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Title: Minotaur, Labyrinth, and Architecture


1
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2
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3
Classical period/ ?????
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  • ????

4
The classical period 600-323 BCE
5
The three major Greek tragedians
  • Aeschylus Agamemnon
  • Sophocles Oedipus the King
  • Euripides Medea

6
AESCHYLUS524?-456 B.C.
7
Epitaph of Aeschylus
  • This tomb hides the dust of Aeschylus, an
    Athenian, Euphorions son, who died in
    wheat-bearing Gela his glorious valor the
    precinct of Marathon may proclaim, and the
    long-haired Medes, who knew it well.
  • Aeschylus, Fragment 272

8
Greek Text
  • ??s????? ??f??????? ????a??? t?de ?e??e?µ??µa
    ?ataf??µe??? p???f????? G??a?????? d' e?d???µ??
    ?a?a?????? ??s?? ?? e?p???a? ßa???a?t?e?? ??d??
    ?p?st?µe???

9
the creator of tragedy
  • The earliest documents in the history of the
    Western theater are the seven plays of Aeschylus
    that have come down to us through the more than
    two thousand years since his death.
  • ??? Oresteia,????????

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490s BCE
  • When he produced his first play in the opening
    years of the fifth century B.C., the performance
    that we know as drama was still less than half a
    century old, still open to innovationand
    Aeschylus, in fact, made such significant
    contributions to its development that he has been
    called the creator of tragedy.

15
Dionysia Festival
  • After the defeat of the Persian invaders (480-479
    B.C.), as Athens with its fleets and empire moved
    toward supremacy in the Greek world, this spring
    festival became a splendid occasion.
  • The Dionysia, as it was now called, lasted for
    four or five days, during which public business
    (except in emergencies) was suspended and
    prisoners were released on bail for the duration
    of the festival.

16
an open-air theater
  • In an open-air theater that could seat seventeen
    thousand spectators, tragic and comic poets
    competed for the prizes offered by the city.

17
three tragedies and a satyr play
  • Poets in each genre had been selected by the
    magistrates for the year.
  • On each of three days of the festival, a tragic
    poet presented three tragedies and a satyr play
    (a burlesque on a mythic theme), and a comic poet
    produced one comedy.

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trilogy
  • The three tragedies could deal with quite
    separate stories or, as in the case of
    Aeschyluss Oresteia, with the successive stages
    of one extended action.
  • By the time this trilogy was produced (458 B.C.)
    the number of actors had been raised to three
    the spoken part of the performance became
    steadily more important.

22
The Oresteia
  • The first play, Agamemnon, was followed at its
    performance by two more plays, The Libation
    Bearers and The Eumenides, which carried on its
    story and theme to a conclusion.

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Death of Agamemnon
25
Orestes killing Aigisthos
26
an equilibrium (concerto)
  • In the Oresteia an equilibrium between the two
    elements of the performance has been established.
  • The actors, with their speeches, create the
    dramatic situation and its movement, the plot
  • the chorus, while contributing to dramatic
    suspense and illusion, ranges free of the
    immediate situation in its odes, which extend and
    amplify the significance of the action.

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justice
  • The theme of the trilogy is justice, and its
    story, like that of almost all Greek tragedies,
    is a legend that was already well known to the
    audience that saw the first performance of the
    play.

29
Tribe ? polis
  • The legend preserves the memory of an important
    historical process through which the Greeks had
    passed the transition from tribal institutions
    of justice to communal justice, from a tradition
    that demanded that a murdered persons next of
    kin avenge the death to a system requiring
    settlement of the private quarrel by a court of
    law (the typical institution of the city-state,
    which replaced the primitive tribe).

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Avenge
  • When Agamemnon returns victorious from Troy, he
    is killed by his wife, Clytemnestra, and her
    lover, Aegisthus, who is Agamemnons cousin.
  • Clytemnestra kills her husband to avenge her
    daughter Iphigenia, whom Agamemnon sacrificed to
    the goddess Artemis when he had to choose between
    his daughters life and his ambition to conquer
    Troy.
  • Aegisthus avenges the crime of a previous
    generation, the hideous murder of his brothers by
    Agamemnons father, Atreus.

32
standards of the old system, justice
  • The killing of Agamemnon is, by the standards of
    the old system, justice but it is the nature of
    this justice that the process can never be
    arrested, that one act of violence must give rise
    to another.

33
This red-figure crater
  • The Libation Bearers presents the revenge taken
    on Clytemnestra and Aegisthus by Orestes,
    Agamemnon's son.
  • This red-figure crater (c470 BCE) shows Orestes
    striking down Aegisthus as Clytemnestra tries to
    intervene with an axe.
  • Electra stands at far right, urging him on.

