Throughout history the ruling class/elites hae been trying very hard to return us to life as it was in Ancient History. You know, before Christ came and ruined all their fun. Why do they so desperately want to return to those days? Because the ruling class are descendants of the Fallen and their progeny. THEY RULED with impunity! Why? Because before Christ came most of the world was under their Authority. The Devil had the Earth as his playground and the masses had to do whatever the demons demanded or suffer the consequences. I know that is hard for people to grasp let alone believe. But, it is the truth.
Only the nation of Israel was under God’s protection, God was creating a real-life demonstration on what is required to HOLY and why WE need a SAVIOR.
In the meantime. The Devil and his minions were working up their own strategy. They KNEW the plan of Salvation. They Knew the promise of Savior bo be born of a Virgin. They created false religions that contained the virgin and child, they set up false Saviors and convinced the people they did not need to fear the God of the Israelites.
The Fallen Angels and their progeny, in the form of gods, demigods, goddesses and demons convinced the people to worship them. Sure they would give the people some benefits in exchange for obedience and sacrifice. However, they were also very mean vindictive and self-indulgent. They demanded sacrifices of all kinds including animal and human sacrifices. they took pleasure in human suffering and created wars, and all manner of torture and abuse.
The Fallen Angels taught them many things which we know as arts, sciences, pharmakoi, abortion, birth control, electricity, weaponry, spell-casting, sound frequencies, music, astrology and the cosmos, farming, blacksmithing, cross breeding and DNA manipulation, making of idols/statues, painting, weaving, make-up, and so much more.
Among these entities was the people group that first occupied the island of RHODES. They were direct offspring of the primordial beings and they were known as the Telchines. They were the ones who developed technology. They were the first to institute the worship of the gods and the first to create statues/idols. The were great magicians and known as the magi. They were wicked and malevolent and very secretive. The did evil things just for the fun of it and brought mayhem and chaos to the Island of Rhodes. But, they were also responsible for most of the GREAT WORKS AND WONDERS of RHODES.
As I have said, the elite want to take us all back to PAGANISM. That is why they hae been rebuilding all the ancient Temples and Sacred Places. They are reestablishing the Pagan beliefs and practices.
In case you have not seen the stories, today we are going to look at what is happening in Rhodes and what is happening in our modern world to promote the Island of Rhodes, the ancient ways and the WORSHIP of the SUN/Helios in glorification of the Colossus of Rhodes.
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SATURN – HEXAGON – DELPHI
Tags: Saturn, Druids, Phoenecians, Romans, Greeks, Nimrod, Apollo, Wicker Man, Diana, Poseidon, Zeus, Hexagon, Lucifer RESTORED: 08/16/2021; RESTORED 4/25/22; RESTORED 5/26/23 Wow, I so wish I had more time. Since my days to post on this site are numbered, I am going to try to get out as much information to you as I can. … Click Here to Read More
HUMAN SACRIFICE RETURNS
RESTORED: 3/12/22 – It is VERY LONG – ALL YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT PAGANISM Paganism is exploding all around the world. GUARD YOUR MINDS AND HEARTS! Remember: If you DANCE TO THE MUSIC… YOU WILL HAVE TO PAY THE PIPER. So, before you turn your back on the GIFT of Salvation provided to you … Click Here to Read More
CORONA BOREALIS AUG 2024 – The Greek Connection
Just in time for the new COVID outbreak they are telling us to watch the skies for the T. Corona Borealis Super Nova. It can happen anytime between now and mid September. So much is happening in the news these days it can make your head spin. In all the craziness, GOD is bringing many … Click Here to Read More
WATER WORLD APPEARING BEFORE OUR EYES
As crazy as it sounds, it appears that the ruling elite are preparing to put the world underwater. It seems like the demonic spirits want to create their own BIBLICAL FLOOD to cleanse the world of all the people and things they deem worthless and to bring forth a New World. Kind of a Water … Click Here to Read More
MARITIME LAW originated with the people of RHODES. RHODES as you will see was populated by worshippers of the primordial gods and their progeny. Infact RHODES was the first place where the progeny of the Fallen Angels was worshipped. The first place where IDOLS were created. It was a place permeated with the evils taught to humanity by the Fallen Angels. The Telchines were the original inhabitants of RHODES.
REVIVED ROMAN EMPIRE – Maritime Law – You & Your Children – Part 4
RESTORED: 8/12/22 It really is important to view this series in order. The information revealed builds on itself, so that you cannot fully appreciate the posts individually. Please view the entire Series from beginning to end. The links are listed in order at the end of each post. Thank you and God bless you. It … Click Here to Read More
Revived Roman Empire – ONE RELIGION UNDER ROME – Part 3
RESTORED: 8/14/22 It really is important to view this series in order. The information revealed builds on itself, so that you cannot fully appreciate the posts individually. Please view the entire Series from beginning to end. The links are listed in order at the end of each post. Thank you and God bless you. In … Click Here to Read More
REVIVED ROMAN EMPIRE – THE SEA – Part 2
It really is important to view this series in order. The information revealed builds on itself, so that you cannot fully appreciate the posts individually. Please view the entire Series from beginning to end. The links are listed in order at the end of each post. Thank you and God bless you. In this part … Click Here to Read More
REVIVED ROMAN EMPIRE – As Prophesied – Part 1
RESTORED: 8/12/22 It really is important to view this series in order. The information revealed builds on itself, so that you cannot fully appreciate the posts individually. Please view the entire Series from beginning to end. The links are listed in order at the end of each post. Thank you and God bless you. In … Click Here to Read More
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The Colossus Computer
Colossus was a set of computers developed by British codebreakers in the years 1943–1945
Colossus was obscured for decades due to government secrecy. Now, it is finally recognized as the world’s first programmable electronic digital computer.
It wasn’t until the 1970s that the story of Colossus began to emerge, thanks to the efforts of researchers like professor Brian Randell, Colossus was finally recognized as the world’s first programmable electronic digital computer, predating ENIAC and other early systems.
Efforts to honor Colossus began in the 1990s. Tony Sale, inspired by the rediscovery of its history, led a team to reconstruct the machine using declassified information and surviving components. The result was a fully functioning replica, now displayed at the National Museum of Computing at Bletchley Park.
Today, Colossus is celebrated as a landmark achievement in computing and a testament to the ingenuity of its creators. In 2024, new images and information were released to commemorate its 80th anniversary. Source
Island of Colossus and the Technological Revolution
The Colossus computers’ development and operation were a testament to the ingenuity and foresight of the British codebreakers and the advancements in computing technology of the time. Their legacy continues to inspire future generations of engineers and computer scientists, highlighting the impact of technology on warfare and the revolution of computing. Britannica+2
Colossus – Computer Revolution, Codebreaking, Cryptanalysis – Britannica
There were nine Colossi in the Newmanry by the end of the war, housed in two vast steel-framed buildings. Newman directed the world’s first electronic computing facility, with job queues, teams of operators working round the clock in shifts, specialized tape-punching crews, and engineers continually on hand to keep the machinery running smoothly. Nothing like it was seen again until the 1960s, when the first large modern computing centres began to emerge.
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Apart from the Colossus of Rhodes, AI has also recreated the other ancient Seven Wonders of the World. Among them is the Mausoleum at Halicarnassus, the Temple of Artemis at Ephesus and the Statue of Zeus at Olympia.
Source: Daily Mail
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Why Have There Been Plans to Build a New Colossus of Rhodes?
For one thing, the statue was among the almost mythical Seven Wonders of the World that were recounted by observers such as 2nd-century-BCE writer Antipater of Sidon. Despite a lack of evidence indicating what the Colossus of Rhodes looked like in its full form, people throughout history have been taken with images of a chiseled Helios raising a torch to the sky and wearing a crown of sun rays. The Statue of Liberty is a particularly distinguished example of the ancient statue’s cultural legacy. French sculptor Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi drew inspiration from the imagined appearance of the Colossus of Rhodes, as well as its symbolism, for his design of the iconic New York City figure.
Evidently, the ancient statue’s toppling did nothing to prevent it from becoming a captivating marker of the onetime prosperity of Rhodes.
One notable proposal for a redo in Rhodes was announced in 1999, arriving in time to mark the new millennium. Island officials introduced the scheme to the public with plans for a global fundraising campaign and for the statue’s completion by the opening of the Athens 2004 Olympic Games. According to an Associated Press article in the Washington Post reporting the announcement, the project was “dedicated to international peace and cooperation at a historic crossroads between Europe, Asia and the Middle East.” While it would have been fascinating to build a new version of the ancient wonder on the threshold of an ultramodern moment, this plan never did come to fruition: it faced opposition from those who felt it was a tacky gesture.
A different project to erect a new Colossus of Rhodes came in 2008, placing a similar emphasis on celebrating ideals of international peace and Greek culture. However, this plan intended to differentiate itself from past ambitions with its even larger size and reconception as a light installation. This version of the Colossus, promoted by a Greek tourism consultant and designed by a German light artist, was well received by the island’s mayor for bringing something new to the concept of the storied statue. Nevertheless, this plan also failed to get off the ground.
