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The
Apollo temple of Didyma (the Didymaion), located within the
boundaries of the village of Yeni Hisar in the Söke
district of the province of Aydın, was known as a sanctuary
and seat of an oracle attached to Miletus. Recent
excavations revealed remains which showed that Didyma was
not only a seat of an oracle but also the site of dense
settlement.
The
research concerning the origins of the names of Didyma and
Didymaion has been a subject of discussion going on for
years. Along with several other myths, it was thought that
the name Didymaion which meant "twin temples" or
"temple of the twins", was related to Artemis, the
twin sister of Apollo. However, as no definite evidence
could be found, this theory also remained as a myth. With
the intensification of work in recent years on the
"Sacred Road" connecting Miletus and Didyma, and
the finding of the place of the Artemis cult during the
excavations however, it was proved that this thesis was riğht.
The two temples built for the twin brother and sister, the
Artemision and the Didymaion, constitute the origin of the
name Didyma.
Apollo
and Artemis were closely related to the mother goddess
Cybele who had, from prehistoric times, a very important
place in Anatolia. The mother goddess Cybele had various
nemes (such as Kubaba, Isis, Hepat, Lat) and epithets
according to localities and cultures. The most widespread of
these names was Dindymene which was derived from mount
Dindymus and which is remarkable for its resemblance to the
name Didyma.
The
name of Apollo is considered not to be Greek. Apollo, who,
because of the resemblance in names was identified with the
god Apulunas mentioned in Hittite written sources,
represented shape given by rational perception, temperate
power, fine arts and light. Besides these, he was renowned
for his abilitiy to prophesy, and he communicated to people
through mediums and oracles his knowledge of the future.
The
dependence of communities on religion increased as it was
seen that gods possessed forces to direct according to their
will, all phenonema and events relating to natura and
society. As a natural consequence of the increase in
religion, belief in the power to prophesy of the gods who
could foresse events and phenonema was intensified.
In
the Archaic period the oracle of Apollo had great fame. The
great number of temples erected in Anatolia as seats of
oracles is evidence that belief in gods had reached enormous
proportions. The most important of the temples dedicated to
Apollo were the Temple of Apollo at Delphi in Greece, and
the Didymaion in Anatolia. These to seats were in constant
rivalry with each other. A fine example of this rivalry can
be clearly seen in the following verses by the oracle of
Delphi.
"And
that day, Miletus, on that day,
You, the badly organized city,
You shall be ample prey to the enemy,
A table of festivities to hordes and hordes of people!
Your woman will wash the feet,
Of warriors of long hair and beard,
And foreigners will, Oh Didyma,
Lay hands on your temple".
In
the mid 7th century BC, in the oracles of Apollo, the god
could be consulted once a year for official matters, and the
answers received to questions directed would be in the form
of "yes or "no". When in later years,
consulting the god also for private matters became a
tradition, these consultations became gradually more
frequent. The oracles of Apollo grew very rich as a result
of this, and their fame and influence spread over large
areas. They became as powerful as the state they were in and
were effective in shaping the destinies of persons and
communities, and particulary in politics where they played a
very important role, they very often caused wrong decisions
to be taken.
Pausanias
states that the Apollo temple at Didyma had been built
before the Greek colonization (10th century BC). It is
believed in the light of this that the existence of Didyma,
like that of Miletus and Priene goes back to the 2nd
millennium BC. However according to the results of
excavations and research work undertaken up to the present
day, the earliest temple remains date back to the end of the
8th century BC.
One
learns from Herodotus that valuable votive offerings were
presented to the temple by King Necho of Egypt at the end of
the 7th century BC, and King Croesus of Lydia in the 6th
century BC.
It
is believed that the construction of the Archaic temple was
begun in the mid 6th century BC and was completed at the end
of the same century. In the 6th century BC, the Didymaion
was administered by a priestly caste named Branchids. During
this period which lasted about 100 years, the temple
flourished and went through its most brilliant era.
It
was completely burned and plundered by the Persians during
the battle of Lade, the priests of the temple were driven to
Susa, and the cult statue of Apollo was taken to Ecbatana.
The statue of Apollo which was dated back to 500 BC, was
made by the sculptor Kanachus of Sicyon and reflects
Anatolian - Hittite characteristics.
