Wonder: The Temple of Artemis
                
Country: Turkey
Region: Izmir
Visitable: No
About:
  
            
            Country: Turkey
Region: Izmir
Visitable: No
About:
                   This
wonder of the ancient world is also known as the Temple of Diana. The
temple was located in Ephesus an ancient Greek city around 50 Km from
the actual city of Izmir in the territory that today occupies Turkey
Wonder type: Ancient World Wonder
The great marble temple dedicated to the Greek goddess Artemis was completed around 550 B.C. at Ephesus, near the modern-day town of Selçuk in Turkey.
In addition to its 120 columns, each standing 60 feet (20 meters) high, the temple was said to have held many exquisite artworks, including bronze statues of the Amazons, a mythical race of female warriors.
A man named Herostratus reportedly burned down the temple in 356 B.C. in an attempt to immortalize his name. After being restored, the temple was destroyed by the Goths in A.D. 262 and again by the Christians in A.D. 401 on the orders of Saint John Chrysostom, then archbishop of Constantinople (Istanbul).Today the temple's foundations have been excavated and some of its columns re-erected.
                    This wonder of the ancient world is also known as the Temple of Diana. The temple
                    was located in Ephesus an ancient Greek city around 50 Km from the actual city of
                    Izmir in the territory that today occupies Turkey.
                
                    The temple was dedicated to Artemis the Greek goddess, the virginal huntress and
                    twin of Apollo, who occupied the place of Titan Selene as Goddess of the Moon.
                    This deity was passionately venerated as an archaic pre-Hellenic icon. The original
                    statue that represented to Artemis was carved in wood. The statue had many breasts
                    which denoted her fertility, rather than the virginity that Hellenic Artemis assumed.
                
                 The Greek Artemis was a little different from the Artemis that was adored in Ephesus.
                    The Ephesus’s goddess was a deity of the fertility; whereas the Greek Artemis was
                    traditionally the goddess of the hunt. Therefore, it believes that the cult to the
                    Artemis of Ephesus began several centuries before the Hellenic period. Probably
                    the worship to Artemis derived from the ancient worship that Ephesians gave to Cybele.
                  The temple was built, destroyed and reconstructed many times since Bronze Age. But
                    the temple that was listed as one of the Seven Wonders of the World was a project
                    of 120 years which was started by Croesus of Lydia.
                  Antipater of Sidon described the temple using the following words: “I have set eyes
                    on the wall of lofty Babylon on which is a road
                    for chariots, and the statue of
                    Zeus by the Alpheus, and the hanging gardens, and the colossus of the Sun, and the
                    huge labor of the high pyramids, and the vast tomb of Mausolus; but when I saw the
                    house of Artemis that mounted to the clouds, those other marvels lost their brilliancy,
                    and I said, Lo, apart from Olympus, the Sun never looked on aught (anything) so
                    grand”.
                
Pliny was who described the temple with more detail. According to his
description the temple was 377 feet (115 m) long and 180 feet (55m)
wide, with an area three times as large the Parthenon in Athens. It was
made mainly of marble and was enclosed in colonnades of 127 Ionics
columns, each column was 60 feet (18 m) height. The temple was always
surrounded by priests and priestesses, musicians, dancers and acrobats.
HISTORY
                
                    The sacred shrine of Artemis was very old and it was an important religious centre
                    many centuries before the temple that was considered one of the wonders was built.
                    There are ancient Greek stories which attributed the origin of the worship to Artemis
                    in Ephesus to the legendary Amazons. Archeological excavations realized before World
                    War I discovered three successive temples overlying one another on the site.
                
                 
                    However, the construction of temple which was listed as one of the wonders was started
                    around 550 BC, by the Cretan architect Chersiphron and his son by order of the King
                    of Lydia Croesus. A new statue of the goddess was sculpted by Endoios as well as
                    a naiskos (a small temple with columns or pillars and a triangular structure named
                    pediment above the horizontal structure) to house the goddess.
                 
                    The temple had more than 1000 items of cult like sculptures of famous artists such
                    as Polyclitus, Pheidias, Phradmon and Cresilas. Most sculptures represented Amazons
                    who according the legend founded Ephesus. Today, some fragments of the bas-reliefs
                    that ornamented the amazing columns of the temple are preserved in the British Museum.
                    Because of its location at an important economically zone, the temple was since
                    ancient times a tourist attraction, visited by pilgrims, merchants, kings, who offered
                    to the goddess jewelry and other goods.
                
               
                    According to the story, the temple was destroyed on July 21 356 BC by Herostratus
                    who realized this barbarian act finding fame at any cost. According the legend the
                    same night that the temple was burned, Alexander the Great was born. Plutarch said
                    that Artemis was too preoccupied with Alexander’s delivery to save her temple. Therefore,
                    Alexander offered to rebuild the temple, but Ephesians refused.
                    Nevertheless, after
                    Alexander’s death the temple was restored in 323 BC.
              
                    The temple was destroyed again by Goths in 262 but Ephesians rebuild the temple
                    again. According the biblical book Acts of John (II century), the apostle prayed
                    publicly in the Temple of Artemis exorcizing its demons and “of a sudden the altar
                    of Artemis split in many pieces… and half the temple fell down” instantly many Ephesians
                    became Christians. By IV century, most Ephesians were Christians and in 391 all
                    pagan temples were closed by order of Roman Emperor Theodosius. Finally the temple
                    was destroyed in 401 by a group of people leaded by St. John Chrysostom. Most stones
                    of the temple were used to build other buildings like the famous Hagia Sophia.
               The temple’s site was rediscovered in 1869 thanks to an archaeological expedition
                    sponsored by the British Museum. At the beginning of the XX century, some fragments
                    of sculpture from the IV century were found, which
                    have been used to rebuild an
                    image of the temple in the “Ephesus Room” of the British Museum. In the ancient
                    location of the temple now only there is a single column constructed with several
                    fragments found on the site.

 
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