Yet another concept for a new Colossus surfaced in 2015—right in the thick of Greece’s historic debt crisis. Put forth by a team of European architects, engineers, and economists, this bold plan proposed a statue larger than the original in order to house a museum, a restaurant, a library, and shops. In addition, it would serve as a functional lighthouse. The team envisioned using solar panels on the exterior surface of the figure to generate sustainable energy for the site while paying modern homage to the sun god Helios. According to a YouTube video displaying a digital rendering of the statue and its interior, the purpose of the project was “not to propose a copy of the original statue…but to arouse the same emotions that visitors felt more than 2200 years ago.” The Guardian of London’s coverage of this new plan for the Colossus of Rhodes questioned the ambitiousness of the project and its hefty cost: “For Greece, which has suffered so much in recent years, is it foolhardy?” Perhaps this rhetorical question had some merit, as the project’s Web site now seems to be defunct. Nevertheless, according to another article published while the Web site was still up, the project’s mission statement included the goal of mitigating some of the economic hardships of Greece by creating jobs through the statue’s construction and generating tourism revenue.
THE REVIVAL OF THE COLOSSUS OF RHODES A PROJECT WITH A VISION OF PEACE IN
THE MEDITERRANEAN
WORLD TOURISM DAY 2024
“TOURISM AND PEACE”
– 27 September 2024
by George Barboutis
Today, as we celebrate World Tourism Day with the timely theme “Tourism and Peace”, we are faced with a unique opportunity to examine how tourism can act as a force for peace and solidarity, particularly in the sensitive Mediterranean region.
The Mediterranean has always been a meeting place for cultures, religions and peoples.
However, the challenges it faces today – such as geopolitical tensions, migratory flows and climate change – require new approaches and solutions that promote peace and cooperation.
Tourism, as an activity that brings together people from different parts of the world, has the power to bridge differences, enhance understanding and promote international friendship.
The Colossus Revival: A Vision for the 21st Century
The ancient Colossus, one of the Seven Wonders of the ancient world, was dedicated to the Sun god and represented the freedom and peace that followed the successful defence of Rhodes against Demetrius the Besieger in the Hellenistic era.
This statue, with its gigantic size, stood proudly at the entrance to the city of Rhodes, welcoming visitors from all over the then known world. Today, the vision of the revival of Kolossos must take on a new dimension, reflecting the values that our era needs more than ever: peace, friendship and cooperation between peoples.
The new Colossus, instead of being a sterile representation of the ancient miracle, could be a modern symbol of peace, a global reference point reminding us of the need for dialogue and coexistence. This project should be a major tourist attraction, attracting visitors from all over the world, but also serve as a meeting place for cultures, a venue for international conferences and events focusing on peace and sustainable development.
The new Colossus of Rhodes should host a thematic museum dedicated to the history of the ancient Colossus and its values, as well as an International Peace Centre, where dialogue and cooperation will be promoted at a global level.
ROADMAP FOR THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE OPERATION
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Idea – Vision
Colossus is the eternal myth that Rhodes “carries”, which is attempted to be given a new substance, without being altered by the creation of a sterile and anachronistic copy (Replica of the statue) with archaeological implications. The philosophy and ambition of the project is to constitute an evolutionary ideological continuation of the ancient statue, which was dedicated to the Sun god, peace and freedom, and also to take on a nationwide character and to be presented as a Greek seal of the universal and timeless ideas of universal peace, friendship and brotherhood of peoples, with the prospect of becoming a global landmark and reference point.
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Implementation (Global Competition )
The conception of the project must be based on the construction of a contemporary architectural creation, with artistic expression and dimensions of an innovative and sustainable technical achievement, a 21st century vision and version, which will respect the measure, harmony, the historical and culturally rich architectural environment of the place.
This project should be the result of an open global competition, in order to create a rich reservoir of architectural ideas for its construction.
International Evaluation Committee
The best of the proposals are proposed to be evaluated and selected by a local and international Selection (Evaluation) Committee, composed of eminent personalities from the fields of culture, letters, arts, sciences, technology and politics.
It is proposed that the Selection Committee be placed under the auspices of the President of the Republic, in order to ensure global visibility, international prestige and absolute transparency of the procedures.
In this way, the project will have the potential to be brought under the auspices of UNESCO and other cultural bodies, following our existing priceless monuments and attracting funds from foundations, sponsors, Greek and philhellenic citizens.
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Featured Projects – Avoidance Εborealization
In order to eliminate any possibility of commercialization of the project, it is proposed that the money from future revenues be reinvested towards the dissemination of peace and our cultural heritage by creating:
A) an interactive Thematic Museum on ancient Colossus and its history
B) an Archaeological Research Centre, but also an Academic Chair of Colossus, which will assist the research and study of future generations of young archaeological scientists – researchers on issues relating to the location or possible future findings of the ancient wonder, according to the latest scientific data and
C) the establishment of an International Centre for Mediterranean Peace Chair, which will house an excellent, technologically advanced cultural centre, which will include a conference and exhibition centre, an amphitheatre, a concert hall and will host international events and activities.
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Finding Resources – Funding
In the direction of raising financial resources, it is proposed that the project be self-financed through the mobilization of distinguished personalities (Ambassadors of the Idea), who will lead an International Fundraising Campaign that will raise money from sources such as:
- sponsorships from Greek and foreign foundations,
- grants from official bodies and International Organisations, such as UNESCO, the European Union and others
- supports local authorities
- donations from wealthy Greeks, expatriates of the diaspora, as well as philhellenic citizens all over the world, who would like to contribute to the implementation of the idea.
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Contact Strategy
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The communication strategy should be designed with the main objective, on the one hand, to maximise the publicity of the project and, on the other hand, to find the resources through:
- The creation of an International Public Relations Campaign, with the aim of generating global interest, informing and maintaining contacts with the international media.
- The mobilization of eminent Greek and international personalities, artists and celebrities, who will support the project internationally as its ambassadors.
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Examples – Optimal Best Practices
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To avoid confusion, it is worth mentioning just a few examples of landmark projects that have added glory and admiration to the cities – countries that undertook them:
- The new Library of Alexandria (www.bibalex.org)
- The Opera House of Sydney (www.sydneyoperahouse.com)
- The Museum Guggenheim in Bilbao (www.guggenheim.org)
- The New Acropolis Museum ( www.theacropolismuseum.gr)
but also many other wonders where they have been built have created significant cultural surpluses.
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Mediterranean Έacts ΕPeace
The supreme challenge is to consolidate the conviction that Rhodes can, in the long term, claim the reputation of the “Neutral Island of Peace”, a symbolic “Davos” for the peaceful resolution of disputes in the Mediterranean and beyond.
And through the semantic creation of the Colossus Revival project, to maximise extremely important benefits.
Rhodes, with its multicultural identity and its prominent strategic position at the crossroads of three continents, becomes an ideal place for bridging ideas and cultures, consolidating free dialogue and promoting the universal and timeless ideal of peace and brotherhood of peoples.
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MULTIDIMENSIONAL DEVELOPMENT ECOLOSSAL BUSINESS
As can be seen, the project is progressively developing along three major pillars with sustainability in mind:
- The first, in the sense of an admirable Architectural Landmark of the island, offered for healthy and sustainable tourist development.
- The second, in the sense of a pioneering Cultural Achievement of the 21st Century with the creation of a technologically advanced museum complex, which will incorporate Archaeological Research Spaces, Conference Centre, Concert Halls for international cultural events and happenings.
- The third, Diplomatic, which in the long term will aim to create a Mediterranean Venue of Peace on the island, thus offering significant benefits to our international relations.
Benefits and Advantages
Such an undertaking will have the potential to offer significant benefits to Greece on multiple levels, sending a message to the global community of the country’s dynamic presence in international developments and confirming the modern evolutionary perspective of Greek culture.
As a tourism project, ensures publicity and impact, repositioning Rhodes and Greece dynamically on the world map, creating a diversified demand for the destination, promoting economic and social development, helping to extend the tourist season and generating significant income.
As a cultural achievement, it attracts the interest of the world community, contributes to the exploitation of our National Treasures and contributes to the promotion of our cultural heritage.
As a work of diplomacy, is expected to be a resounding response to those who question the borders of Greece and the United Europe, strengthening our sense of national pride and making Rhodes a universal transmitter of messages of world peace at an international level.
STRATEGY FOR A SUSTAINABLE APPROACH TO THE PROJECT
The strategic positioning of the Colossus Revival project at the core of the sustainable approach becomes imperative.
It creates the appropriate conditions for our country to harmonize and contribute decisively to the development goals of sustainability and sustainability of the 2030 Agenda, established by the United Nations and adopted by the World Tourism Organization, UNESCO and the European Union.
The transformation of the world starts with our own transformation, the change we wish to bring to our place, through projects such as the one proposed.
As mentioned, it is an action plan that desires and seeks prosperity, peace, fraternity and the free expression and flow of ideas, with a specific target:
- the creation of an architectural project that is in harmony with the principles of sustainable philosophy and respects the natural, residential and cultural environment,
- the economic and social development of the country and the improvement of its standard of living, as it will provide countless jobs,
- promoting the “building” of a new, universal and collective intelligence, through partnerships between universities and institutions in many countries,
- ensuring equal access to educational activities linked to our culture, myths and history, tradition and values,
- the creation of a pioneering infrastructure, open to the whole world, through the philosophy of inclusion of all people without exclusion and discrimination,
- improving our country’s ranking in terms of its performance in innovative practices, compared to other countries,
- the promotion of peaceful and cooperative actions in order to promote Rhodes as a crossroads of culture and peace among peoples, through the creation of a Mediterranean Peace Chair.
- the transformation of the city of Rhodes as a creative city, which, according to the Creative Economy Report 2030, can be the catalyst for fragility, sustainable development and the restoration of the economic and cultural fabric of the region and Greece.
A VISION OF PEACE FOR A BETTER WORLD
We join our vision with that of the World Tourism Organization, the UN, UNESCO, and the European Union, in order to be able to converge on the universality of the overall solution to the global challenges (5Ps) of the 21st Century: the
Peace, the
Peace (Peace),People (People), of
Prosperity, Partnership and Planet to create a better future for all.