The
construction of the Hellenistic temple was begun after the
victory of Alexander the Great over the Persians. However,
it was understood from the remains that this Hellenistic
temple was not completed.
The
temple of which the construction was continued under Emperor
Caligula (37 - 41 AD) who wanted to be though of as the god
of the temple, and later under Hadrian (117 - 138 AD), was
never completed. With the alterations made in the 3rd
century AD to protect it from plunder, the temple took on
the appearance of a fortress, and flourished under the
reigns of Aurelian (270 - 275) and Diocletian (284 - 305).
There
are findings which indicate that work was done on the temple
during the reign of Emperor Julian (361 - 363).
In
the beginning of the 5th century AD, Emperor Theodosius had
a church built in the sacred courtyard (Adyton - Sekos).
This church, which had the appearance of a three - winged
basilica, was destroyed in an earthquake and later rebuilt
with one wing (9th century AD).
In
the 10th century AD, the two - columned hall
(Chresmographeion - hall of the oracle) and the pronaos,
which were used as storage areas, were greatly damaged in a
fire, and most of the marble turned into lime.
After
the Seljuks and the Mongols conquered the region the temple
was completely abandoned.
An
Italian traveller who visited Didyma in 1446 records that
the whole temple was standing, however at the end of the
15th century the temple was completely destroyed by an
earthquake and turned into a heap of marble. In later yeras
the temple was used as a quarry, and many of its
architectural elements were used as building meterial in the
construction of dwellings and other buildings by the local
people.
EXCAVATIONS
The
first excavations in Didyma were made in 1858 by the English
under the direction of Newton. The area axcavated was the
Sacred Road.
In
the temple, excavations were first begun in 1872 by the
French under O Rayet and A Thomas. The aim was to find the
cult statue of Apollo, but at the end of the work which
lasted two years, the cult statue had not been found.
However, it had been possible to determine the dimensions of
the temple and to reconstruct its plan.
In
the excavations of 1895 - 96, again undertaken by the
French, the work, supervised by B Haussoullier and E
Pontremoli, was concentrated on the northern part of the
temple. These excavations were stopped shortly after due to
economic reasos. Excavations begun in 1905 for the museums
in Berlin under the supervision of Th. Weigand, were
continued on a systematic basis until the year 1937. During
this time a great portion of the temple was revealed. After
this date, axcavations were interrupted and work on
publication of the results was begun.
In
order find solutions to certain problems concerning the
temple and its surroundings, excavations were begun again in
1962, this time for the German Institute of Archaeology,
under the supervision of R Naumann. When R Naumann left, the
excavations in Didyma were contiuned under the supervision
of Klaus Tuchelt. Work is at present still going on in the
area with special attention to research on the Sacred Road.
THE
SACRED ROAD
The
Delphinion is accepted as the starting point of the Sacred
Road connecting Miletus and Didyma. The road ran from the
Sacret Gate of Miletus southwards in the direction of the
coast to Panarmos Harbour (above Akköy), and - bending
south - east from the port, reached the Didymaion. Within
the boundaries of Yenihisar, the Sacred Road runs close
along the side of the asphalt road. A partion of the Sacred
Road has been revealed by excavations and exploratory
trenches dug in recent years. However, due to certain
bureaucratic obstacles, it has not yet been possible to
establish its connection to the temple.
On
either side of the road there were statues of Branchids
(priests and priestesses attached to the temple), crouching
lions and sphinxes, all of which gave the road an impressive
appearance. Monumental tombs and sarcophagi belongig to
important persons were also dispersed along the road.
Statues of Branchids revealed in the excavations carried out
by Newton in 1858 on the Sacred Road have been taken to the
British Museum. Some fragments belonging to the statues are
in the storeroom of the house of excavations in Didyma. Four
of the Branchid statues in which Hittite influence is
apparent and which have been dated back to the 6th century
BC, are on display in the museum in Miletus. In the years
100 and 101 AD Emperor Trajan had the Sacred Road restored.
The parts of the road that had fallen down were raised to a
higher level and the other parts were repaired. Inscriptions
indicate that the restoration work was completed in a very
short time.
