Erectheum

Title

Erectheum

Date

420 BCE

Identifier

1791

Creator

Mnesicles

Creator Nationality

Greek

Work Type

built works

Work Location

Greece (nation)
Athens (inhabited place)

Style/Period

Classical

Subject

temples (buildings)
Ionic order

Description

View of Erechtheum from the southwest with the sacred olive tree said to have been planted by Athena, at the Acropolis in Athens. "The most exceptional Ionic building on the Acropolis is the enigmatic Erechtheum, to the north of the Parthenon. Built about 420 B.C., the temple was regarded with special veneration. Its site was particularly sacred, for it included the tomb of Cecrops, the legendary founder of Athens, the rock that preserved the mark of Poseidon's trident, and the spring that arose from it. In a walled area just to the west of the temple stood the sacred olive tree of Athena. The building's complexity of plans and levels can be partly understood from this complicated archaeology, as well as from its having housed not only a shrine to Athena Polias, but also altars to Poseidon, god of the sea; Hephaestus, god of fire; Erechtheus, a mythical king of Athens, who had battled unsuccessfully with the sea god; and Butes, brother of Erechtheus and priest to Athena and Poseidon. Moreover, spoils from the Persians were kept in the temple, as well as the famous golden lamp of Callimachus, which burnt for a year without refilling and had a chimney in the form of a palm tree."— Marvin Trachtenberg and Isabelle Hyman. Architecture: from Prehistory to Post-Modernism. p94.

Reproduction Type

jpeg

ID Number

A1GRATH2-5421BE2A4

Files

A1GRATH2-5421BE2A4.jpg
Date Added
August 29, 2013
Collection
LTU Digital Images
Item Type
VRA Core
Citation
“Erectheum,” LTU Digital Images, accessed May 1, 2024, https://ltuimagecollection.omeka.net/items/show/11869.