This project with a vision of peace in the Mediterranean can be a model worldwide for the establishment of a culture of peace through international cooperation, acting to achieve in particular Goals 16 “Peace and Justice” and 17 “Partnership for the Goals” of the 2030 Agenda. According to the UN Secretary General Mr.
Antonio Guterrez “The Sustainable Development Goals are the pathway to a fairer, more peaceful and prosperous world and a healthy planet and the greatest challenge for intergenerational solidarity.”
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| RHODE – Goddess of the Island of Rhodes |
RHODE was the goddess-nymph and eponym of the Aegean island of Rhodes. She was a daughter of Poseidon and the wife of Helios the Sun–the island’s patron god.
Rhode was identified by the Rhodians with the goddess Athena, and her seven sons with the Kouretes
Rhodos was a naiad, of whom the following legend is related. When the gods distributed among themselves the various countries of the earth, the island of Rhodes was yet covered by the waves of the sea. Helios was absent at the time; and as no one drew a lot for him, he was not to have any share in the distribution of the earth. But at that moment the island of Rhodes rose out of the sea, and with the consent of Zeus he took possession of it, and by the nymph of the isle he then became the father of seven sons, the Heliadae.3 Source
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In Greek mythology, Rhode[pronunciation?] (Ῥόδη) also known as Rhodos (Ancient Greek: Ῥόδος) was the sea nymph or goddess of the island of Rhodes.[1]
Though she does not appear among the lists of nereids in the Iliad XVIII or Bibliotheke 1.2.7, such an ancient island nymph in other contexts might gain any of various Olympian parentages: she was thought of as a daughter of Poseidon[2] with any of several primordial sea-goddesses— with whom she might be identified herself— notably Halia or Amphitrite.[3] Pindar even urges his hearers to “Praise the sea maid, daughter of Aphrodite, bride of Helios, this isle of Rhodes.“[4] “All three names— Halia, Aphrodite, Amphitrite, and furthermore also Kapheira—[5] must have been applied to one and the same great goddess“, Karl Kerenyi observes.[6]
In Rhodes, to which she gave her name, she was the consort of Helios, as Pindar says, and a co-protector of the island, which was the sole center of her cult. Her name was applied to the rose, which appeared on Rhodian coinage. (This is very important, Rosicrucians/The Red Rose and The White Rose of the War of the Roses in England.)
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The first inhabitants of Rhodes were identified by Hellenes as the Telchines. Helios made the island rise from the sea and with Rhode, fathered seven sons there,[7] the Heliadae: Ochimus, Cercaphus, Macareus,Actis, Tenages, Triopas, and Candalus) and one daughter, Electryone. Electryone died a virgin and the sons became legendary astronomers and rulers of the island, accounting for the cities among which it was divided. Rhode was worshipped on Rhodes in her own name,
as well as Halia, the embodiment of the “salt sea” or as the “white goddess”, Leucothea.
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Leucothea – From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia In Greek mythology, Leucothea (/ljuːˈkoʊθiə/; Greek: Λευκοθέα, translit. Leukothéa, lit. “white goddess”), sometimes also called Leucothoe (Greek: Λευκοθόη, translit. Leukothóē), was one of the aspects under which an ancient sea goddess was recognized, in this case as a transformed nymph. Mythology In the version sited at Rhodes, a much earlier mythic level is reflected in the genealogy: There, a nymph or goddess named Halia (“salty”)[a] plunged into the sea and became Leucothea. Her parents were the titans Thalassa and Pontus (or Uranus). She was a local nymph and one of the aboriginal Telchines of the island. Halia became Poseidon‘s wife and bore him Rhodos and six sons; their sons were maddened by Aphrodite in retaliation for an impious affront, assaulted their own mother Halia, and were confined in caves beneath the island by their father Poseidon; Halia cast herself into the sea, and became Leucothea. The people of Rhodes traced their mythic descent from the nymph Rhodos and the Sun god Helios.[1][2][3] |

The Colossus of Rhodes
One of the “Seven Wonders of the World” and the ancient forerunner of the Statue of Liberty, the Colossus of Rhodes remains an inspiring mystery.

After Alexander the Great’s death in 323 BC and while his rivalrous successors struggled against one another for power and lands, Antigonus I Monophthalmus (“The One-Eyed”) sent his son, Demetrius I Poliorcetes (“The Besieger”), to attack Rhodes in 305-304 BC, hoping to force the island to break its ties with Ptolemaic Egypt. When the siege failed, due to Rhodes’ strong defenses and the Egyptians’ clandestine provisioning of the island, Ptolemy I became known as Soter (Savior), a name given to him by the Rhodians.
To defeat the Rhodians, Poliorcetes had employed a full array of weaponry and equipment, including an enormous rolling siege tower, called a Helepolis (“City Destroying”) that was 40m high and 20m wide. The sides of this multi-storied machine were iron-plated. Openings in the plating allowed the firing of catapults and dart-throwers. Nevertheless, unintimidated, the Rhodians resisted and ultimately either forced the Helepolis’ withdrawal or caused it to become bogged down in ground covertly softened.
Giving up after a year-long siege, Poliorcetes departed Rhodes, abandoning his machines and many of his weapons – which the Rhodians promptly sold to finance the construction of a giant victory monument-cum-offering to their primary divine patron, Helios.
Chares of Lindos, a pupil of Lysippus, created the Colossus of Rhodes, taking twelve years to complete it at a cost of 300 gold talents – equivalent today to several million dollars. Historical sources give various heights for the Colossus (60-80 cubits). The average of these sources puts it at the same height (about 34m) as New York’s Statue of Liberty (not including her upraised arm). The ancient text, “On the Seven Wonders of the World,” ostensibly provides further details concerning the Colossus, but its author (“Philo of Byzantium”) – regardless of his eloquence (Chares “…made a god to equal the god, and…by his daring…had given the world a second sun to match the first…”) – has been shown to be later in date (3rd-4th c. AD) and unreliable as a source.
How Chares crafted the Colossus, therefore, with cast or hammered sections of bronze, remains a mystery. Iron braces were likely employed for internal reinforcement, but still the statue proved short-lived, ultimately collapsing during an earthquake in 226 BC. Noting its size, hollowness and construction, Pliny wrote: “Few men can clasp the thumb in their arms, and its fingers are larger than most statues. Where the limbs are broken asunder, vast caverns are seen yawning in the interior. Within it, too, are to be seen large masses of rock, by the weight of which the artist steadied it…”
Where the Colossus stood also remains a question. Medieval artists depict it astride the entrance to Rhodes’ port, one foot on the terminus of each breakwater. Technical considerations would have made this location impossible, but a distinctive circle of stones and finely-carved marble blocks reused in the 15th c. St. Nicholas Tower at the mouth of Mandraki harbor may indicate the base and position of the statue there. Alternatively, the Rhodian acropolis has also been proposed as a possible location.
The actual appearance of the Colossus poses further questions. A Rhodian relief, according to Andrew Stewart, suggests a figure resembling the Getty’s bronze Victorious Youth (300-100 BC). Furthermore, a special series of silver Rhodian didrachms depict the head of Helios with a rayed crown, which may have represented and paid homage to Helios the god represented by the newly erected Colossus. After the Colossus collapsed, the Rhodians followed oracular advice from Delphi and chose not to rebuild their monument. The fallen remains themselves became a tourist attraction; in the 7th c. AD, they were sold by the island’s Muslim overlords to a merchant from Edessa. Today, a debate rages in debt-torn Greece whether a new Colossus of Rhodes should be erected.