It
was understood from a milestone revealed during excavations
that the road was 16.5 kilometres long. According to the
portions uncovered, the width of the road which was made of
stone blocks, changed between 5 and 7 metres. On both sides
of it were rows of shops, votive fountains, monumental
tombs, baths, and the area for the cult of Artemis. Findings
indicate a dense settlement. The group of people who set out
from Miletus to join the annual celebrations and festivities
which were held in the Didymaion every spring, reached the
temple after a long walk, there were therefore, resting
places on the Sacred Road. It is understood that the Terrace
with the Sphinx, uncovered during excavations carried out in
1985 about 4 kilometres to the south of Akköy, was a
halting place built for rest purposes.
THE
ARCHAIC DIDYMAION (The Apollo Temple at Didyma)
Remains
of foundations of the Late Geometric period were found
during excavations carried out in 1962 by German
archaeologists within the secos of the Hellenistic temple to
look for the first Apollo temple of Didyma which, according
to Pausanias, had existed before the 10th cendtury BC. The
temple which, according to the foundations of secos walls
uncovered in the north and south parts, was 10.20 metres
wide and 24 metres long and slightly narrowed towards the
east, was built at the end of the 8th century BC. The small
and simple temple contained a secos (sacred courtyard), an
altar, a sacred source, a cult statue and the symbols of
Apollo. The Late Geometric temple did not have a naiscos,
the naiscos is understood to have been built at the end of
the 7th century BC to protect the cult statue. Exploratory
digging carried out to the south - west of the temple
revealed the remains of a columned building 15.50 metres
long and 3.60 metres wide. The remnants and ceramic findings
have been dated back to the end of the 7th century BC.
Not
many remains are left to the present day from the Archaic
Didymaion, as it was burned, destroyed and plundered in 494
BC (the battle of Lade). Besides, findings relating to the
Archaic temple are further limited by the fact that the
Hellenistic temple was built over the foundations of the
Archaic one. However, the construction of the plan was
possible and various examples of reconstruction were made
through ancient authors, as well as architectural and
sculptural fragments found during borings and excavations.
The
Didymaion became really important in the first of the 6th
century BC when all Ionian cities, and especially
Miletus,reached their most flourishing era. The temple was
rebuilt in 560 - 550 BC with larger proportions. The
influence of the temples of Hera at Samos and Artemis at
Ephesus are apparent in the Archaic Didymaion.
The
temple, an 87.65 metre long and 40.89 metre wide building of
a dipteral plan (having a double row of columns all around),
rested on a two - stepped crepis. The longer sides had 21
columns each, the east had 8, and the west 9, whereas in the
pronaos there were 8 columns in two rows. Together with the
columns within the peristasis (the surrounding hall), the
total number of columns added up to 112.
The
parts of the temple which were not visible from the outside
were made of local tufa, while those that were visible were
made of marble. The marble was provided from marble quarries
on the island of Toşoz, and in the hills above the village
of Pınarcık near Bafa lake. One can still see fragments of
roughly prepared column shafts in the quarries at Pınarcık.
The party worked marble, brought from the quarry to Latmos
Harbour, was then taken by sea to Panarmos Harbour, and from
there it was carried to the temple
The
bases and capitals of the 15.45 metre high columns bear the
characteristics of the Artemis Temple at Ephesus; the bases
consists of tori and double trochili, the Ionic capitals
have large volutes, the column shafts have 36 flutes. On the
eastern facade, the lower parts of the columns in the front
row were decorated with reliefs; a head of a woman (Kore)
from these reliefs is on display in the Charlottenburg
Museum in Berlin. The characteristics of all these elements
indicate that they were at the latest made in the year 550
BC, which coincides with the date of the initial
construction of the Archaic Didymaion.
The
double row of columns in the pronaos indicate that it had a
roof. The architrave is quite narrow. In the corners are
highreliefs of winged gorgons and behind these are figures
of crouching lions. It is believed that certain wild
animals' figures were also there besides the lions. This
type of decorations is quite unusual in temple entablature.
These pieces of work which can be dated back to the end of
the 6th century BC, were probably made during restoration
works which took place in the temple at the time. On the
architrave rest, in due order, a band of egg - and - dart
moulding, dentils, another band of egg - and - dart
moulding, a cornice and a roof.
