Amphiareion of Oropos

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Amphiareion of Oropos
Άμφιαρείον Ωρωπού
Amphiareion-1.jpg
View of the Temple of Amphiaraos.
Amphiareion of Oropos is located in Greece
Amphiareion of Oropos
Shown within Greece
Location Markopoulo Oropou, Attica, Greece
Region Attica
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Type Sanctuary
History
Founded 5th century BC
Periods Hellenistic to Roman
Satellite of Athens
Site notes
Condition Ruined
Ownership Public
Management 2nd Ephorate of Prehistoric and Classical Antiquities
Public access Yes
Website Amphiareio, Oropos

The Amphiareion of Oropos (Greek: Άμφιαρείον Ωρωπού), situated in the hills 6 km southeast of the fortified port of Oropos, was a sanctuary dedicated in the late 5th century BC to the hero Amphiaraos, where pilgrims went to seek oracular responses and healing. It became particularly successful during the 4th century BC, to judge from the intensive building at the site.[1] The hero Amphiaraos was a descendant of the seer Melampos and initially refused to participate in the attack on Thebes (detailed in the Seven Against Thebes of Aeschylus) because he could foresee that it would be a disaster.[2] In some versions of the myth,[3] the earth opens and swallows the chariot of Amphiaraos, transforming him into a chthonic hero.[4] Today the site is found east of the modern town Markopoulo Oropou in the Oropos municipality of Attica, Greece

The sanctuary is located 37.2 km NNE of Athens[5] at a sacred spring; it contained a temple of Amphiaraos (with an acrolithic cult statue), as well as a theater, stoa, and associated structures. The temenos extended for some 240 metres northeast from the Temple of Amphiaraos (hence Amphiareion) along a streambed. The cult, which was both public and private, dates to the 5th century BC.[6] There was an upswing in the sanctuary’s reputation as a healing site during the plague that hit Athens in the late 5th BC Herodotus relates that the oracular response of this shrine was one of only two correct answers to the test put to them all by the Lydian king Croesus.[7] There were many dedications from Greeks, notable Romans, and others, many with inscriptions.[8] On the southeast side of the streambed there are extensive remains of domestic structures as well as an unusually well-preserved clepsydra.

At the Amphiareion, in addition to the presumed annual festival, Greater Amphiareia were celebrated in an agonistic festival of athletic games, every fifth year. Two reliefs of the late 5th-early 4th century BC seem to provide the earliest attestations of the festival games; there is an inscribed catalogue of victors at the Greater Amphiareia that dates before 338 BC.[9]

Amphiaraos was also worshipped at the site of Rhamnous about 17.5 km southeast, as well as at Athens, Argos, Sparta, and other sites. The cult at the Amphiareion came to an end with the outlawing of non-Christian worship in the Theodosian decrees at the end of the 4th century AD.

In 414 BC Aristophanes produced a comedy, Amphiaraos, of which fragments survive as quotations.[10]

Sanctuary of Amphiaraos

Plan of the Sanctuary of Amphiaraus.

At the Temple of Amphiaraos, the site is about 154 m in elevation, with a gentle slope to the northeast, as it fills the northwest bank of a small ravine between two hills. The sanctuary was located near the border of Attica and Boiotia, the respective spheres of control of Athens and Thebes; control over the site passed back and forth between the rival cities until Alexander the Great destroyed Thebes in 335 BC. In the 2nd century AD, the Greek periegetic writer Pausanias stated:

I think that Amphiaraos most of all dedicated himself to interpreting dreams: it is clear that, when he was considered a god, he set up an oracle of dreams. And the first thing is to purify oneself, when someone comes to consult Amphiaraos, and the purification ritual is to sacrifice to the god, and people sacrifice to him and to all those whose names are on (the altar), and - when these things are finished – they sacrifice a ram and spread out its skin under themselves, lie down waiting for the revelation of a dream.
Description of Greece 1.34.5

An inscription from the site, however, states that each man may sacrifice what he wants. Some variation in practice during the nine centuries of cult activity at the sanctuary may be expected. The baths of the site were famous in antiquity. The locations of a stadion and a hippodrome are unknown.

Temple of Amphiaraos

Interior view of the Temple of Amphiaraos showing interior colonnade and arm of an acrolithic statue

The early 4th-century BC temple of Amphiaraos was of an unusual Doric hexastyle in antis plan: i.e. it had six columns across the front façade between small projecting walls. The antae were capped with half columns, giving the appearance of an octastyle façade. It measures 14 by 28 m (46 by 92 ft) Behind the columns was a pronaos, leading into a cella with two rows of five unfluted internal columns. Alongside the second pair of columns back from the pronaos there was a base for the acrolithic cult statue of Amphiaraos of which one arm remains in situ. In the rear wall of the cella, there was a threshold, perhaps a later addition.

