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Sculptured tombs of Hellas

Chapter 2: PREFACE
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The book surveys ancient Greek funerary practice and the sepulchral monuments that express popular beliefs about death. It outlines ritual procedures for preparing, displaying, and interring the dead, summarizes ideas about the afterlife as reflected in material remains, and classifies types and stylistic periods of tomb architecture, relief sculpture, and inscriptions. Illustrated descriptions of notable cemetery ensembles and museum pieces support comparative readings of form and iconography, while plates and engravings accompany explanations of artistic technique and social context.

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Title: Sculptured tombs of Hellas

Author: Percy Gardner

Release date: December 9, 2022 [eBook #69508]

Language: English

Original publication: United Kingdom: Macmillan & Co, 1896

Credits: Chuck Greif, deaurider and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SCULPTURED TOMBS OF HELLAS ***

Preface
Table of Contents and Index
List of Illustrations

 

SCULPTURED TOMBS OF HELLAS

 

 

Plate I

Frontispiece

SCULPTURED TOMBS
OF HELLAS

BY
PERCY GARDNER, Litt.D.

LINCOLN AND MERTON PROFESSOR OF CLASSICAL ARCHAEOLOGY AND ART
IN THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD

WITH THIRTY PLATES, AND EIGHTY-SEVEN ENGRAVINGS IN THE TEXT




London
MACMILLAN AND CO., Ltd.
NEW YORK: THE MACMILLAN CO.
1896

[All rights reserved]

OXFORD: HORACE HART
PRINTER TO THE UNIVERSITY

Few griefs and many joys my life has held,
Out-lengthened to the utmost bounds of eld.
My name is Symmachus, in Chios born,
Which rich with grapes the branching vines adorn;
But when I died, my bones were hidden here,
In Attic land, to gods and men most dear.
Athenian Epitaph.

 

PREFACE

The monuments erected to the dead belong in every country, like funeral customs generally, to a deeper stratum of the national consciousness than do openly expressed beliefs. This is, in fact, a phase of the general law that in the history of religion cultus is more venerable and more conservative than doctrine. And as, further, the beliefs which find an expression in literature are those of the most enlightened and the least conservative spirits, it is misleading if one attempts to learn from the higher literature of a people how the masses really think and feel in regard to death and the life which lies beyond death.

These considerations are certainly applicable in the case of Greece. The two great literatures of Greece, the Epic and the Attic, belong each to a class, to an aristocracy whether of birth or of talent, and stand high above the beliefs of the common people. If we wish to ascertain what the ordinary Greek citizen, l’homme sensuel moyen, thought and felt in the presence of death, whether his own or that of friends, we must supplement the study of the poets, the orators, and the philosophers by an investigation of ritual, of burial customs, and of the lines of tombs which stretched from the gates of many Greek cities on both sides of the main roads.

The purpose of the present book may best be accomplished if we proceed to consider in succession, first the burial customs of the Greeks, next the ideas as to the future life which prevailed among them, and finally the monuments of the dead.

It is the last-mentioned memorials which are the principal concern of this book. For a long while English-speaking scholars, and even tourists, have felt a special interest in the sepulchral monuments which form so marked a feature of the great museum at Athens, and in the Dipylon cemetery, part of which still survives. I have tried to set forth, for scholars and for lovers of art, a concise account of these monuments, their periods and classes, their inscriptions and their reliefs. And as an introduction and supplement to an account of the tombs of Athens, I have added a still slighter account of the tombs of the pre-historic age in Greece, of the monuments of Asia Minor, of the tombs of Sparta, Boeotia, and other districts, and of the magnificent Greek sarcophagi recently discovered at Sidon.

It would occupy much space if I tried here to detail all my obligations to previous scholars. The whole success of this work must depend on its due illustration; and though the nucleus of my illustrations consists of photographs taken for me during a visit to Athens, I have been obliged also to borrow from a variety of learned and valuable works. In every case in which I asked permission to copy a published engraving that permission was courteously granted. If by mischance I have in any case copied without permission, I trust that I may be pardoned. References to the sources of engravings will be found at the foot of my pages.

Special thanks are due to Dr. Conze and the German Archaeological Institute for allowing me to use the plates of their magnificent work, Die Attischen Grabreliefs, which furnishes representations by photography or drawing of almost all important Attic tombs. Where the photographs of this work were better than my own, I have in some cases used them in preference.

