful throne of cedar wood, which was ornamented with
ebony, gold, precious stones and ivory. In his right hand a figure of Victory made
from ivory and gold. In his left hand, his scepter adorned with precious metals
and an eagle perched on the scepter. The sandals and the robe of Zeus were made
of gold.
HISTORY
The temple that hosted the statue was constructed from 466 to 456 BC
approximately and was designed by the Greek architect Libon who was native from Elis a town near
Olympia. This temple was built with a classic Doric style very similar to the Parthenon
in Athens.
Obviously the main piece in the temple was the statue, which was constructed around
432 by Phidias. Greeks thought, the statue was the incarnate god. This statue was
very impressive and it was the most important chryselephantine sculpture (a cult
statue of high status in the ancient Greece).The legend says that Phidias was asked
about what inspired him: If he went to Olympus to see Zeus or if Zeus was under
from the Olympus to pose for Phidias. Phidias answered then that he was inspired
by one of the verses of the Iliad of Homer: “He spoke, the son of Kronos, and nodded
his head with the dark brows, and the immortality anointed hair of the great god
swept from his divine head, and all Olympus was shaken”.
Because of the climate in Olympia, which was so damp, the statue required care so
that the humidity would not crack the ivory. Therefore Phidias had the responsibility
of the maintenance of the statue which was treated with oil constantly.
In the first century Caligula ordered to transport the statue to Rome, but this
attempt failed because the scaffolding constructed to do this work collapsed.
The statue of Zeus presided the Olympics games until 393 AD, when the Roman emperor
Theodosisus I decided to abolish the games and close the temple, because Rome became
Christian and both temple and games were considered pagan manifestations.
The reasons and circumstances of the destruction of the statue are not clear. A
tradition compiled by the Byzantine historian Georgios Kedrenos says that the statue
was carried to Constantinople and was destroyed in the great fire in 475.
Another version says that it was burned with the temple in 425 AD.
Recently between 1954 and 1958, archeologists have found in excavations in Olympia
several tools and terracotta mold with the inscription “I belong to Phidias” very
near location where Pausanius said the Phidias’ workshop was. These objects have
allowed to scientists to confirm the date of statue’s creation.
Now, there are several statues that maintain the spirit of the Zeus at Olympia,
one of the most famous of them is the statue in honor to Abraham Lincoln in the
Lincoln Memorial in Washington D.C. In this statue Lincoln is depicted seated on
a huge throne as well as Zeus in the legendary statue of Olympia.
The statue of the Zeus at Olympia and its history has been from 2500 years
ago, a great source of inspiration for artists of all times and it is still now one of
the most famous works of art of the history.
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