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insoluble dilemma
  • Agamemnons murder must be avenged too, as it is
    in the second play of the trilogy by Orestes has
    acted justly according to the code of tribal
    society based on blood relationship, but in doing
    so he has violated the most sacred blood
    relationship of all, the bond between mother and
    son.
  • The old system of justice has produced an
    insoluble dilemma.

36
The ending of the second play
  • At the end of the second play they are only a
    vision in Orestes mindYou cant see them, he
    says to the chorus.
  • I can they drive me on. I must move on.
  • But in the final play we see them too they are
    the chorus, and they have pursued Orestes to the
    great shrine of Apollo at Delphi where he has
    come to seek refuge.

37
The Furies
  • At the end of The Libation Bearers , Orestes sees
    a vision of the Furies.
  • They are serpent-haired female hunters, the
    avengers of blood.
  • Agamemnon had a son to avenge him, but for
    Clytemnestra there was no one to exact payment.

38
Furies/ Erinyes/ Eumendies
  • female, chthonic deities of vengeance or
    supernatural personifications of the anger of the
    dead.
  • They represent regeneration and the potency of
    creation, which both consumes and empowers.
  • A formulaic oath in the Iliad (iii.278ff
    xix.260ff) invokes them as those who beneath the
    earth punish whosoever has sworn a false oath.

39
The Remorse of Orestes (1862) by William Frederic
Bouguereau (18251905)
40
The task of the Furies
  • This task is taken up by the Furies, who are the
    guardians of the ancient tribal sanctities
  • they enforce the old dispensation when no earthly
    agent is at hand to do so.
  • Female themselves, they assert the claim of the
    mother against the son who killed her to avenge
    his father.

41
The trial
  • The arguments employed in the trial may not
    strike us as compelling, and may appear
    disappointing as an answer to the problems of
    guilt and justice raised by the trilogy.

42
The establishment of the court
  • According to this argument, the fact of the
    courts establishment is more important than the
    particular judgment in Orestes case.
  • This is the end of an old era and the beginning
    of a new.
  • The court institutes a system of communal
    justice, which punishes impersonally and has at
    last replaced the inconclusive anarchy of
    individual revenge.

43
Human institutions
  • Besides, the trilogy not only is concerned with
    the history of human institutions but also makes
    a religious statement.
  • The sequence of murderous acts and counter-acts
    over three generations, leading to an important
    advance in human understanding and civilization,
    can be seen as the working out of the will of
    Zeus.

44
Athenian democracy
  • The ending of the Eumenides, then, when the
    Furies call blessings down on Athens, gives a
    vision of a city ruled by law and living in
    harmony with its land and its gods.
  • In this story of progress painfully won,
    Aeschylus offers Athenian democracy its charter
    myth just as it is entering the era of its
    greatest achievements and its greatest risks.

45
THE CITY-STATES OF GREECE
  • The geography of Greecea land of mountain
    barriers and scattered islandsencouraged this
    fragmentation.

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The expansion of Greece750-580 BCE
  • Starting with colonies at Ischia and Cumae around
    the Bay of Naples in c. 750 BCE, the Greeks
    founded cities all around the Mediterranean, from
    the south of France to Naucratis in Egyptian
    Delta, to solve problems of over-population at
    home.

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Athens
  • Athens was at this time a democracy, the first in
    Western history.
  • It was a direct, not a representative, democracy,
    for the number of free citizens was small enough
    to permit the exercise of power by a meeting of
    the citizens as a body in assembly.

50
The Athenian Acropolis
51
Athena
  • Athens is the symbol of freedom, art, and
    democracy in the conscience of the civilized
    world.
  • The capital of Greece took its name from the
    goddess Athena, the goddess of wisdom and
    knowledge.

52
Resorted plan of the Agora in 400BCE
53
Sparta
  • Sparta, on the other hand, was rigidly
    conservative in government and policy.
  • Because the individual citizen was reared and
    trained by the state for the states business,
    war, the Spartan land army was superior to any
    other in Greece, and the Spartans controlled, by
    direct rule or by alliance, a majority of the
    city-states of the Peloponnese.

54
Persian War and Peloponnesian War
  • These two cities, allies for the war of
    liberation against Persia, became enemies when
    the external danger was eliminated.
  • The middle years of the fifth century were
    disturbed by indecisive hostilities between them
    and haunted by the probability of full-scale war
    to come.
  • As the years went by, this war came to be
    accepted as inevitable by both sides, and in
    431 B.C, it began. It was to end in 404 B.C, with
    the total defeat of Athens.

