Rhamnous

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Greece Rhamnous (Ραμνούς)
The deme site of Rhamnous.
Location
Rhamnous (Greece)
Rhamnous
Coordinates 38°13′24.25″N, 24°1′37.53″E
Country Greece
Region Attica
Elevation 28 m
Controlling City Athens
Peak Period Hellenistic

The site of Rhamnous (Greek: Ραμνούς), the remote northernmost deme of Attica, lies 39km NE of Athens and 12.4km NNE of Marathon, Greece overlooking the Euboean Strait. Rhamnous was strategically significant enough to be fortified and receive an Athenian garrison of ephebes (young men). A fortified acropolis dominates the two small harbors, into which grain was imported for Athens during the Peloponnesian War. These harbors are located on either side of the fortified hill and have extensively silted up since antiquity. The site was known in Antiquity for its sanctuary of Nemesis[1], the implacable avenging goddess whose sanctuary here was the most important one dedicated to her in ancient Greece. Many grave monuments have been recovered from burials along the road from Rhamnous to Marathon, on which the sanctuary was also sited.

Contents

View of the 5th BCE (L) and Archaic (R) temples looking east.
View of the 5th BCE (L) and Archaic (R) temples looking east.

On the road between Rhamnous and Marathon, around 630m south of the fortified deme site, there was a sanctuary of Nemesis built on a platform with a well-built 44m terrace wall at 38°13'3.88"N, 24° 1'37.07"E. During its time of use the sanctuary was not isolated, but rather was in close proximity to a number of houses and other structures scattered in the vicinity. In the Roman period c. 46 CE, dedications were made to the deified Livia Augusta (wife of Augustus) and to the emperor Claudius. In the 2nd century CE, Herodes Atticus made dedications of busts of the emperors Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus as well as a statue of his pupil Polydeucion. The cult of Nemesis at Rhamnous came to a formal end with the decree of the Byzantine emperor Arcadius in 399 CE that instructed any surviving polytheist temples in the countryside to be destroyed. [2]

The earliest known structure dates to the early 6th century and is known only by its terracotta roof tiles of Laconian type.

The late 6th BCE Temple of Nemesis was distyle in antis in plan and built with poros stone. This temple was probably destroyed by the Persians in 480 BCE. The site of this temple remained in ruins until the larger late 5th BCE temple was built to replace it.

The small temple (L) and late 5th BCE temple (R) looking west.
The small temple (L) and late 5th BCE temple (R) looking west.

In the early 5th BCE, a small temple (6.15 by 9.9m) was built immediately south of the ruins of the late 6th BCE temple. Pottery found under the temple dates no later than the early 5th BCE. There are several cuttings on the steps of this temple for the insertion of stelai. The temple was built of local dark marble and roofed with terracotta tiles. The walls of the cella and the terrace wall of the sanctuary platform are built in the Lesbian polygonal style of masonry. Based on the dedicatory inscriptions on two marble seats of the 4th century BCE that were sited on the porch, the smaller temple is thought to have been jointly dedicated to Nemesis and to Themis. This may show that Themis was originally venerated here in conjunction with Nemesis: one the personification of Right Order and the other the avenger of Order's transgressors. This structure survived into the 4th century CE. A statue of Themis and several other dedications, unearthed in the cella, are at the National Archaeological Museum, Athens.

Unfinished fluting and carving on the 5th BCE temple.
Unfinished fluting and carving on the 5th BCE temple.

The destroyed late 6th BCE poros temple was functionally replaced by a 6x12 Doric peripteral temple in the late 5th century BCE measuring 10.05 by 21.4m. The euthynteria and lowest step of the crepidoma were made from local dark marble, while the rest was constructed of white marble. There were no pedimental sculptures, nor were the metopes decorated with sculpture. The roof was decorated with sculptural acroteria, however. For unknown reasons the carving of the flutes on the columns was not done. The stylobate blocks were left unfinished, retaining the protective excess marble over their easily damaged corners and upper surfaces.

The cella of the new temple housed the cult figure of Nemesis alone, carved by Agorakritos, a pupil of Pheidias, from the block of Parian marble alleged to have been brought by the over-confident Persians for their triumphal stele. The famous statue [3] of the goddess stood within the cella of the temple and was around 4m high. The Roman historian and connoisseur Varro rated it the finest example of Greek sculpture (Pliny). The base has been reconstructed from the hundreds of fragments that were found scattered about after the destruction of the cult image by early Christians. On three sides of the base, the nearly-in-the-round scene shows the presentation of Helen to her mother Nemesis by Leda. [4] The base was capped with a course of dark Hymettian marble.

Southern gate of the fortified site.
Southern gate of the fortified site.

Occupying a c. 28m high hill between two bays, the fortified site of Rhamnous covered a site of approximately 230 by 270m. The fortification walls were constructed of the local marble from Agia Marina. As has been noted above, there were significant numbers of structures and inhabitants outside the walls of the fortified area.

  1. ^ Described by Pausanias 3.3.2.
  2. ^ si qua in agris templa sunt, sine turba ac tumultu diruantur.
  3. ^ Pliny's Natural History Pliny 36.17.
  4. ^ As is frequently the case, there were competing versions of the Greek myth (story).

  • Despinis, G. "Discovery of the Scattered Fragments and Recognition of the Type of Agorakritos' Statue of Nemesis." AAA 3 (1970), 403-414.
  • Dinsmoor, W.B. Jr. "Rhamnountine Fantasies," Hesperia 30 (1961), 179-204.
  • Edwards, C.M. "Tyche at Corinth," Hesperia 61 (1990), 529-542.
  • Hodge, A.T. and R.A. Tomlinson. "Some Notes on the Temple of Nemesis at Rhamnous," AJA 73 (1969), 162-185.
  • Karusu, S. "Ein Akroter klassischer Zeit" AthMitt 77 (1962), 178-190.
  • Langlotz, E. "Eine Metope des Nemesistempel in Rhamnus" in Scritti in onore di Bartolomeo Nogara. Vatican City, 1937, 225-230.
  • Lapatin, K.D.S. "The Reconstruction of the Temple at Rhamnous? Who is who on the Nemesis Base?" Hesperia 61 (1992), 107-119.
  • Leake, William Martin. Travels in the Morea vol. II (London 1830
  • Miles, M.M. "The Reconstruction of the Temple of Nemesis at Rhamnous." Hesperia 58 (1989), 134-256.
  • Petrakos, V. Rhamnous. Athens, 1991.
  • Stillwell, Richard , ed. Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites, 1976: "Rhamnous, Attica Greece"
  • Thompson, H.A. "Athens Faces Adversity." Hesperia 50 (1981), 346-348.
  • Travlos, J. Bildlexikon zur Topographie des antiken Attika. Tubingin, 1988, 388-403.
  • de Waele, J.A.K.E. "The Design for the Temple of Nemesis at Rhamnous," in M. Gnade, ed., Stips Votive, Papers Presented to C.M. Stibbe. Amsterdam, 1991, 249-264.
  • Wilhelm, A. "Themis und Nemesis von Rhamnous." OJb 44 (1942), 200-209.

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