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Techne
In Ancient Greek philosophy, techne (Greek: τέχνη, romanized: tékhnē, lit. ‘art, skill, craft‘; Ancient Greek: [tékʰnɛː], Modern Greek: [ˈtexni]) is a philosophical concept that refers to making or doing.[1] Today, while the Ancient Greek definition of techne is similar to the modern definition and use of “practical knowledge“,[2] techne can include various fields such as mathematics, geometry,[3][4] medicine, shoemaking, rhetoric, philosophy, music, and astronomy.[4]
One of the definitions of techne led by Aristotle, for example, is “a state involving true reason concerned with production”.[5]
History of the term
Many Ancient Greek philosophers, such as Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle, had difficulty coming up with a single definition for techne and there is differentiation between the ways that these philosophers used the term.[6]
The word techne comes from the Greek word for art, skill, craft, and technique. The modern-day English word technology comes from the prefix techne and the suffix ology; both words are of Greek origin combined to mean “the practical application of knowledge”.[7] Techne in Ancient Greece was thought of as dangerous in its virtues by many philosophers, including Plato.[8] Arts such as paintings and sculptures were particularly thought to be unvirtuous because of their “third-hand [representation] of “true” reality and absolute beauty”.[8] Other philosophers, such as Aristotle, believed that techne was virtuous because it uses natural materials “to create objects unknown in nature” and therefore it “completes nature”.[8]
Ancient Greek Philosophers
Socrates
The Ancient Greek philosopher Xenophon wrote down conversations he had with Socrates in the Socratic works Memorabilia and Oeconomicus.[6] In both of these works, Socrates uses episteme and techne interchangeably.[6] Crafts that Socrates classifies as techne include harp playing, flute playing, dancing, wrestling, medicine, carpentry, ruling, generalship, housebuilding, running a household, farming, and mathematics.[6][9]
Plato

Plaster cast of Ancient Greek physician and patient from Wellcome Historical Medical Museum
The Ancient Greek Philosopher Plato often used episteme and techne interchangeably, much like Socrates.[6] This is because Plato was a student of Socrates and also wrote Socratic works.[10] Plato’s works define techne as activities such as medicine, geometry, politics, music, shipbuilding, carpentry, and generalship.[6] Plato’s dialogues introduce the idea of a practitioner connected to a craft, such as a physician with medicine.[11][12][13] Plato introduced the idea of techne as a way to explain aspects of life such as virtue.[6] This increased the complexity of the definition of techne, adding that crafts are separated by what the end product (telos) will be or what the activity accomplishes.[6] Plato’s writings also reveal that he believed the most important job of the practitioner was to be able to explain what they were doing and why they were doing it.[6][11]
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| telos as the root for the word telephone The root word “telos” originates from Ancient Greek, meaning “end” or “goal”. It signifies the ultimate object or aim of an action or process. In the context of the word “telephone,” telos combines with the Greek word “tēle,” meaning “far,” and “phōnē,” meaning “voice,” together meaning “distant voice”. This reflects the idea of communication over a distance, where the “telos” refers to the goal of reaching a distant voice. Online Etymology Dictionary |
| Telos (/ˈtɛlɒs, ˈtiːlɒs/;[1] Ancient Greek: τέλος, romanized: télos, lit. ‘end, purpose, goal‘)[2] is a term used by the philosopher Aristotle to refer to the final cause of a natural organ or entity, or of human art. The Greek word telos is the root of the modern term “teleology“, the study of purposiveness or of objects with a view to their aims, purposes, or intentions. Teleology is central in Aristotle’s work on plant and animal biology, and in his analysis of human ethics, through his theory of the four causes. Aristotle’s notion that everything has a telos also gave rise to epistemology.[3]
Telos has been consistently used in the writings of Aristotle, in which the term, on several occasions, denotes ‘goal’.[4] It is considered synonymous to teleute (‘end’), particularly in Aristotle’s discourse about the plot-structure in Poetics.[4] The philosopher went as far as to say that telos can encompass all forms of human activity.[5] One can say, for instance, that the telos of warfare is victory, or the telos of business is the creation of wealth. Within this conceptualization, there are telos that are subordinate to other telos, as all activities have their own respective goals. |
Aristotle

Model of Ancient Greek Trireme in Athens, Greece
Aristotle does not use techne and episteme interchangeably as Socrates and Plato did before him. He distinguishes clearly between the two terms.[6] Aristotle includes techne and episteme in his five virtues of intellect: episteme, techne, phronesis, sophia, and nous.[6][14] In Nicomachean Ethics,
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nous(n.)
English in philosophy 1670s as “the perceptive and intelligent faculty.” The Greek word is of uncertain origin |
Aristotle wrote that techne not only meant craft but also production (for example: the production of a ship).[14] Richard Parry wrote that Aristotle believed techne aims for good and forms an end, which could be the activity itself or a product formed from the activity.[6] Aristotle used health as an example of an end that is produced by the techne of medicine.[6] Like Plato’s beliefs about the importance of a practitioner being able to explain their craft, Aristotle believed that the practitioner with the knowledge of techne could teach their skill because they not only had the wisdom of the craft but also understood the outcome.[6][15]
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Resounding The Faith
A Catechetical Perspective on Scripture and Other Faith Issues
Background Information:
Secular culture: This term illustrates the creative process of making something appear and the bringing forth of something. Expertise, knowledge, and skills become practically applied in various genres (politics, literature, rhetoric, philosophy, and the arts). The value of techne is the end product. Plato’s Republic provides the basis for the philosophers’ craft of ruling in the city. Aristotle uses health as an example of an end that is produced from the techne (skill) of medicine.
Old Testament: Interestingly, the Old Testament culture really did not have an applicable term pertaining to the fine arts. It was only until the 20th century that such a Hebrew term was developed. Perhaps, the traditional Old Testament cultural values did not have the need for such a term. It seems that the Aramaic term umanut, meaning craftsmanship, provides the closest meaning to the Greek word techne. This fragrant powder, expertly prepared, is to be salted and so kept pure and sacred (Ex. 30:35). The various artisans who were doing the work made the tabernacle with its ten sheets woven of fine linen (Ex.36:8). You have available workers, stonecutters, masons, carpenters, and experts in every craft (2 Chr.22:15). They continue to sin, making for themselves molten images, silver idols according to their skill, all of them work of artisans (Hos.13:2).
New Testament: Essentially, this term refers to a craft, skill, or trade. In Athens, Paul appeals to the religiosity of Greeks, who worship various gods, including an unknown God. Paul mentions that God’s divinity cannot be fashioned by gold, silver, stone, or human art and imagination. Paul, a tentmaker by profession, supports his ministry with his craft. In many languages there is no special term for craft.
Scripture:
“Since therefore we are the offspring of God, we ought not to think that the divinity is like an image fashioned from gold, silver, or stone or human art and imagination.” Act.17:29
Paul mentions that God cannot be limited or defined by images created by artisans.
“And because he practiced the same trade, stayed with them and worked, for they were tentmakers by trade.” Act.18:3
Paul, a tentmaker, supported his ministry with his craft. Paul also associated with Aquila and Priscilla, whom were also tentmakers.
Conclusion:
Technique, technical, art, artisan, artistic, artistry
I would say that the ancient Greco-Roman secular culture has made a profoundly great contribution to developing the skills (talents) in various genres such as philosophy, rhetoric, literature, sciences, and the arts. This is easily understood, considering all of the geniuses from ages past.
It is probably not surprising that the simple, agrarian Old Testament culture would have no need for a term for the fine arts. This society would be more concerned with trades, craftsmanship, and apprenticeship. Even in the New Testament, it was important that Jesus learned carpentry from His stepfather Joseph. Even Paul supported his ministry through his trade of tent making.
Tekhne: Greek Spirit Of Art, Craft, And Technical Skill
In Greek stories, you find a collection of spirits called daimones. Each one does something different. Some guide through life’s happenings, and others act as go-betweens for gods and people.
The significance of Tekhne in Greek mythology lies in its embodiment of the divine spirit of art, craft, and technical skill, serving as the foundation for human creativity and innovation. Ancient Greeks interpreted Tekhne as the spirit or daimon of skill, craft, and artistry that imbued everyday life and creative endeavors with divine influence.
In Greek tales, the hammer, anvil, chisel, and lyre symbolize the deeper essence of skill and creativity known as Tekhne,
| Symbol | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Hammer | Power, strength, and skill in making things |
| Anvil | Being steady and a base for craft |
| Chisel | Exact work and fine art-making |
| Lyre | Playing music well and making nice art |

telo-
FROM THE PRIMORDIAL SOUP?
Seems like every day now we hear about some new marvel. Some new invention. Some new discovery. I must remind you that the Word of God says “there is NOTHING NEW UNDER THE SUN.” Ecclesiastes 1:9 That which has been is that which will be, And that which has been done is that which will … Click Here to Read More
Who Were the Telchines?
The Telchines were malevolent wizards and respected artisans who forged weapons for the gods and who were feared for their destructive magic.
The Telchines were thought to be the original inhabitants of the island of Rhodes. They were also present on Ceos and Crete. Hesiod called them malignant wizards, and Ovid celebrated their legendary skill as artisans. They were described as fish-like creatures and demons who acted as guardians and nurtured Poseidon and Zeus. Although they often helped the gods, their hubris and lust for power eventually led to their downfall.
The Telchines were strange creatures associated with the sea and often referred to as fish children. They were known to have fin-like hands and dog-like heads. Descriptions of them are similar to those of merfolk, with some accounts stating that they had a fish’s lower body and a human-like upper body. Their skin was described as rough, like echinoids or sea urchins, which are hard-shelled sea animals with venomous spikes. (As the Telchines were by all accounts shapeshifters, it is not surprising to find conflicting stories about their appearance. They could take any shape they desired.)
| The Telchines were regarded as the cultivators of the soil and ministers of the gods and as such they came from Crete to Cyprus and from thence to Rhodes[13] or they proceeded from Rhodes to Crete and Boeotia.[14] Rhodes, and in it the three towns of Cameirus, Ialysos, and Lindos (whence the Telchines are called Ialysii[15]), which was their principal seat and was named after them Telchinis[13] (Sicyon also was called Telchinia[16]) and by some accounts, their children were highly worshiped as gods in the said three ancient Rhodian towns. The Telchines abandoned their homes because they foresaw that the island would be inundated (which it was a part of it remains underwater, Atlantis?) and thence they scattered in different directions; Lycus went to Lycia, where he built the temple of the Lycian Apollo. This god had been worshiped by them at Lindos (Apollôn Telchinios) and Hera at Ialysos and Cameiros (Hêra telchinia);[17] and Athena at Teumessus in Boeotia bore the surname of Telchinia.[14] Nymphs also are called after them Telchiniae. Source |
| So we see that the Telchines were shapeshifters and that the God/King Lycus of Lycia was a Telchine also a shapeshifter as we have discussed before he was known as a WEREWOLF! |
However, the Telchines were not limited to the sea and were also said to be able to walk and live on land. Due to the limited information available about the Telchines, descriptions of them are fluid and varied, allowing them to adapt to different settings and functions, underwater and on land, depending on the account.
The Telchines are complex creatures with both benevolent and malevolent qualities. Their duality can be attributed to their two most prominent features: their formidable magical abilities, often referred to as demonic, and their unmatched metallurgic and artistic skills.
