For a
comprehensive study of the links between Anaximander's work and the
architectural projects going on in Ionia in his time, see
Anaximander
and the Architects by Robert Hahn (Albany, NY: SUNY Press,
2001).
On the main web page for this course there is a picture of the Temple
of Athena at Priene, a few miles from Anaximander's home town of
Miletus in Ionia, Asia Minor. That temple dates from about 325 BCE, over two centuries after
Anaximander's time. However, the technique for building very tall
columns from shorter cylinders (called "column-drums," because they are
shaped like drums) was developed by the Egyptians well over a thousand
years before Anaximander.
Consider what this technique had to accomplish:
- The columns had to stand up,
- the columns
had to support the stone roofs of the temples without falling,
- the whole assembly (columns plus roof) had
to stand on a base in such a way as not to sink into the ground, and
- the columns and roof had to be assembled so as to avoid any tilting or uneven stress.
To do this effectively and reliably requires tremendous precision in building, in measurement,
and in calculation, as well as a well-developed grasp of principles of
geometry and mechanical physics.
There is evidence of Persian temples built with this technique at least
as far back as 700 BCE. Remember that the Persians lived in Asia Minor
too; both the Persians and the Egyptians traded extensively with the
Ionian Greeks. By about 600 BCE, large temples supported by columns
made of stone cylinders began to appear in Greek territories,
especially Ionia. It was costly to build such a temple, and only in
certain areas such as Ionia were any Greek communities wealthy enough
to build on such a massive scale at that time. Within the next decades,
more and more Greek communities began large building projects.
Evidence such as architectural drawings on stones, and some
stone-cutters' marks, makes clear that the Ionian Greeks learned from
the Egyptians how to make large column-drum temples. Here are two
examples of Greek column-drum temples from the 6th century BCE, at and
shortly after Anaximander's time.
Above is a column from a temple at Assos, a few dozen miles up the coast
from Miletus. The temple dates from about 580 BCE (Anaximander's time).
The columns had all fallen or been knocked down, and today workers are
restoring them. Here, workers have put the original pieces of a column
back together. (This picture also comes from the
Perseus web
site.)
This is a temple from Akragas in Sicily (home of Empedocles). It dates
from about 510 BCE. The people next to it give some idea of the scale.
Sicily isn't that close to Miletus, but there was trade between the
two, and there was trade between Akragas and Egypt. This picture also
comes from
Perseus.
Questions, comments?
Contact me at rcherubi(at)gmu(dot)edu.