The
inner sides of the walls of the secos (sacred courtyard)
were fortified by pilasters in the form of half - columns,
which brought colour to the long, high walls. The height of
the walls of the 50.25 metre long and 17.45 metre wide secos
reached 17.5 metres. Walls of this height give the
imperision that the secos was was roofed, but the greatness
of the distances between the pilasters on the walls destroys
this theory.
Within
the secos stood the naiscos (little temple) where the cult
statue of Apollo was kept. However, there are not many
findings belonging to this buildings. During borings in the
Hellenistic naiscos, foundation remains belonging to a
smaller building were found. It is believed that these
foundations belong to the Archaic naiscos. The bronze cult
statue is known as the "Apollo Philesius" and
represents Apollo catching a deer.
In
front of the temple (east) and on the same axis stands a
circular altar. This altar, of which the outher diameter
measures 8 metres and the inner one 5.5 metres, had two
doors. The holes for the hinges can still be seen on the
thresholds. The altar of which the inside is very well
preserved, had been used in the Archaic, and also in the
Hellenistic and Roman temples as the sacred place where the
animals presented as votive offerings were burned. The great
amount of ashes found in the building during excavations is
evidence of this. In ancient times, animals offered to the
gods of the sky were burned in this type of altar, and
sanctification was achieved by washing in the blood of the
animals offered to the gods under the ground. To the north
of the altar is the sacred source. The masonry of the lower
parts of this circular well shows that it was constructed in
the Archaic period.
3.5
metre high protective walls encircle the front part of the
temple. These walls must have been built to diminish the
difference of levels in the large area in front of the
temple. In the uncovered portion of these protective walls
were five outlets with staircases, each 2.5 metres wide. The
central stairs are situated just opposite the altar, on the
same axis. These stairs led to the terrace on which stood
the votive and gods' statues. The style of the egg - and -
dart moulding used to decorate the upper part of the terrace
wall as well as the workmanship of the wall and stairs, bear
the characteristics of the Archaic period.
On
this terrace one also comes across the remains of two long
structures built of limestone. The 34.5 metre long and 7
metre wide buildings must have been shops where visitors
took shelter or shopped. These buildings also show the
characteristics of the Archaic period.
Next
to the stairs along the terrace wall situate in the
direction of the south - east end of the temple are rows of
benches. It is understood that these benches extending
parallel to the steps of the temple were built in the
Hellenistic period, and were the rows of benches for the
stadium situated to the south of the temple, Every four
years festiveties called the "Megala Didymeia" and
musical shows, were held here, and torch processions and
competitions were arranged. The bases having a hole in the
centre, which marked the starding points of the races, can
be seen at the eastern end of the stadium. These bases lie
on the same axis as the altar.
THE
HELLENISTIC DIDYMAION
What
remains of the temple in the present day, throgh hundreds of
years of earth - quakes, fire, destruction and plunder are
mostly remnants of the Hellenistic period. The Roman
characteristics witnessed in certain parts of the temple,
are elements which have reached the present day from the
temple, which continued to be built during the Roman period
also.
It
is known that the construction of the Hellenistic temple was
begun in 313 BC, and that it was erected over the Archaic
temple which was burned and destroyed in 494 BC. The
donations of Alexander the Great and King Seleucus I of
Syria were of great help in the rebuilding of the Didymaion.
Furthermore, Seleucus I had the cult statue of Apollo
brought back from Ecbatana (300 BC) and replaced in the
temple.
The
plan of the temple was made by Paionius of Ephesus and
Daphnis of Miletus. These two renowned architects had also
worked on the Artemision at Ephesus (one of the seven
wonders of the world) and the Heraion at Samos, which were
considered to be the largest and the most magnificent
temples of the Hellenistic period. The Didymaion emerges as
the third largest edifice of the Hellenistic period,
following the former.
The
plan, as a requisition of the cult, had to provide an open
air space to hold the Sacred Fountain, the Altar, the Laurel
Grove, considered to be the sacred tree of Apollo, and it
had also to shelter the cult statue. All these elements had
to be arranged in a way not to disturb the covered spaces.