The Telchines had the ability to control nature itself, and their powers were believed to be on par with those of the mighty Olympians. They could create lightning and snow, manipulate the seas, and even bring about devastating earthquakes. Furthermore, the Telchines could produce a poisonous substance that could harm all living things.
In addition to their power, the Telchines could change their shape at will. However, their use of magic was mostly malevolent. They were known to cause harm and curse innocent people, making them a destructive force to be reckoned with. The Telchines were accused of committing a heinous act by mixing the waters of the Styx with sulfur in their hands and pouring it over the fertile fields of Rhodes. This act resulted in the destruction of all plant and animal life on the island.
The Telchines were known not only for their skills in metallurgy but also for stone sculpting. They were the first to create marble statues of the gods, and the ancient Greeks highly regarded their masterpieces. According to the historian Diodorus Siculus, the Telchines were responsible for crafting statues of Apollo and Hera on the island of Rhodes in Lindus and Camirus, respectively.
Who were the Telchines?
The Telchines were mysterious sorcerers and metalworkers of Greek mythology who lived on the island of Rhodes.
Telchines were direct descendants of the original primal gods and some of the earliest beings depicted in Greek mythology.
In some myths, they are nurturers and caregivers, in others they are quite demonic. According to some descriptions, they had magical powers over the heavens, able to summon storms at will. They used these powers for evil and guarded their magical secrets very carefully, something that certainly did not sit well with the gods.
It was the Telchines who were “the discoverers of certain arts and that they introduced other things which are useful for the life of mankind. They were skilled metalworkers and crafted sophisticated tools of bronze and iron, such as sickles and other tools.
It is when the Telchines combined their metallurgical abilities with their magic, however, that they were at their most powerful. They created Poseidon’s trident, the sickle that was horrifically used on Uranus, and a cursed necklace, all of which made them principal, albeit hidden, characters in some of the most popular Greek myths.
The myths that have survived describe them as smart, skilled, industrious, and powerful creatures. The magic and skills they possessed affected many different critical facets of Greek society.
The Greeks were seafarers, and a great number of myths describe storms and shipwrecks at the hands of various sea monsters. The Telchines, who had power over the sea, were blamed for sudden storms, although they don’t seem to have gotten much credit for calm seas.
Their ability to control the weather also affected agriculture, and when floods or droughts appeared, Greek farmers believed it was the work of the Telchines.
Other accounts credit them as the first to construct statues to honor the gods and talented metallurgists who created many of the gods’ weapons, such as Poseidon’s legendary trident.
In a demonstration of both their artistic skill and their ingenuity, they were also the first to erect statues in honor of the gods, a tradition that became extremely prevalent in Greek society and even more so in later Roman times.
There is a great deal of consensus on why they were eventually punished. For one reason or another, they mixed Styx water and sulphur in order to kill the plants and livestock on their native island of Rhodes. This obviously caused great harm to its human inhabitants.
The Telchines were wiped off the face of the earth.
The Telchines were largely removed from the written record. Some scholars say that early Greek authors, such as Pindar, largely excluded them because they cast a bad light on those from Rhodes and didn’t fit his larger morality goals for the myths he was retelling.[6] Strabo says they were maligned and erased because so many were jealous of the Telchines’ awe-inspiring craftsmanship and magical powers.
Or perhaps it was just a matter of the myth’s popularity in ancient times. Would you rather hear that the seas were controlled by the mighty Poseidon or some fishy dog creatures?
Myths Involving the Telchines
If you think of Greek mythology as one enormous movie, the Telchines are the production crew. They’re the ones creating the sets, taking care of the lighting, and doing all the little things necessary to make the film. They might briefly appear on screen as an extra, but almost all of what they do is behind the scenes.
Consider their role in the following myths.
Castration of Uranus
Cronus, considered one of the most evil Greek gods, lusted after the power possessed by his father Uranus. After Uranus and Gaia had some arguments over how to raise their children—Uranus thought some of them should be banished to the depths of the Hades—Gaia decided to help Cronus take the throne.
To do so, she and Cronus would need a formidable weapon. They went to the Telchines, who crafted and designed an enormous sickle of unimaginable power.
Gaia asked Uranus to meet her, but had Cronus hiding nearby. At her signal, Cronus leapt from his hiding place and castrated his father with the sickle. Uranus was never quite the same, and Cronus assumed the throne.
The Birth of Poseidon
Poseidon’s father, Cronus, was not only a castrator, but he also had a penchant for eating his children if he saw them as a threat to his throne. Poseidon’s mother Rhea had to be quite creative in hiding any offspring, so she told Cronus that she’d given birth to a horse instead of a god.
Cronus apparently bought it, and Rhea spirited away her real child, Poseidon, to Rhodes, where she asked the Telchines to raise him.
Poseidon’s Trident
One of the first images that springs to mind when you think of Greek gods is probably the mighty Poseidon emerging from the sea with his trident aloft.
Guess who made that trident. That’s right, the Telchines.
The Telchines crafted the trident out of gold and brass and imbued it with the power to control the sea and the earth. With that trident, Poseidon could create rivers, start earthquakes, and control the winds and seas.
Well, the Telchines could not possibly imbue the Trident with those kinds of powers unless they had those powers themselves. Apparently, Poseidon was not born with them, or given them ZEUS or JUPITER or even PONTUS. But, it was the TELCHINES who gave him those powers.
Necklace of Harmonia
Telchines were the creators of the necklace.
The necklace carried both an enticing blessing and a heinous curse. Whoever wore it would look eternally young and beautiful, but also face dire consequences.
Despite the Telchines’ significance, their relative obscurity means they only appear as bit characters in most literature and arts.
Modern depictions of Telchines
A small but growing resurgence of interest in the Telchines is reflected in fantasy fiction, animated series, and games.
Popular author Rick Riordan also introduced his version of the Telchines to his millions of readers in a particularly modern way:
A telkhine was hunched over a console, but he was so involved with his work, he didn’t notice us. He was about five feet tall, with slick black seal fur and stubby little feet. He had the head of a Doberman, but his clawed hands were almost human. He growled and muttered as he tapped on his keyboard. Maybe he was messaging his friends on uglyface.com.
– Rick Riordan, The Last Olympian
Riordan’s books have inspired graphic novels, films and television series, and fan fiction, so perhaps a resurgence of the myths of the Telchines is soon upon us.
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No Rest for the Wicked
Magicians, artists and craftsmen, the Telchines are the proverbial jacks-of-all-trades – yet they are also atypical masters of all. Considered by most ancient authors to be malevolent daimons of the sea, the Telchines have no one specific role in mythological stories but rather serve to enhance chaos and mayhem. Though they are rarely mentioned directly in what survives of ancient texts, when they are referenced, their destructive magic far outweighs the technical capabilities of these mythical creatures.
The Origins of the Telchines
The beginnings of the Telchines (Telkhines in Greek) remains up for debate, as is often the case with ancient mythologies. While some Greek and Roman writers thought the Telchines were siblings of the Furies (aka Erinyes) and born of the genital blood of Kronos’ father Ouranos, most tend to adhere to the likelihood that they were children of Thalassa, the sea.
It can also be argued that in a way the Telchines were the children of both, as Ouranos’ blood falling into the ocean is what birthed Aphrodite, and it falling on the earth birthed the Furies; however, this does not appear explicitly stated. Nevertheless, the Telchines play an early role in the life of the Olympians, the grandchildren of Ouranos, as they aided the goddess Kapheira in the raising of Poseidon, their future king of the sea
According to Eustathius and John Tzetzes, these daimons often used their powers over the natural world to cause mayhem. As magicians, the Telchines were able to use the forces of nature as the gods could. They are recorded as being able to “produce earthquakes, lightnings, and storms, and, like Proteus, change their shapes at will.”
The Telchines of Crete were masters of magic, and part of this art is the skill of concealment and word play which they had perfected. Hence, the magical Telchnines would be known throughout history over the last three thousand years by a multitude of various names such as the Curetes (Kouretes), Cappadocians, Corbanytes, Phoenicians, Syrians or White Syrians, Sea Peoples, Philistines (or Palestinians) and the Minoans; just to name some. Strabo had written in his book ‘Geography’, the connection between the Telchines, Curetes and the Corbanytes;
The people and priesthood, known under one of their names as the Telchines, had originated on the island of Crete and were placed in charge of protecting Zeus (Jupiter or Jove) by his mother Rhea from his vengeful father, Cronus (Saturn). Rhea had hidden the infant Zeus in a cave on the island and then placed him in the care of these priests known by many names. I had written about the people known as the Curetes, who are also called the Telchnines and the island of Crete in my article, Crete: The Lost Island of Atlantis;
Herodotus had said that the Curetes had come to Crete with the Phoenician Prince Cadmus. In Latin Crete is called, “Cappadocia or Cappadocian” who were known as a large tribe of the Magi and are also called fire-kindlers. Herodotus tells us that the name of the Cappadocians was applied to them by the Persians, while the Greeks had simply called them, “Syrians” or “White Syrians.” The Latin name of the Cappadocians were known as “the men of Caphtor”, who we can call today, “the men of Crete.”
This same story of Zeus and Crete, is almost the exact same story like that of King Melissus of Crete who first began the
practice of sacrifice to the Gods and introduced new rights and sacred ceremonies to the priesthood. Melissus was the eldest and leader of the nine Curetes of Crete. The meaning of the name Melisseus is “bee-man,” and another form of Melissus, in Cretan means, “honey-man.” (Could this be the source of the “HIVE” mentality for control over the masses?) He had two daughters, Amalthea and Melissa who nursed the child Jupiter, and fed him with goat’s milk and honey.