To M. Cavvadias and the Greek Government I am indebted for permission to photograph freely in the Athenian Museums; and to the Trustees of the British Museum for leave to reproduce two interesting monuments (Figs. 28 & 35) which are hitherto unpublished.

When I have had occasion to quote from Homer and the poets of the Anthology, I have usually attempted a rendering in English verse. For Greek elegiacs I have used rhymed heroic verse, and for Greek hexameters English ballad metre. I have also to thank my colleague, Dr. James Williams, of Lincoln College, for allowing me to use several of his excellent versions of poems of the Anthology.

After careful consideration, I have decided that in a work of this kind, which does not attempt completeness, but is methodical in arrangement, the best form of Index is a detailed table of contents and list of engravings. By the aid of these, anything included in the book can be very readily found.

Percy Gardner.

Oxford, August, 1896.

PS. Most of the abbreviations used in the notes will explain themselves; but I should explain the following:—

C. A. G. (‘Corpus of Attic Grave-reliefs’) is Die Attischen Grabreliefs, ed. A. Conze.

Kaibel, is G. Kaibel, Epigrammata Graeca ex Lapidibus conlecta.

TABLE OF CONTENTS AND INDEX

CHAPTER I

BURIAL CUSTOMS IN GREECE.
Importance attached to burial, 1. The Prothesis, 2; illustrated by
vases, 3. Presence of ghosts, 4. The Ecphora, on archaic vases, 5; on later monuments, 6. Sleep and Death, 7. Custom of burning, 9. Funeral feast and speeches, 11.
CHAPTER II

THE WORSHIP OF THE DEAD.
Primitive beliefs as to needs of dead, 12. Liberality to the dead in archaic times, 12. Terra-cotta offerings, 13. Sacrifices at tombs, 14. Evidence of excavations, 16. Classes of heroes, 17. Evidence of sepulchral lekythi, 18. Presence of the dead in representations, 19.
CHAPTER III

BELIEFS AS TO THE FUTURE LIFE.
Question what became of the dead, 23. Homeric beliefs; Hades, 25; visit to Hades of Odysseus, 26; Islands of the Blessed, 27. Influence of Orphism, 28. Paintings of Polygnotus at Delphi, 30; Charon, 31; Theseus and Peirithous, 32; Orpheus, 33; the Uninitiated, 34; Eurynomus, 35. Painting on vase of Canusium, 36; Orpheus, 37; Herakles and Cerberus, 37; Megara, 38; Initiated, 38. Comparison of Greek and Christian Hades, 39. Development of the Eumenides, 40. Conflict between ritual and ethics, 42. Hades in the Tragedians, 43. Localization of ghosts, 44.
CHAPTER IV

THE PRE-HISTORIC AGE OF GREECE.
So-called treasuries of early Greece, 46; at Mycenae, 47; really tombs, 51; various forms, 51. Rock-graves at Mycenae, 52; their tombstones, 54; subjects and style of art, 57.
CHAPTER V

ASIA MINOR: EARLY.
Early Ionian civilization not yet excavated, 59. Tomb of Tantalus on Sipylus, 60. Geometric tombs of Phrygia, 62; Lion-tombs, 64; their chronology, 66; relation to Mycenae, 67. Archaic tombs of Lycia, 67; pre-Ionian art, 68; the Harpy Monument, 69; Sirens, 73; other Lycian tombs, 74.
CHAPTER VI

SPARTA.
Relief of Chrysapha, 76; its meaning, 77; other similar tombs, 78. Cultus of ancestors at Sparta, 80. Details of reliefs; honour paid to women, 81; food of the dead, 82; horse and dog, 83.
CHAPTER VII

HEROIZING RELIEFS.
Distinction of tombs from commemorative tablets, 87. Lines of descent from Spartan reliefs, 88. Athenian banqueting reliefs, 88. Customs of sitting and reclining, 89. Tegean relief, 90. Presence of votaries, 91. Asklepian tablets, 92. Tablets to heroes and to ancestors, 93. The hero as horseman, 94; accompanied by lady, 98. Votive tablets from Tarentum, 100. The hero as foot-soldier, 102; unarmed, 103.
CHAPTER VIII

