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DIDYMA
Didyma is located near the
village
of
Yenihisar
(Yoran) near the town of
Söke
in the
province
of
Aydın
in the Aegean region. Here one finds an important sanctuary that
housed one of the oracles of Apollo. It was connected to
Miletus
by sea, and those arriving by ship would land at the
harbour
of
Panormus
and thence follow the Sacred way to Didyma. Until its destruction by
the Persians in 494 B.C. it was administered by the family of the Branchidae, the descendants
of Bronchos, a youth beloved of Apollo. For the last two kilometers the
Sacred Way
was lined with seated statues of the male and female members of the
Branchidae family. After his capture of
Miletus
in 334 B. C. Alexander the Great placed the administration of the
oracle in the hands of the city of
Miletus
. In 331 B.C. the oracle proclaimed Alexander "the son of Zeus".
In 300 B.C. the Milesians embarked on the construction of the largest temple in the Greek
world. Although work continued until the middle of the 2nd century A.D. the temple was never
finished. Later, a church and other buildings were constructed, while the Byzantines built a
barracks in which troops were garrisoned. The buildings were damaged by fire and in the 15th
century further damage was caused by a great earthquake. The
Temple
of
Apollo
(Didymaion) was the largest and wealthiest Ionic temple in
Anatolia
and was renowned for its holy relics, its treasury, its sacred
spring and sacred laurel grove. Investigations in the
Temple
of
Apollo
were first undertaken in 1834 by the French traveller Charles Texier
and the English archaeologist Charles T. Newton, who had conducted the excavations at
Halicarnassus
.
The first excavations were
begun in 1904 by Theodor Wiegand under the auspices of the
Berlin
Museum
and continued until 1913. Since 1962 excavations have been conducted
by Klaus Tucheld on behalf of the German Archaeological Institute.
The first
Temple
of
Apollo
was built in the Archaic period and the Hellenistic temple which
succeeded this was built on the foundations of the earlier building, materials from which were
used in the construction. The temple we see today is an Ionic structure measuring 60 x 118 m,
with a dipteral arrangement of two rows of columns with 21 on each side and 10 at each end.
The columns are of various styles with pedestals adorned with reliefs. These columns support
an architrave surmounted by a frieze decorated with acanthus leaves and Gorgon (Medusa) heads. The high pronaos at the top of a monumental
flight of steps leads into a naos with two columns, which gives access to the sacred area or
cella in the form of an open courtyard surrounded by high walls with columns and containing a
small Ionic temple which housed the statue of the god. Didyma was never a large city and its
fame was closely connected with the existence of a sacred spring and the temple founded over
it. The ancient Greeks merely took over the already existing sanctuary and reorganised it.
Didyma was connected to
Miletus
by the
Sacred Way
, the latter part of which was lined with sarcophagi and statues of
lions and sphinxes. The Branchidae family was responsible for the maintenance of the
Sacred Way
.
The remains of the earliest
temple, which lie within the later building, have been dated to the 8th and 7th centuries B.C.
These consist of a sacred wall measuring approximately 24 x 10 m, an open-air sanctuary, a
portico 16 m in length, a sacred well and a votive altar.
After traversing the entire length of the
Sacred Way
, all suppliants to the temple would assemble in front of the
building and purify themselves with the water from the sacred well. They were then obliged to
pay a certain tax proportionate to the seriousness of their request. For a private affair one
had to pay eleven times the standard tax. It was then necessary to sacrifice an animal,
frequently a goat, in order to learn whether or not the god was willing to receive the
suppliant's request.
Before the sacrifice, cold
water was thrown over the animal. If the animal showed no reaction the whole process had to be
repeated. The suppliant then entered the naos and addressed his question to the priest. If
there were a large number of suppliants the next to be received was chosen by lot. The priests
then entered the inner temple and communicated the question to the priestess of Apollo who had
prepared herself by fasting for several days and purifying herself with water from the holy
well. The priestess in the inner sanctuary would drink the water from the sacred well, chew
bay leaves and inhale the gases rising from the well.
She would then begin to
utter apparently meaningless words and sounds, which would be interpreted by the priests, the
oracle being written in understandable language in the chresmographeion, or oracle office, a
building located immediately adjacent to the pronaos. All the words uttered by the priestess
were subsequently communicated to the suppliant by a priest or priests.
Legend has it that it was in
this way that Alexander the Great learned of his coming victory over the Persians.
The pronaos, or forecourt,
to which access is given by thirteen steps, contains twelve columns. The ceiling decorations
were of great magnificence, and the columns of quite exceptional height. It was here that the
suppliants waited for the oracle of Apollo.
Oracular divination was the art of foretelling the
future through the power of the god mediated by the observation of natural events or objects.
Divination in some form or another has been known in all countries in all ages and spread
throughout the Western world in the form of astrology. It is popularly known as ``fortune-telling".
Oracular divination rests on conclusions drawn on the basis of observation and interpretation.
In the case of divination based on observation, recourse is had to the examination of
accidental phenomena interpreted by intuition. The soothsayer who examines the intestines of
the sacrificial animal, its shoulder-blade or its footprints in ashes was obliged to take
special measures to ensure the truth of the oracular pronouncement. The signs chosen for
observation by the ancient Greek and Roman soothsayers included lightning, thunder, the night
and call of birds and sacred fowls, as well as accidental phenomena such as the spilling of
salt, sneezing or stumbling.
The term "oracle", which is derived from the Latin "orare", to speak, was
used both for the relation between the soothsayer and the god, and the place where the
divination was performed. One of the oldest oracles was that of Apollo at
Delphi
on the skirts of Mt Parnassus at the top of the
gulf of Corinth. At first the oracle belonged to Gaia, the goddess of the earth.
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