19th century English lexicographer, Sir William Smith Kt. had described the mythology surrounding the Telchines as a family or tribe that had come to Crete and which represents three different skill sets in his book, “A Smaller Classical Dictionary of Biography, Mythology, and Geography;”
TELCHINES (-um), a family or a tribe said to have been descended from Thai a sea or Poseidou (Neptmie). They are represented in 3 different aspects:
(1.) As cultivators of the soil and ministers of the gods. As such they came from Crete to Cyprus, and from thence to Rhodes, where they founded Camtrns, Ialysus, and Lindus. Rhodes, which was named after them Telchinis, was abandoned by them, because they foresaw that the island would be inundated. Poseidon was intrusted to them by Rhea, and they brought him up in conjunction with Caphira, a daughter of Oceanus. Rhea, Apollo, and Zeus (Jupiter), however, are also described as hostile to the Telchines. Apollo is said to have assumed the shape of a wolf, and to have thus destroyed the Telchines, and Zeus to have overwhelmed them by an inundation.
(2.) As sorcerers and envious daemons. Their very eyes and aspect are said to have been destructive (possibly the source of the “EVIL EYE”?).They had it in their power to bring out hail, rain, and snow, and to assume any form they pleased (shapeshifters): they further mixed Stygian water with sulphur, in order thereby to destroy animals and plants
(3.) As artists, for they are said to have invented useful arts and institutions, and to have made images of the gods.(They started the practice of idol worship, and creating statues, which God forbids) They worked in brass and iron, and made the sickle of Cronos and the trident of Poseidon.
ETYMOLOGY OF TELCHINES
The Greek word Telchines is a compound word combining the three words, Tel, chi and nes. The word tel or tele, a form of tele, meaning “afar, far off.” The word Chi is the 22nd letter of the Greek alphabet, (X) pronounced /’ka?/ or /’ki?/ in English. Chi or x is a symbol or number for Christ whose name in Greek (XpiVros, “Christos”) begins with this letter which is often used to abbreviate the name Christ, as in the holiday Christmas (Xmas). Christos means “anointed one” or “messiah.” In Plato’s Timaeus, it is explained that the two bands which form the soul of the world cross each other like the letter X. The word “nes or ines” in Spanish is “Inés,( orEenés),” which in Latin is the name Ynez and in French Agnes. Agnes \ag-nes\ as a girl’s name is pronounced AG-ness. It is the Latin form of the Greek name Hagnes, meaning “pure, holy.”
Hence, they were the original anointed priesthood from far off (The East) who were the pure and holy priests placed in charge of our savior (Poseidon?). They were and are still in charge of religion, magic and commerce.
CONCLUSION
On the island of Crete, the Telchines had perfected their skills in art, religion, and magic; they had also invented various methods of pharmaekia which is the Greek word for sorcery. They would eventually profane the gifts of the Gods, by turning their white magic into black by poisoning nature, animals and humans. For many centuries, the Telchnines had ruled from Crete before spreading their culture of magic and war to various parts of the world. The Greek historian Homer had said, “various tribes jostled each other in that island,” and eventually the gods had killed the Telchines for their magical crimes against humanity and nature, particularly, when they produced a mixture of Stygian water and sulfur, which killed animals and plants. Crete would be destroyed, along with all its inhabitants from the result of a massive volcanic erruption that brought earthquakes and floods to the island.
However, there would be some survivors of the flood. One of them would be the God of Fire, Hephaestus who became Vulcan in Rome, and was also known as the biblical Tubal Cain. Tubal Cain and his sons would spread out around the world, and who the first century Jewish Historian, Josephus Flavius described in “The Antiquities of the Jews;”
Nay, even while Adam was alive, it came to pass that the posterity of Cain became exceedingly wicked, every one successively dying one after the other, more wicked than the former. They were intolerable in war, and vehement in robberies; and if any one were slow to murder people, yet was he bold in his profligate behaviour, in acting unjustly, and doing injury for gain.
Tubal Cain had descended from Cain, the son of Lamech and Zillah, and the brother of Naamah. Tubal is said to be the last soul survivor of the race of Cain after the flood. The Sons of Tubal Cain, his descendants are first recorded in the inscriptions of Tiglath-pileser I, by the King of Assyria in approximately the year 1100 BC. Later they are also reported by Tukulti-ninurta II, Ashurnasipal II, Sargon and Shalmaneserr III, and are mentioned as the Mushki.
The Mushki had become the founders of Moscow in modern-day Russia. A subject for a future article.
MORE SUPPORTING RESEARCH
An Historical Account of the Heathen Gods and Heroes: By William King page 24 –
Of Vesta, Rhea, Ops or Cybele, the Wife of Saturn.
IT is no easy Matter to distinguish between this Vesta, and her Mother, of whom Mention has been made before, and another Vesta, who was a Virgin, and her Daughter. The Poetical Historians, after their usual Custom, attributing to one the Character and the Actions of the other.
This Goddess had various Names, as Magna Mater, Mater Deerum, Pafithea, the Great Mother, and Mother of all the Gods; as she represented the Earth, Die was by the Latins called Ops, from the Help and Assistance she brings to all things in the World. The Greeks called her Rhea, from the many Blessings that flow from her continually, and therefore a Sow was sacrificed to her to denote her Fruitsulness; she was highly honour’d in Phrygia, and receiv’d many Names from diverse Places in that Country, as Cybtle, Dyndimene, Dea Pastmuntia, Idea, Mygdonia, Bererynthia; her greatest Magnificence uses to appear when she makes her Progress through the Cities of Phrygia; she rides in her Chariot drawn by Lions, her Head crown’d with Towers, and is adorn’d with all the beauteous Objects the Earth produces, and attended by an hundred Celestial Gods, being all of them her own Divine Offspring.
The Priests of this Goddess were the Idœi Dafiili, the Cut et es or Cory han tes, and the Telchines, who were all of the same Kindred and Family.
The Matt DaSHli were the ancient Inhabitants of Crete, and had their Original from Mount Ida in Phrygia, and were called Daclili from being Ten in Numher, according to that of the Fingers. They carried their Rites and Mysteries into Samotbracia, and were said to have found out the use of Fire, to have discovered the nature of Iron, Brass, and others Metals, and to have invented many other things of great Use and Advantage to mankind, and that they were therefore reputed as Gods or Dæmons.
The Curetes were descended from the Da&M; they first taught Men how to manage Flocks of Sheep, and to tame and breed Herds of other Cattle, to gather Honey, to live in Societies, to hunt, cast Darts, use Swords, Targets and Helmets, of which they were the Inventors; to these Curetes Rhea committed the Care of Jupiter, to preserve him from his Father Saturn; they by dancing in Arms, and clashing of their Weapons to the sounds of Pipes, Drums and Cymbals, made such a Noise as might drown the Cries of the Infant God. Hepaclidcs Ponticus says the Curetes born in Crete were the first Mortals that appeared in brazen Armour, and that their Rendezvous was in Eubæa, that they had the Education of “Jupiter, became afterwards his Fellow draiers m his Wars, and at last placed him in his Father’s Kingdom.
Rhea had other Priests in Crete, who afterwards transplanted themselves to Rhodes; they were call’d the Telthines, and were the Offspring of Thalajsa, or the Sea; they together with Caphira, Daughter of Oceanus, had the Education of Neptune, who was committed to them by this Goddess; for this careful Mother is said to have preserved Neptune and Pluto, as well as Jupiter, from their ‘devouring Father. These Telchines were reported to have been Magicians, able to transform themselves into diverse Shapes, and to raise Winds and Tempests pells at their Pleasure, others thought them Dæmons prefiding over the Winds; others, that they were the Winds themselves, such as were in the Heavens, at Sea, and in the Caverns of the Earth, every where conducing to the Product of Beings, and to the healthful Support of them, but that these Winds wou’d sometimes destroy the Labour of Mankind, and seem to threaten the Overthrow of Nature, when they burst forth in their Rage and Fury. These Telchines had another Character of being great Artists, and were said to have invented many usesul Things, particularly the making of Statues, and setting’ up the Images of the Gods,
The Corybcntes were of the same Original as the Curetes, and the peculiar Priests of Cybele the Great Mother in the Island of Samothrace, were they celebrated the Mysteries of the Cabin, which were conceal’d with a sacred Silence; these Gods were call’d Cabiri, or Omnipotent, from a most ancient word Cabir which had that Signification; they were four in Number, who had mystick Names, but were the same as Ceres, Proserpine Pinto and Mercury, tho’ Jupiter and Bacchus are thought to have been the two first of the Cabiri. Dardanus, the Son of Jupiter and ElcElra, brought the Samothraiian Rites into Phrygia, where Cyhele, Widow to his Brother Jef.nn, who being belov’d by Ceres, was receiv’d among the Gods, call’d the Goddess Rhea after her own Name, and gave the ancient Priests the Curetes the Name of Cory hantes from her own Son Coryhas. ‘
The Phrygians report that Mæones heretofore relgn’d in Phrygia, that he married Dyndima, and by her had a Daughter, call’d Cybele, which she expos’d in the Mountain Cyhelus, that she was nourished there by Lionesses and wild Beasts, till found by some Shepherdesses; as she grew in Years
Archaic England: An Essay in Deciphering Prehistory By Harold Bayley page 493 –
In Candia or Talchinea, the Cabiri were worshipped as the Telchines, and as chin or khan meant in Asia Minor Priest as well as King, and as the offices of Priest and King were anciently affiliated, the term talchin (which as we have seen was applied to St. Patrick) meant seemingly tall or chief King-Priest. The custom of Priest-Kings adopting the style and titles of their divinities renders it probable that the historical Telchins were worshipped as archetypal Talchin.