ATHENS: PERIODS AND FORMS OF MONUMENTS.
Graves of Dipylon style at Athens, 105. Periods of Athenian monuments, 106. First period, the mound and stele, 108; the table, 109; the pillar, 110. Early Athenian tombs usually of the young, 111. Second period; forms of tombs, 112; marble vases, 113. Tombs usually of families, 116. The use of painting and metal on marble, 116. Determination of dates of tombs, 117. Third period, 118. Preservation of part of cemetery at Athens, 118. Architectural decoration of tombs; the acanthus, 119; the sphinx, 121; the siren, 126; goats butting, 128; the lion, 130; the bull, 131.
CHAPTER IX

ATHENS AND GREECE. PORTRAITS.
Portraits of the dead originate in Ionia, 133. Portraits at Athens, 134; their ideal character, 134. Portrait statues, 135; on horseback or on foot, 136; female figures, 137. The dead as Hermes, 138. Statues of mourning women, 139. Portraits on stelae, first period, 140; Aristion, Lyseas, 141; stelae of youths, 143. Second period, stelae of citizens, 145; stelae of warriors, 146; Dexileos, 147; young athletes, 149; hunters, 152; students, 153; shipwrecked men, 154; children, 154; matrons, 157; girls, 158; priestesses, 160.
CHAPTER X

FAMILY GROUPS.
Pathos and charm of Attic groups, 162. Predominance of women, 163. Women and children in later Greece, 163. Stelae with father and children, 164; mother and children, 166. Family groups, 167. Series of groups representing leave-taking, 168; series representing self-adornment, 171. Stele of Phaenarete, 173. Stele of Ameinocleia, 176. Dressing for a journey or offerings to the dead? 176. Domestic interiors or scenes at the tomb? 178. Several stone lekythi on one slab, 178. Occasional appearance of Hermes, 180.
CHAPTER XI

MEANING AND STYLE OF THE RELIEFS.
Do the Attic reliefs refer to past or future life? 182. Line of connexion with Spartan stelae, 182; the wine-cup, the pomegranate, the cock, 183; the dove, the horse, 184; the dog, 185. Reliefs which clearly refer to past life, 185. The δεξίωσις, 186. We must distinguish between origin and meaning of reliefs, 187. Oblong reliefs refer to the future, 188; in them Herakles and Dionysus sometimes present, 189. Style of archaic reliefs, 190; bear name of sculptor, 191. Lower level of style in fifth-century reliefs, 191. Fourth-century reliefs connected with the second Attic school of sculpture, 193.
CHAPTER XII

INSCRIPTIONS.
Simplicity of inscriptions on early stelae, 195. Explicatory character of inscriptions, 196. Occurrence of χαῖρε, 197. Inscription of Dexileos, 197. Longer inscriptions after the fourth century, 197. Specimens of public epitaphs over warriors, 198; over others, 201. Specimens of later inscriptions, 203; sentiments as to life, 204; statements as to the future life, 204. Orphism in epitaphs, 206. Threats to violators, 207. Epitaphs of the Palatine Anthology, 208.
CHAPTER XIII

LATER MONUMENTS OF ASIA MINOR.
Splendour of Asiatic Greek tombs, 214. The Lycian Nereid Monument, 215; its sculptures, 216; its occasion, 219; its date, 220. Relation to Ionian school of historical painting, 221. The heroon of Gyeulbashi, 221; subjects of sculpture, 223; relation to painters, 224. The Lion-tomb of Cnidus, 225. Greek graves in the Crimea, 226.
CHAPTER XIV

THE MAUSOLEUM.
Interesting problem of reconstruction, 228. Plans of Pullan and Oldfield, 230. Testimony of ancient writers, Hyginus, Martial, 232; Pliny, 233. Account of excavation by Guichard, 236. Analogy of other buildings, 239. The statues of Mausolus and Artemisia, where placed, 240. Other sculptural remains, 241.
CHAPTER XV

GREEK SARCOPHAGI.
Discovery of sarcophagi at Sidon, 243. Archaic sarcophagi of Clazomenae, 243. Sarcophagus of the Satrap at Sidon, 245; its connexion with history, 246; and with Ionian art, 247. The Lycian sarcophagus, 248; ideal character, 248. The sarcophagus of the Mourning Women, 249; variety in expression of grief, 251; likeness to temple, 251; perhaps belongs to King Strato, 252. The Alexander sarcophagus, 252; dress of Greeks and Persians, 253; subjects of pediments, 253; the lion-hunt, 255; the battle, 256; perhaps belongs to Abdalonymus, 258; of uncertain artistic school, 258. The Amazon sarcophagus of Vienna, 258.