The architects constructed on ostentatious example of
architecture, by the perfect use of the local
characteristics of the cult of the oracle and of the spaces
of different levels. This temple differed from a normal
temple plan in that it was also the seat of an oracle. Teh
edifice consisted of a long pronaos, a rectangular hall with
two columns in the centre (the oracle hall-Cresmographeion),
a sacred courtyard surrounded by high walls (Secos-Adyton),
and in this courtyard a small temple sheltering the cult
statue of Apollo (the naiscos), all set on the same axis but
at different floor levels.
The
temples, situated over the Archaic one and of Larger
proportions, had necessitated an ucommonly high lower
structure. The temple rested on a 3.5 meter high and 7 -
stepped platform (crepis), and had in the centre of the
front facade a 14 - stepped stairway of which both sides
were limited. The width of these stairs was equal to that of
the temple. This characteristic is also visible in the
Classical Artemision. The temple, 109.34 metres long and
51.13 metres wide, was built on a dipteral (having a double
row of columns all around) plan. It had 21 columns each on
its longer sides, and 10 each on the shorter ones. Together
with the columns within the peristasis and the ones in the
pronaos and cresmographeion, the total number of columns
added up to 122. The cost of the columns of which only three
stand today, was very high. Excavations have revealed a
great number of inscriptions showing the calculation of
construction costs prepared during the building of the
temple. It is understood from these documents that the cost
of one column was 40,000 drachmae and that the daily wages
of a labourer was only 2 drachmea. This means that one
labourer would have to work for 20,000 workdays to put a
column in its place, or to adapt it to the present day, by
assuming that the minimum daily wage of a stone workman be
10,000 TL, the construction cost of a column could be
calculated to amount to 200 million TL. It is also known,
from these inscriptions that, from 250 BC onwards, 8
archhitects and 20 construction companies worked for the
temple.
Such
a large and costly building could certainly not have been
finished in a short time. It is understood that the
construction went on in the 3rd and 2nd centuries BC, and
that some of it was completed during the Roman period.
Although a great portion of the columns were prepared and
set in their places, it can be seen that those in the outer
row of the peristasis and especially those in the rear
facade were never completed.
The
height of the columns was first determined in 1873 by A.
Thomas as being 19.71 metres. The accuracy of the
measurement was evidenced by recent research work also. The
lower diameters of the columns vary between 1.96 and 2
metres. This conforms to the rule that, in the Ionic order
lower diameters of columns are equal to 1/10th of their
height.
A
von Gerkan has calculated the total height of the temple,
including the 19.71 meter high columns, the stepped lower
structure and the entablature, as 29.40 metres. This
measurement gives an idea of the magnificence of the temple
before it was destroyed.
The
double row of columns round the temple gave the building a
very impressive appearance as well as depth. Of the 108
columns in the peristasis (the peripheral hall) about 80 are
standing in their original places. The letters seen in the
upper and lower parts of the fragments of column shafts were
written by the workmen to avoid any mistakes during the
placing of the columns in their places. This is also an
indication that the columns had entasis (a swelling of
column shafts).
Of
the three Hellenistic coluns still standing, the workmanship
of two are complete and they carry the entablature. The
third column which carries a capital has no fluting in its
shaft. According to the characteristics of the capitals, the
columns were built in the first half of the 2nd century BC.
The
bases of the coluns in the peristasis display different
characteristics; whereas some consist of plinthus, torus and
double trochilus, the column bases in the central part of
the outher row in the front facade show Early Roman
characteristics. One of these bases is divided in to 12
restangular panels decorated with motifs of sea creatures,
palmettoes and other plants. On another base there are
double meander and palmento motifs. These bases were built
between the years 37 and 41 BC by Emperor Caligula who
wanted to identify himself with Apollo.
The
capitals situated at the outer corners of the peristasis and
ornamented with busts of gods and bulls' heads as well as
the heads of Gorgons on the architrave, show the baroque
characteristics of the 2nd century AD.
The
columns on the north side of the temple, of which the
workmanship is complete, are all standing in their places,
wehereas those on the west side were set in their places,
although their workmanship was incomplete, the latter now
lie on the ground, fallen in earthquakes. Most of the
columns on the south side are missing, and it is understood
that they were never completed.
