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NEW TREASURES?

HUNT ON ACROPOLIS

SCIENTISTS' HOPES

Beeent discoveries of archaeologists working in' the vicinity of the Acropolis of Athens raise the hope that other important ruins will soon be brought to light on that hill, the location of the Parthenon and other architectural masterpieces, says tho New York "Times." A few weeks ago a mutilated statue was picked up, and was-said to "be one. of the famous western pediment group of the Parthenon, missing since about 1749. More recently ruins were dug up on the northern slope of the Acropolis, believed to.be those of the first Temple of Eros, god of love. The Acropolis, a rocky plateau 886 feet long, 512 feet wideband about 500 feet above sea level, has been the scene of many excavations. The surface of the hill itself has been dug down to bedrock, and it isjthought unlikely that further discoveries will be made there. But the slopes present better opportunities. On the northern slope, for instance, debris thrown from the hill in past years has accumulated to a depth of forty feet, houses have been built there, and trees have grown up. It is a newer and perhaps fertile field. THE STATUE. OF ATHENA. But -to tell' in advance just what fragments of Grecian art, what shattered -. temples or altars lie on the slopes of the ancient citadel would, according to archaeologists, he quite futile. Books haye been written on suppositions; plans have boon drawn on conjectures. • Most of such guesses go back; in the last analysis, to th 3 Greek historian Pausanias, who, in the second century A.D., travelled through Greece and wrote a description of the Acropolis as he saw it then. After painting, glowing pictures of the Propylaea, Erochtheum, Parthenon, etc, his account has mainly to do with the statues there. At that time there must I hav§ been a SfiJX ferge number, of im-

ages, most of which were broken up or carried away in the Middle Ages. On the Acropolis stood, according to Pausanias, as a trophy of the Persian Wars, the immense bronze statue of Athens, "made from the spoils of the Medes who landed at Marathon. It is the work of Phidias. The whole of the wall which runs around the Acropolis, except that part built by Cinion, son of Miltiades, is said to have been erected by the Pelasgians, who once dwelt at the foot of the Acropolis.

"There is but one entrance to the Acropolis," he.writes. "It admits of no other, being everywhere precipitous and fortified with a strong wall. The portal has a roof of white marble, and for the beauty and size of the blocks It has never been matched. On the right of the portal is a temple of Athena Nike. , At'the entrance are figures of Hermes and the Graces and a bronze lioness in memory of Leaena, tortured 'to death by Hippias. Near by is an imag' of Aphrodite, and a bronze statue of-Dutrephes, pierced by arrows. There are images of gods, of Health, the daughter of Aesculapius, and of Athena. AET TREASURES. ' "Among other things that I saw on the Acropolis at Athens was the bronze boy holding the sprinkler (by Lycius), and Perseus after he has done the deed on Medusa (by Myron). Also'a sanctuary of Branronian Artemis; the image is by Praxiteles, the bronze figure of the so-called Wooden Horse, and statues of Epicharmus, running in armour, of Heracles ■ strangling the. serpents, and of Athena rising from the head of Zeus." On the Acropolis now are the ruins of a number of magnificent buildings. On its northern side, is the Propylaea. praised by Pausanias. On the right or the Acropolis "entrance is the little tfrnplo of Athena Nike, from ' which Aegeus is said to havo thrown himself upon beholding the black sails of the ship of Theseus returning from having killed the Minotaur. Through the Propylaeay on the left, is the unique little temple called the Erechtheum. On the southern side is the Parthenon, or Temple of Maidens. >

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19310709.2.171

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXII, Issue 8, 9 July 1931, Page 26

Word Count
670

NEW TREASURES? Evening Post, Volume CXII, Issue 8, 9 July 1931, Page 26

NEW TREASURES? Evening Post, Volume CXII, Issue 8, 9 July 1931, Page 26