 

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

WITH THEIR SOURCES

CHAPTER I
  PAGE
Fig.1.Lying in State. Benndorf, Griech. u. Sicil. Vasenb., pl. i.3
  2. pl. xxxiii.4
  3.Funeral Procession. Rayet, Monum. de l’Art ant., pl. lxxv.6
  4.Arrival at the Tomb. pl. lxxv.6
  5.Deposition at the Tomb. Dumont, Céram. de la Grèce propre, pl. xxvii.9
  6.Pyre of Patroclus. Mon. dell’ Inst. IX, xxxii.10
CHAPTER II
  7.Child’s Coffin. Stackelberg, Gräber der Hellenen, pl. viii.14
  8.Offerings at a Tomb. Ephemeris Archaiol. 1886, pl. iv.18
  9.Spirit seated on Stele. Pottier, Lécythes blancs, pl. iv.20
  10.Toilet scene, Sepulchral. Furtwängler, Coll. Sabouroff, pl. lx.21
  11.Gifts at Tomb. Brit. Mus. Cat. Vases, IV, pl. iv.22
CHAPTER III
  12.The Boat of Charon. Antike Denkmäler, I, pl. xxiii.31
  13.The Greek Underworld. Wiener Vorlegeblätter, Ser. E, pl. i.36
CHAPTER IV
  14.Sectional plan of the so-called Treasury of Atreus. Schuchhardt, Schliemann’s Ausgrabungen, p. 17647
  15.Restoration of interior of Treasury. Perrot et
Chipiez, La Grèce Primitive, p. 638
48
  16.Plan and façade of Treasury. Perrot et Chipiez, La Grèce Primitive, pl. vi.49
  17.Ceiling of Treasury, Orchomenus. Journ. Hell. Stud. II, pl. xiii.50
  18.Tombstone, Mycenae. Schliemann, Mycenae, p. 8154
  19. p. 8655
  20. Perrot et Chipiez, op. cit., p. 77056
CHAPTER V
  21.Tumulus on Sipylus. Texier, Description de l’Asie M. pl. cxxx.61
  22.Section of Chamber. Weber, Le Sipyle, pl. i.61
  23.Tomb of Midas. Perrot et Chipiez, Phrygie, p. 8362
  24.Geometrical façade of Tomb. p. 10363
  25.Tomb flanked by Lions. p. 11164
  26.Head of Lion. Journ. Hell. Stud. pl. xviii.65
  27.North and West sides of Harpy Tomb. E. A. Gardner, Handbook of Greek Sculpture, I, p. 11071
  28.Gable of Lycian Tomb. Photograph74
CHAPTER VI
Pl.iiSpartan stele. Photograph76
Fig.29.Hades and Persephone. Ann. dell’ Inst. XIX, pl. F79
  30.Seated Hero. Journ. Hell. Stud. V, p. 12383
  31.Stele, man feeding snake. Photograph85
CHAPTER VII
Pl.iiiSepulchral Banquet. Photograph88
Fig. 32.Assur-bani-pal and Queen. Perrot et Chipiez, Chaldée et Assyrie, p. 10789
  33.Stele from Tegea. Photograph90
  34.Coin of Bizya. Br. Mus. Cat. Coins, Thrace, p. 9092
  35.Horseman relief (British Museum). Photograph96
  36.Horseman relief (Berlin). Furtwängler, Coll. Sabouroff, pl. xxix.97
  37.Votive tablet, Tarentum. Mon. dell’ Inst. XI, pl. lv.101
  38.Hero on foot. Monum. Grecs de l’Assoc. d’Études Grecques, pl. i.102
  39.Hero seated. Roscher, Lexikon, I, p. 2571103
CHAPTER VIII
Fig. 40.Achilles at tomb of Patroclus. Gerhard, Auserlesene Vasenbilder, pl. cxcix.108
Pl.ivMarriage-vase. Athen. Mittheil. 1887, pl. ix. 114 v. Marriage-vase and Lekythi. Photograph 115 i. View in Cemetery of Cerameicus.118
Fig. 41.Head of Assyrian stele. Perrot et Chipiez, Chaldée et Assyrie, p. 270120
  42.Head of Greek stele. Brückner, Ornament u. Formen der Att. Grabstelen, pl. i.120
  43.Anthemion of stele. Photograph121
  43.A. 122
  43.B. 123
  44.Sphinx of Spata.123