In
the front of the temple, after the double row of columns,
was the pronaos. Also mentioned as the 12- columned hall in
archaeological literature, the pronaos had a total of 12
columns in three rows of four columns each, which carried
the roof (Dodecastylos). The marks left by the fire of the
Middle Ages can be seen on the Attic styl, scale motifs are
carved on the upper parts of the antae walls are profiled in
the same form. This is the first time that this
characteristic, of which an example is in the Porthenon, is
seen in a Ionic temple.
There
were three doors in the rear wall of the pronaos. The
central door of monumental appearance was 5.63 metres wide
and 14 metres high. The fact that its threshold was placed
1.46 metres higher than the floor of the pronaos shows that
there was no entrance from here to the oracle hall. The
prophecies of Apollo were communicated by his pronouncers to
the people through this door. It is therefore named the
"Oracle Door". The marble blocks on either side of
the door weigh 70 tons each are known as the heaviest
elements of antiquity.
The
two other doors, one on either side of the monumental door,
were each 1.20 metres wide and 2.25 metres high, and
provided the entrance to the inner part of the temple. These
doors were connected to the sacred courtyard by vaulted and
sloping narrow corridors. In the lower parts of the
corridors which opened onto the Adytum were small divisions
which had coffering in their ceilings. Doric elements seen
on the doors are characteristics which remind one of the
propylaea of the Athenian Acropolis. Only persons working in
the temple and priests could enter the inner part of the
temple. These people would reach the Adytum through the dark
and mystic corridors mentioned above.
To
the east of the Adytum, between the doors at the end of the
corridors, was a 15.24 meter wide stairway consisting of 24
steps. These stairs led to a 14.01 meter long, 8.74 meter
wide and 20 meter high hall with three doors and two
columns. This hall which had no entrance from the pronaos
was Cresmographeion (the hall of the oracle) which together
with the pronaos the first completed sections of the temple.
Only priests and mediums could enter this hall, and they
communicated the prophecies to the people through the above
mentioned monumental door. Therefore, the Cresmographeion
and the pronaos, which constituted an entity, were
considered the most important divisions of the Didymaion.
The two columns in the centre of the oracle hall had
Corinthian capitals and carried the roof. Understood to have
been built in the beginnig of the 3rd century BC on the
evidence of their characteristics, these capitals are
considered to be among the earliest examples of Corinthian
capitals.
The
doors the north and south sides of the Cresmographeion open
onto stepped passages mentioned as Labyrinths in
inscriptions. On the ceiling of the better preserved
southern corridor meander motifs can be seen. These passages
played an important role in accoustics during cult
ceremonies accompanied by the chorus. The roof of the temple
was also reached by these passages.
The
21.71 meter wide and 53.63 meter long Adytum is of a very
striking appearance with its 25 meter high walls and its top
open to the sky. The lower part of the Adytum walls which
are at the same level as the Cresmographeion have the
appearance of a high podium. Their base is profiled and the
upper end is finished with a row of egg - and - dart
moulding. The podium which is made of smooth marble blocks
displays a fine workmanship. In the central parts of the
walls are pilasters in the form of half - columns. Over the
pilasters were pilaster capitals ornamented with motifs of
griffins or volutad plants, on the frieze between the
capitals were reliefs representing winged lions holding
Apollo's lyre between their paws, and on top of it all was
the cornice ending in the cymatium. All these elements
brought colour to the long and excessively high walls. The
decorations on the walls of the Adytum bear the
characteristics of the Early Hellenistic period. These
elements indicate that the Adytum was built in the first
half of the 2nd century BC. It has also been proven by an
inscription that the Adytum had been completed at that time.
One
of the most important findings of recent years in the
Didymaion are the drawings on the lower parts of the walls
of the Adytum. These drawings which can be seen with great
difficulty and only under certain lighting condition, first
attracted attention in 1979 and work was begun on them in
1980. The work is being carried out by Lother Haselberg who
was the first to see the drawings. These were worked onto
the smooth marble walls of the Adytum by making about half a
millimeter deep incisions in the surface of the marble by a
very thin and sharp point, and they represented the plants
of various elements and divisions of the Didymaion. In order
to obtain accurate drawings, a grid consisting of horizontal
lines with 1.8 - 1.9 centimeter intervals cut at regular
intervals by perpendicular lines, was prepared beforehand to
serve as a scale. This grid facilitated the making of the
actual dravings. It is understood that these drawings which
are extremely accurate, were done by the architects who
worked on the construction of the temple.