View SW across altar, theatral area, sacred spring, and temple

On axis with the center line of the temple, and about 10.5 m (34 ft) northeast, are the remains of the altar divided into sections with inscriptions to a number of gods and heroes. Pausanias (1.34.3) says that the altar was dedicated to five groups:[11]

  • Heracles, Zeus and Apollo the Healer (Παιών)
  • Heroes and heroes’ wives
  • Hestia, Hermes, Amphiaraos, and of the children of Amphiaros, Amphilochos
  • Aphrodite, Panacea ("all-cure"), Iaso, Hygeia, and Athena the Healer (Παιωνία)
  • Nymphs and Pan; the rivers Achelous and Cephisus

Wrapping around the altar on the west side is a stepped structure that may have served as an early theatral area before the construction of the theater. Immediately to the east is the sacred spring, where Pausanias says worshipers threw coins when they were healed of a disease.[12] Immediately northeast of the spring is the structure traditionally called the men’s bath.

Line of dedication bases, looking NE

To the northeast of the temple was a line of dedications of statuary, of which the bases (illustration, right) have largely survived; the avenue stretched for around 70 m (230 ft) along the road into the sanctuary. Among the more notable dedications, all of the Roman era:

There are also the remains of a small temple at the southwest extremity of this area.

Theatre

Proscaenium of the theater.

The theatre is dated to the 2nd century BC by inscriptions and the seating area was likely composed of wooden seats on stone supports. Five marble prohedria (seat of honor at the front of the seating area) were discovered placed around the orchestra, which had a radius of 12.4 m. Two parodoi (side entryways) led off from the orchestra between the seating area of the cavea and the stage building. The Doric order proscaenium of the stage structure (c. 12 m wide) is well preserved and thus important for the study of theater design. The theater would have held approximately three hundred spectators.

Stoa

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View of the Stoa looking NE.

Dating to the mid-4th century BC, the stoa measured 11 by 110 m with 39 exterior Doric columns and 17 internal Ionic columns.[13] There were stone benches set into the back walls of the structure, perhaps where the suppliants of the god slept and awaited their dreams. The sexes may have been segregated as may have been the case for the bath to the northeast of the stoa, which is traditionally called the women’s bath.

Clepsydra

View SW of the clepsydra.

On the southeast side of the streambed opposite the sacred spring are the remains of an unusually well-preserved clepsydra. This instrument is important in the study of ancient methods of timekeeping in that it is an example of an inflow water clock. Since an inflow clock measures time by the filling of a known volume from a constant rate of inflow, it is much more accurate than an outflow water clock in measuring the gradations between full and empty.[14] The clepsydra was composed of a central, square reservoir with a steep stairway on the south side to allow access to the bronze plug at the bottom of the reservoir. Domestic structures for the operation of the sanctuary are closely packed along the southeast side of the ravine, both north and south of the clepsydra.

Images of the Amphiareion

Notes

  1. V.C. Petrakos 1968:68-70, noted by Eran Lupu, "Sacrifice at the Amphiareion and a Fragmentary Sacred Law from Oropos", Hesperia 72.3 (July 2003:321-340)..
  2. The Roman poet Statius wrote an epic poem on this myth in the 1st century AD.
  3. Pindar, Ninth Nemean Ode.
  4. Pausanias 1.34.2
  5. The site is described for the non-specialist by E. Melas, in Temples and Sanctuaries of Ancient Greece: A Companion Guide, Melas, editor, (London: Thames & Hudson) 1973.
  6. Two fragmentary fourth-century inscribed sacred laws reflecting the ritual and votive reliefs (Eran Lupu 2003) supplement Pausanias' description of the incubation, practiced in the second century AD by incubation on a sacrificed ram's fleece.
  7. Histories, 1.47-49: Croesus asks what he will be doing on a predetermined day, when he was boiling a tortoise and a lamb in a bronze pot with bronze lid. The oracle's answer is, in contrary to that of Delphi, not preserved (§49) but Herodotos does say that "he [Croesus] believed that from there [Amphiareionic oracle] too he had received a true answer".
  8. In Histories, 1.92.2, Herodotus says that Croesos made a dedication at the Amphiareion.
  9. Lupu 2003:322 note 5
  10. A.B. Petropoulou, "The Eparche documents and the early oracle at Oropus" Greek, Roman and Byzantine Studies 22 (1981:57f).
  11. Pausanias (1.34.3)
  12. Pausanias, 1.34.4
  13. The stoa is dated by the shape of the Doric capitals.
  14. An outflow water clock has a rate of outflow that is dependent on the mass of water remaining in the reservoir; the less water remains, the slower is the outflow.

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