The original Telchins are described by Diodorus, as first inhabiting Rhodes, and the Colossus of Rhodes was probably an image of the divine Tall King or Chief King. It is related that Rhea entrusted the infant Neptune to the care of the Telchines who were children of the sea, and that the child sea-god was reared by them in conjunction with Caphira or Cabira, the daughter of Oceanus.
“The Telchines…were masters of magic, and part of this art is the skill of concealment and word play which they had perfected.”
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Table of Contents
The Role of the Telchines in the Gigantomachy: The Sea Sorcerers’ Impact
I. Introduction
The Gigantomachy, a significant event in Greek mythology, represents the epic struggle between the Olympian gods and the giants, who sought to overthrow the established order of divine rule. This conflict not only showcased the might of the gods but also highlighted the intricate relationships among various mythological beings. Among these beings were the Telchines, enigmatic sea sorcerers whose influence and contributions during the Gigantomachy warrant exploration.
This article aims to delve into the role of the Telchines, examining their origins, abilities, and the lasting impact they had on the Gigantomachy and Greek mythology as a whole. By understanding who the Telchines were and how they interacted with both the gods and the giants, we gain insights into their significance in this grand mythological narrative.
II. The Mythological Background of the Telchines
A. Origins and Characteristics of the Telchines
The Telchines are said to be the offspring of either the sea god Oceanus or the primordial deity Pontus, depending on the mythological source. They are often depicted as having the ability to shape-shift and wield control over the elements, particularly water and storms. Traditionally, they were known as skilled craftsmen, creating magical artifacts and possessing knowledge of various sorceries.
B. Their Connection to the Sea and Poseidon
The Telchines were closely associated with the sea, often residing in the island of Rhodes. As worshippers of Poseidon, they were believed to have a direct connection to the god of the sea, who favored them for their abilities to manipulate the waters and craft weapons. Their domain over the ocean allowed them to have an influential role in maritime mythology, marking them as significant figures in the pantheon of sea deities.
C. The Telchines’ Reputation as Sorcerers and Craftsmen
Renowned for their magical prowess, the Telchines were feared and respected throughout the ancient world. They were credited with the creation of various mystical objects, including:
- Tridents and other implements wielded by Poseidon
- Magical weapons used by the gods
- Amulets and charms for protection against evil
Their skills in craftsmanship and sorcery earned them a dual reputation as both creators and potential threats, depending on their allegiances and interactions with other mythological beings.
III. The Gigantomachy: A Brief Overview
A. Definition and Significance of the Gigantomachy
The Gigantomachy was a cosmic battle symbolizing the struggle between order and chaos. The giants, born from Gaia (the Earth), sought to challenge the Olympian gods, leading to a series of fierce confrontations. This conflict served not only as a narrative of divine power but also as an allegory for natural forces and the balance between humanity, nature, and the divine.
B. Key Players in the Conflict: Gods vs. Giants
In the Gigantomachy, the primary figures included:
- The Olympian gods, led by Zeus, who fought against the giants
- The giants, formidable beings born from Gaia, who aimed to overthrow the gods
- The Telchines, whose role fluctuated between allies of the gods and neutral entities
The conflict was characterized by intense battles and the use of magical artifacts, showcasing the importance of divine and magical intervention in the resolution of cosmic disputes.
C. The Role of the Telchines in the Broader Context of Greek Mythology
The Telchines’ involvement in the Gigantomachy highlights their significance within the mythological hierarchy. As intermediaries between the gods and the giants, they navigated the complexities of divine politics, often swaying the outcomes of battles through their sorcerous abilities. Their presence in the Gigantomachy exemplifies the interconnectedness of various mythological themes and the importance of craftsmanship and magic within the larger narrative of Greek mythology.
IV. Contributions of the Telchines to the Gigantomachy
A. Magical Artifacts and Weapons Crafted by the Telchines
During the Gigantomachy, the Telchines contributed significantly by crafting powerful artifacts that aided the Olympian gods. Some notable creations include:
- Zeus’s thunderbolts, which became a symbol of his power
- Aegis, a protective shield often associated with Athena
- Weapons that enhanced the abilities of the gods, giving them an edge in battle
These artifacts were essential in turning the tide of battle in favor of the gods, showcasing the Telchines’ importance as craftsmen.
B. Their Role in Supporting the Olympian Gods
The Telchines were not merely creators of magical objects; they also actively participated in the conflict. Their alignment with the Olympians was strategic, as they understood the stakes involved in the battle against the giants. By using their magical powers to aid the gods, they provided critical support, enabling the Olympians to combat the formidable giants more effectively.
C. Specific Incidents of Telchine Intervention During the Battle
Historical accounts of the Gigantomachy often highlight moments of Telchine intervention, including:
- Casting spells that disrupted the giants’ plans
- Creating illusions to confuse their enemies
- Summoning storms that hindered the giants’ movements
These interventions were crucial in maintaining the balance of power during the tumultuous battles, illustrating the Telchines’ strategic importance.
V. The Telchines’ Relationship with the Giants
A. Allegiances and Rivalries in the Gigantomachy
The Telchines’ position during the Gigantomachy was complex. While they aligned with the Olympians, their motivations were not entirely clear-cut. Some myths suggest that certain Telchines had sympathies towards the giants, leading to a web of alliances and rivalries that characterized the conflict.
B. The Telchines’ Role as Neutral Parties or Allies
In some narratives, the Telchines are portrayed as neutral parties, choosing to observe rather than directly engage in the conflict. This neutrality allowed them to maintain their influence and protect their interests, as both sides recognized their power and sought their favor. Their duality as both allies and potential foes added layers to their role in the Gigantomachy.
C. Consequences of Their Actions in Relation to the Giants
The actions of the Telchines during the Gigantomachy had significant consequences. By siding with the Olympians, they ensured the defeat of the giants, which solidified their status among the gods. However, this decision also led to their eventual downfall, as the giants sought revenge, and the Telchines faced dire consequences in the aftermath of the conflict.
VI. Analysis of the Telchines’ Magical Abilities
A. Types of Sorcery Employed by the Telchines
The Telchines were known for their diverse range of magical abilities. Their sorcery included:
- Weather manipulation, allowing them to summon storms and control ocean currents
- Illusion creation, helping them deceive enemies and alter perceptions
- Enchantments that could empower weapons and artifacts
This variety of skills made them versatile and formidable within the context of Greek mythological conflicts.
B. Key Spells and Their Effects on the Gigantomachy
Several specific spells attributed to the Telchines played pivotal roles in the Gigantomachy. For example:
- A spell to enhance the strength and speed of the Olympian gods, giving them an edge in battle
- Incantations that created barriers against the giants, protecting the gods from harm
- Spells that summoned sea creatures to aid in the battles, turning the tide of conflict
These spells not only showcased the Telchines’ magical prowess but also their strategic importance in the overall outcome of the Gigantomachy.
C. Comparisons with Other Mythological Sorcerers
When comparing the Telchines to other mythological sorcerers, such as Circe and Medea,
Abstract
The origins of architectural craftsmanship in ancient Greece are to be found in the archaic arts of tectonics. The first Greek architects, appearing under that name around the 6th century BC, rose out of and based their work on this age-old tectonic tradition, which semantically underwent a transformation during the time from Homer to Plato, the latter relegating the tektones to a lower rank in the order of craftsmanship. Through a detailed reading of the ancient Greek testimonies of the tectonic tradition, the paper demonstrates that in the Homeric tradition the tektones were hailed as versatile, first-rate craftsmen who created wonders out of matter, but in classical times they fell from their high status of old. In Plato’s writings tectonics ends up at the lower end of the epistemological and ontological scale.
Hector went to the fine (kala) house of Alexandros. He’d built (eteuxe) it himself with fertile Troy’s best craftsmen (aristoi tektones). (Iliad VI 313–15)
Every architect (architektōn), too, is a ruler of workmen (ergatōn archōn), not a workman himself. (Statesman 259e)
More than three centuries separate these two quotations by Homer and Plato, and during that time the semantics of the ancient Greek words tektōn (roughly, craftsman) and architektōn (architect) underwent a profound change. In fact, the word architektōn does not appear in any of the Homeric texts handed down to us, and there may be no equivalent word for architecture in ancient Greek. Stephen Parcell claims that ‘to speak of “the architecture of ancient Greece” — or even “architecture as a technē” — would be an anachronism’ (Parcell 2012: 24).
Ancient texts do, however, refer explicitly to architektonikē technē, so conceiving of architecture as a technē, or craft, is not wholly anachronistic.1 If we focus not on technē alone but rather on the concept of tectonics, the origins of architectural craftsmanship will crystallise. As we shall see, the word ‘architecture’ was not used in the earliest archaic tradition, nor throughout the ancient Greek tradition was anything like it understood in the way we understand it. Instead, architectural craftsmanship was in the beginning synonymous with the art of tectonics and remained conceptually bound up with other tectonic crafts. The first architects, appearing under that name around the 6th century BC, rose out of and based their highly skilled work on the ancient tectonic crafts, which formed an important part in the erection of the first monumental stone temples.
Despite the obvious etymological link between tectonics and architectonics, the broader semantic implications of the relationship between the two concepts remain relatively unexplored. In ‘Greek Architecture’, a concise review of the state of the discipline, Barbara A. Barletta refers to Alison Burford’s and J. J. Coulton’s studies on architectural education and craftsmanship from the 1970s, as well as Marie-Christine Hellmann’s and John R. Senseney’s recent contributions (Barletta 2011: 628). These studies only touch upon the tectonic prehistory of architectural craftsmanship and do not bring out the multi-facetted content of tectonics. This paper therefore examines the semantic and historical links between tectonics and architecture, drawing on these authors’ works and other etymological, archaeological and historical studies.