The
plans cover an area of 200 square metres. Some of the
drawings were made horizontally, wehereas others are
perpendicular. In general, the horizontal drawings are on a
1 to 1 scale, and the perpendicular ones on a 1 to 6 scale.
Besides
the drawings of elements like column bases and shafts, the
drawing of o portion of the entablature of the niscos was
also discovered on the rear wall of the Adytum. These
drawings, believed to involve all the parts of the temple,
will throw a light upon many an unsolved problem on the
Didymaion, thus adding new proportions to the work.
To
the west of the Adytum stood the naiscos which sheltered the
cult statue. The temple, of which only the remains of the
foundations can be seen today was 14.43 metres long and 8.24
metres wide. The plan of the naiscos, reconstructed from
discovered fragments, was a prostyle. The temple was a small
building with antae obtained by the projection of the two
side walls of the naos and four Ionic colomns in front.
Column bases were of the Ephesus type. The Ionic capitals,
antae capitals and entablature ornaments, all show Early
Hellenistic characteristics. Wall bases were profiled in the
Attic style like the Adytum walls. The edifice, which looked
like the Zeus temple at Priene, was the first Anatolian
temple built in the Hellenistic period under Attic
influence. In contrast with the smooth, ornamentless walls,
the entablature was very richly decorated. The coffering of
the ceiling in the front hall and the soffits of the lower
part of the architrave, were decorated with flower motifs
polychromed in various colours. It is accepted, according to
the ornamentation of the entablature, that the naiscos was
completed in 270 BC and that the cult statue of Apollo which
was brought from Ecbatana, was put in its place in the naos
in 300 BC.
The
reconstruction model of the naiscos, constructed by putting
together the discovered architectural fragments, is kept in
the storeroom of the excavetion house.
GENERAL
CHARACTERISTICS OF THE TEMPLE
Besides
being for centuries a very important oracle seat, the
Didymaion was als renowned for its sacred water, sacred
grove, the many sacred elements it housed, and its wealth.
The riches of the temple had its source in donations and
votive offerings made in varying forms. The very valuable
offerings of King Necho of Egypt, King Croesus of Lydia and
King Seleucus II of Pergamum, had an important place among
the donations made to the Didymaion. The donation of various
sacrifical animals, 1,000 in number, and 12 rams by
Lysimachus, was also one of the interesting offerings.
The
fact that Miletus attempted to build a fleet with the
treasury of the temple before the battle of Lade, shows how
rich the Didymaion was.
One
other feature of the Didymaion was that it had the right to
shelter. This right which was termed "the Right of
Asylum", was the recognition of the right of
iviolability to people who took refuge in the temple. The
right of asylum, which therefore created many problems, had
given rise to many a discussion. The boundaries of the right
of asylum, however, were gradually enlarged and were
increased to 3 kilometres by Emperor Augustus Trajan
enlarged the boundaries even more and wanted them to be
recognized from the beginning of the Sacred Road.
It
is understood from inscriptions that the festivities and
ceremonies held every year in spring went on even after the
Didymaion was comletely destroyed in 494 BC. The journey
from Miletus to the Didymaion was made by sea or by the
Sacred Road. The group of people who set out from Miletus
with ceremonies begun in the Delphinion where they received
the sanctification of Apollo and were sent forward by the
Delphins, came from the Lions' Harbour to the Panarmos
Harbour, and from there reached the Didymaion on foot.
First, sacrificial beasts and votive offerings were
presented to the god, then, after ceremonies to the
accompaniment of music and chorus, the important persons
entered the temple, and after that, the questions asked by
inquires were answered by the oracle. The ceremonies were
directed by the Stephanephors. It was shown by inscriptions
that the Emperors Augustus and Trajan took the title of
Stephanephor and carried out this position. In the Roman
period, the Sacred Road gained in importance as the harbours
filled up with alluvial mud and travel by sea became
unfeasible.
The
reason for this extremely impressive and magnificent
temple's not being considered among the seven wonders of the
world is related by the authorities to its not having been
completed.
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