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The Athenian Empire
  • Before the beginning of this disastrous war,
    known as the Peloponnesian War, Athenian
    democracy provided its citizens with a cultural
    and political environment that was without
    precedent in the ancient world.
  • The institutions of Athens encouraged the maximum
    development of the individuals capacities and at
    the same time inspired the maximum devotion to
    the interests of the community.

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Total Democracy Athenian Democracy in action
  • The role of the assembly
  • After 500 BCE the Assembly met at the Hill of the
    Pnyx, on which stood a plinth.

59
Athena, maiden goddess of wisdom and the crafts,
was very aptly the special deity of Athens, a
city Aristotle later called the city hall of
wisdom.
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61
?????
  • ???? Classical Ideal?????????????????????????????
    ????????????????????????????,?????????-???????????
    ?,?????????????,??????????????????????????????????
    ????????
  • ????(Classical Ideal)?????balance?order?

62
Martin, Thomas R. Ancient Greece From
Prehistoric to Hellenistic Times. New Haven Yale
UP, 1996.
63
The Acropolis 447 BCE
  • Since the assembly convened in the open air on a
    hillside above the agora, it required no building
    at all except for a speakers platform.
  • In 447 B.C., however, at Pericles instigation, a
    great project began atop the Acropolis, the
    mesa-like promontory at the center of the city,
    which towered over the agora.

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Parthenon
  • Most conspicuous of all were a mammoth gate
    building with columns straddling the broad
    entrance to the acropolis at its western end and
    a new Athena temple, the Parthenon, to house a
    towering image of the goddess.

66
Expensive construction program
  • These buildings alone cost easily more than the
    equivalent of a billion dollars in modern terms,
    a phenomenal sum for an ancient Greek city-state.
  • The program was so expensive that the political
    enemies of Pericles railed at him for squandering
    public funds. The finances for the program
    apparently came in part form the tribute paid by
    the members of the Delian League.

67
Parthenon
  • Parthenon, the name of the new temple built for
    Athena on the Acropolis, meant the house of the
    virgin goddess.
  • As the patron goddess of Athens, Athena had long
    had another sanctuary on the acropolis honoring
    her in her role as Athena Polias (guardian of
    the city).

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Optical illusion
  • Since perfectly rectilinear architecture appears
    curved to the human eye, subtle curves and
    inclines were built into the Parthenon to produce
    an optical illusion of completely straight lines
    the columns were given a slight bulge in their
    middles, the corner columns were installed at a
    light incline and closer together, and the
    platform was made slightly convex.

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Next illustration
  • Athenian youths carry offering jars in this
    relief from the Parthenons 524-foot-long frieze.
    Set in the entablature (see box) of the inner
    colonnade, which enclosed the core of the
    Parthenon, the frieze was obscured by the
    entablature of the outer colonnademaking it very
    difficult for visitors to view the carvings. The
    frieze may have depicted the Greater Panathenaea,
    a procession held every four years in which a new
    peplos (an ancient garment) was draped over the
    statue of Athena in the Old Temple of Athena. In
    the early 19th century, Lord Elgin removed 247
    feet of the frieze to the British Museum, where
    it remains on display to this day.

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???(Minotaur )
  • ??????????(Minos)????????????,??????????????????
  • ??,???????????????????,??????????
  • ??,?????????,??????????????????,?????????????????
    ???????,?????????????????

75
Labyrinth
  • ????????????????????????????,????????????????(Laby
    rinth)?
  • ????,???????????????????,????(???????)????????????
    ?????????????????

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Theseus and Ariadne.
  • ????,?????????????,???????????????(Theseus)???????
    ?,??????????
  • ???????(Ariadne. )????,???????????,???????????????
    ????
  • Ariadnes thread

78
  • Daedalus
  • an Athenian architect, and the first inventor of
    images.

79
Daedalus flying machines
  • Minos ?Daedalus?????. . .
  • ??????????????,Daedalus???Icarius????????????????
    ???,????????????????????????,????????

80
Minos, king of Crete/ Daedalus
  • the first ruler to control the Mediterranean Sea,
    which he ridded of pirates.
  • He had with him a famed craftsman, Daedalus the
    Athenian, who was in exile from Athens because he
    had murdered his nephew Talos.
  • Daedalus ?????????????????????!!

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Minoan Civilization
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Minos and Minotaur
85
Theseus kills the Minotaur as Ariadne looks on
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Phaistos Palace
88
Group Discussion
  • 1 ??,?????????
  • 2. ??????,??Orestes????,?????
  • ???????????
  • Apollo Shake out all ballots, friends. Count
    them fairly. Divide them with due care. Make no
    mistakes. Errors in judgment now can mean
    disaster. (AESCHYLUS, THE EUMENIDES 748-750)
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