Athena Promachos

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Idealised view of the Acropolis and Athena Promachos, by the painter Leo von Klenze in 1846. The artist imagined the great statue of Athena Promachos as visible from far away, carrying a great spear in her right hand.

The Athena Promachos (Ἀθηνᾶ Πρόμαχος "Athena who fights in the front line") was a colossal bronze statue of Athena sculpted by Pheidias, which stood between the Propylaea[1] and the Parthenon on the Acropolis of Athens. Athena was the goddess of wisdom and warriors and the protectress of Athens. Pheidias also sculpted two other figures of Athena on the Acropolis, the huge gold and ivory ("chryselephantine") cult image of Athena Parthenos in the Parthenon and the Lemnian Athena. The designation Athena Promachos is not attested before a dedicatory inscription of the early fourth century AD:[2] Pausanias (1.28.2), for one, referred to it as "the great bronze Athena" on the Acropolis.

History

The Athena Promachos was one of Pheidias' earliest recorded works: it was placed in about 456 BC. It was made with the Persian spoils of the Battle of Marathon, won some years earlier. Parts of the marble base remain; according to the preserved inscription, it measured about 30 feet (9 m) high.[3] It showed Athena standing with her shield resting upright against her leg, and a spear in her right hand. The statue was so big it was possible to see the tip of the spear and her helmet crest at sea off Cape Sounion.[4]

Surviving accounts for the sculpture cover nine years, but the dates are not identifiable, because the names of officials are missing (Stewart; Lundgreen 1997:191). The sculpture may have commemorated Kimon's defeat of the Persians at the Eurymedon in 467 or the peace of Kallias in about 450/49 (Walsh 1981).

The appearance of the Athena Promachos can only be certainly identified on a few Attic coins minted in Roman times, in the first and second centuries AD, providing clues to identifying versions in surviving sculptures, with varying confidence. They show that she wore a belted garment and stretched forward her right hand on which a winged object can be seen. A spear leans against one shoulder and her shield, which we know was made separately, by different artists, rests on the ground. Sometimes the plinth is indicated. Her crested helmet is sometimes rendered as Attic in type, sometimes Corinthian.[5]

Athena Promachos stood[6] overlooking her city for about 1000 years until shortly after 465 AD,[7] when she was transported to Constantinople (capital of the Eastern Roman Empire), as a trophy in the "Oval Forum", the last bastion and safe haven for many surviving Greek bronze sculptures, under the protection of the Eastern Empire's Imperial court.

The Athena Promachos was finally destroyed in 1203 by a superstitious mob who thought she was beckoning the crusaders who had besieged the city (Jenkins 1947).

Of surviving models thought to represent the type, the two outstanding are the Athena Elgin, a small bronze statuette in the Metropolitan Museum of Art,[8] who bears an owl in her outstretched hand (like some coin types), and the Athena Medici torso in the Musée du Louvre,[9] of which there are a number of replicas.

Notes

  1. Its surviving base shows that it was aligned with the old Propylon, before the construction of the existing "new" Propylaea.
  2. Birte Lundgreen, "A Methodological Enquiry: The Great Bronze Athena by Pheidias" The Journal of Hellenic Studies 117 (1997, pp. 190-197) p 198. Lundgreen usefully assembles the literature.
  3. Dinsmoor, William Bell. 1921. "Attic building accounts. IV. The statue of Athena Promachos.", American Journal of Archaeology 25/2, pp 118-129.
  4. "There is first a bronze Athena, tithe from the Persians who landed at Marathon. It is the work of Pheidias, but the reliefs upon the shield, including the fight between Centaurs and Lapithae, are said to be from the chisel of Mys, for whom they say Parrhasius the son of Evenor, designed this and the rest of his works. The point of the spear of this Athena and the crest of her helmet are visible to those sailing to Athens, as soon as Sunium is passed." Pausanias, Description of Greece 1.28.2
  5. Lundgreen 1997:191. Lundgreen rejects as useful evidence reliefs on Attic and Roman lamps and Byzantine manuscript illuminations.
  6. Some references casually refer to her as "sitting".
  7. Lundgreen 1997:190.
  8. MMA acc. no. 50.11.1. Height 0.149 m.
  9. MA 3070. Height 2.6 m.

References

External links

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