  45.Terra-cotta: Sphinx and Youth. Stackelberg, Gräber der Hellenen, pl. lvi.124
  46.Stele of Lamptrae, restored. Athen. Mittheil. XII, p. 105125
  47.Siren from Tomb. Photograph127
  48.Head of stele.128
  49. 129
  50.Stele of Leon.130
CHAPTER IX
  51.Portrait from Tomb, Thera. Athen. Mittheil. IV, pl. vi.135
  52.Horseman from Tomb. pl. iii.137
Pl. vi Seated Lady. Photograph 137
vii.Hermes of Andros. 138
viii. Mourning Slave. Furtwängler, Coll. Sabouroff, pl. xv. 139
ix.Stele of Aristion. Photograph140
  Stele of Alxenor.141
Fig.53.Seated Hero. Michaelis, Anc. Marbles in Gr. Brit. p. 385142
  54.Head of Youth holding discus. C. A. G. pl. iv.143
  55.Dermys and Citylus. Athen. Mittheil. III, pl. xiv.144
Pl.xTynnias seated. Photograph 145 xi. Stele of Aristonautes. Photograph 146 xii. Stele of Dexileos.147
Fig. 56. Warrior of Tegea. Bull. de Corresp. hellénique, IV,
Pl. vii pl. vii.148
Pl.xiiiYouth with Dog. Photograph149
Fig. 57.Athlete balancing stone. Photograph150
  58.Young horseman.151
Pl.xivStele from Aegina. 151
  xvRelief from Ilissus.152
Fig. 59. Stele of Democleides.153
  60.Head of Old Man.155
  61.Boy, from stele.156
Pl.xviSeated Lady. C. A. G. pl. xv.156
Fig.62Portrait of Mynno. C. A. G. pl. xvii.157
Pl.xviiStele of Amphotto. Photograph158
Fig.63Girl with Doll. Journ. Hell. Stud. VI, pl. B.159
  64.Priestess of Isis. Photograph159
CHAPTER X
Pl.xviiiEuempolus and children. Photograph164
Fig.65Xanthippus and children. Museum Marbles, X, pl. iii.165
Pl.xixMother and family. Photograph 166 xx. Chaerestrata and Lysander. Photograph 167 xxi. Mica and Dion. Photograph 167 xxii. Mother and daughter. Photograph 168 xxiii. Damasistrata. Photograph 169 xxiv. Mother and nurse.169
Fig.66Plangon fainting. C. A. G. p. 70170
Pl.xxvHegeso. Photograph 172 xxvi. Lady and attendant. Photograph 173 xxvii. Ameiniche. Photograph173
Fig.67Phaenarete. C. A. G. pl. xxxix.174
Pl.xxviiiAmeinocleia. Photograph175
Fig.68Scene at Tomb. Benndorf, Griech. u. Sicil. Vasenb. pl. xv.177
  69.Domestic scene. Heydemann, Griech. Vasenbilder, pl. xi.178
  70.Family group. Brückner, Griech. Grabreliefs, p. 12179
  71. 179
  72.Stele of Myrrhina. Gazette Archéol. I, pl. vii.180
Pl.xxixOrpheus and Eurydice. Photograph181
CHAPTER XI
  xxx.Stele of Eutamia. C. A. G. pl. xxviii.185
Fig.73Dionysus as guest. Roscher, Lexikon, I, p. 2539190
CHAPTER XIII
Fig.74Nereid Monument (Falkener). Overbeck, Griech. Plastik, II, p. 191216
  75.Gable of Nereid Monument. Ann. dell’ Inst. 1875, pl. DE.217
  76.Heroon of Gyeulbashi. Benndorf and Niemann, Heroon von Gjölbaschi-Trysa, pl. i.222
  77.Lion-tomb, Cnidus. Newton, Travels and Discov. II, pl. xxiii.225
CHAPTER XIV
  78.Mausoleum (Mr. Pullan). Archaeologia, LIV, p. 281230
  79. (Mr. Oldfield). Drawing of Mr. Oldfield231
CHAPTER XV
  80.Sarcophagus of the Satrap: end. Hamdy Bey et T. Reinach, Une Nécropole Royale à Sidon, pl xxi.246
  81.Sphinxes: Lycian Sarcophagus. pl. xv.248
  82.Sarcophagus of Mourners: end. pl. vii.250
  83.Alexander Sarcophagus: end. pl. xxvi.254
  84. LION-HUNT. pl. xxxi.255
  85. A LION. pl. XX.257