Because of the scarce textual evidence extant from this early epoch, we must approach with caution the complex semantic field in which the two figures, the tektōn and the architektōn, stand out and become interrelated over time. Delving into the origins of tectonics lies outside the scope of the paper; we can only speculate whether these origins are to be found in the Minoan–Mycenaean building tradition or in other traditions outside Hellas.2 Speculation also arises around the origins of architectural craftsmanship, but arguments, conjectures and conclusions can be based on detailed, well-informed readings of the ancient Greek testimonies of the tectonic tradition, in a critical dialogue with recent research in the field. New light can thus be shed on the semantic transition, which took place around the 7th and 6th centuries BC, from the archaic culture of tectonics to the classical era of the master builder in the 5th and 4th centuries BC. Tectonics, one of the most revered skills in Homeric epic and also one cherished by the first architects, ends up at the lower end of the epistemological and ontological scale in Plato’s writings, hinted at in the second epigraph at the beginning of this paper.
The Multiple Skills of the Tektones
Just as a mountain oak, poplar, or tall pine falls, cut down by working men (tektones andres) with freshly sharpened axes to make timbers for some ships. (Iliad XIII 390–91)
This passage from the Iliad highlights a constellation of words referring to phenomena closely linked to the skills of the tektones andres, ‘working men’. The tektones are explicitly male, implying that it takes the strength of a man to handle the axe and fell big trees in a forest. As often happens in Homeric epic, the poet gives a detailed description of the whole setting around the tall pine which the tektones cut down with their newly whetted axes to produce timbers for shipbuilding.
Etymologically, the Greek term tektōn can be traced back to the Indo-European root tek- or teks– meaning to cut or fashion with an axe, but it also refers to weaving, building, fabricating and joining (Pokorny 1994: 1058; Chantraine 1968: 1100; cf. Karvouni 1999: 105–106; Woodard 2014: 230). The ancient Greek verbs related to tectonics, tiktō and tektomai, refer to the act of bringing forth and giving birth to something, which broadens the field within which the tektones can display their skills. Yet, the axe remains one of the emblematic, tectonic tools in ancient Greece, although the tektones also used other tools and worked in other areas where the axe was not used (Glotz 1965: 44). The cited passage from the Iliad serves as a simile within a fierce encounter on the battlefield, and Homer leaves no doubt that these men are well-prepared, and like warriors, they would not go to work without their ‘arms’ sharpened.
A similar passage can be found in the Odyssey, where the tools of the tektones andres are not mentioned, but the goal of the tectonic labour process is the same as in the passage from the Iliad, namely to produce timber for ships. However, the context in the Odyssey is not the battlefield but the sea, the element of those ships whose purpose is to ‘sail across to other people’s cities’ where it is the custom to come together and trade (Odyssey IX 125–30). In this passage, the importance of the work carried out by the tektones, who are said to build well-decked ships skillfully, becomes manifest, as it lays the basis for something as vital and, for the ancient Greeks, humane as coming into contact with other people through travel and trade. In Homer the tektones are often shipwrights, and the specific tectonic knowledge of shipbuilding stands, so we are told in the ninth song of the Odyssey, in opposition to the ignorance of the wild, lawless Cyclopes about cultivating the earth, meeting in assembly and interacting with human beings in a civilised way. The best of the tektones, assembled by Alexandros to build his house in the sixth song of the Iliad, come, not coincidentally, from fertile Troy.
Not only do the tektones form part of an organised society, but their skills play an important part in forming society as such, helping to cultivate and make visible a certain worldly order through the creation of structures and artefacts, such as buildings, ships, floors, walls, armour, tools and jewellery, all testimonies of social life (McEwen 1993: 46, 72). The group of men in question has acquired specialised knowledge of how to cut materials to measure, join them together and use them for specific purposes within a social context. The tectonic know-how is very often applied to wood, and considering that the axe is the tektones’ emblematic tool, and that the Greeks in ancient times had relatively easy access to wood, it was probably one of the preferred materials for many of them; but we should be careful not to announce wood to be a kind of singular prima materia of tectonics, as many modern theorists have maintained.
This assumption goes back to the influential German tradition of the 19th century, starting with Karl Otfried Müller, who focused primarily on woodwork and ceramics, excluding metal from tectonics (Müller 1848: 10). Gottfried Semper later privileged, despite seeing stone and metal as materials of tectonic craft too, an understanding of ‘Tektonik’ as carpentry roof work with a wooden timber frame as the principal constructive feature; an understanding upon which Kenneth Frampton based his seminal Studies in Tectonic Culture (Semper 2008: 10, 243, 253; Frampton 1995: 4).3 It is true, as Cunliffe has observed, that ‘a qualifying term’ indicates that a tektōn works in another material than wood (Cunliffe 1963: 376), for instance horn (Iliad IV 110) or stone (Blümner 1969: 5; Glotz 1965: 42–44; Karvouni 1996: 79); nevertheless, the tektones without any further qualification are still praised for their skillful ability to use ivory and embellish their work with metals, such as bronze, silver and gold (Odyssey XIX 56–57; cf. Blümner II 1912: 165). Later in the 5th century BC, Aeschylus mentions the Chalybes, living near the Black Sea, and calls them metalbuilders, siderotektones (Prometheus Bound 714). Although wood is often mentioned in relation to tectonic work, it would be precipitous to limit the scope of tectonics to only one or two materials. As much as with the materials themselves, this ancient craft is concerned with the technical way of working with the materials to let them express their nature (Karvouni 1999: 106; Porphyrios 2002: 135–136).
It seems more to the point to say, as Maria Karvouni has proposed, that the tektones work in hard materials with strong tools (Karvouni 1999: 105), but again this observation takes into account only certain groups of tektones, leaving out those who had other tools at their disposal and even worked on their own and not in a group. When we hear speak of one tektōn in Homer, and not a group of tektones, it is very often a highly skilled artisan possessing a distinguished knowledge of his métier. It is as if Homer wanted to underline that each of these individual tektones stands out from the crowd and that their knowledge surpasses the knowledge other groups of tektones may have had. What kind of knowledge did these highly skilled tektones possess?
Starting with a shipbuilder, who is mentioned in the Iliad for his fine ability to set up timber in accordance with a chalk line, we move into a wider field of knowledge and skills which is not only bound to materials and tools, but covers more subtle phenomena such as human and divine affairs. The shipbuilder, whose identity is unknown, is said to make use of his hands in a skilled way. This indicates that he not only uses strong or heavy tools to carry out his work, but during the working process other small items, such as chalk and rope, are utilised for the finer and more dexterous work. Like any highly skilled tektōn, the poet tells us, he has a thorough understanding of his work and minds the advice of Pallas Athene, the goddess of all artisans, including the tektones (Iliad XV 410–12, eu eidēi sophiēs).
Two of these words, eu eidōs, that provide a deeper understanding of tectonics are employed in the same way in the fifth song of the Odyssey, where the protagonist, Odysseus, is compared to a tektōn, who knows the art of tectonics well (Odyssey V 250, eu eidōs tektosynaōn). In this case, tectonics also refers to the art of building a ship, and the text gives an extensive description of the way in which a highly skillful tektōn goes about felling trees with an axe, partitioning, polishing and piling the timber in straight lines and finally joining all the pieces harmoniously together into a seaworthy ship. The text describes in detail a highly skilled tektōn at work and highlights his tectonic knowledge, which can only mean that there are other craftsmen who do not necessarily reach the level of a shipbuilder or of other artists’ mastery (Burford 1972: 107–111). In other words, tektones felling trees in a forest do not have to be shipbuilders as well, and they do not necessarily have an all-embracing knowledge of each tectonic detail. Odysseus is an example of a tektōn who displays a thorough knowledge of every step in the procedure of building a ship, which in the Odyssey is his only chance of getting home. When his newly made ship is again wrecked, it is Pallas Athene who saves him from dying in open sea and shows him the way to the nearest island.
On ‘Higher’ Tectonic Skills and Daedalic Wonders
The passages from the Iliad and the Odyssey have shown that tektones work with all kinds of materials and tools. Wood and axe are undoubtedly essential elements in tectonic craftsmanship, but they are far from the only ones. Secondly, not all tektones are highly skilled. They all have some skill, but it may not amount to what is called throughout the ancient Greek tradition technē or epistēmē; tektōn and technē are linked through the root tek-, but not all tektones have technē in the same way as the god of craftsmanship, Hephaestus, who is described as being ‘famous for his skill’ (Iliad I 571, XVIII 143, 391, klytotechnēn; cf. Homeric Hymn to Hephaestus and Odyssey XIII 296–97, 327, 332)4
Figure 1A black-figure vase painting, Athene’s birth from Zeus’ head cleaved by Hephaestus, Phrynos (signed), c. 560 BC, British Museum, London B24.
According to our readings of Homer, there are certainly tektones who possess the highest form of technē, but others do not, and they are tektones nonetheless. All tektones can display some skill when handling tools and materials, but, as said before, this does not mean that they have technē of the highest degree, which requires a thorough knowledge of the whole working process and the skillful expertise to create a well-wrought final product. The skills of a tektōn depend on the knowledge he possesses, resulting in degrees of skilled knowledge; some go beyond mere pragmatic know-how.
Seen from this perspective, ancient Greek tectonics opens up a wider and more differentiated field than the concept of the tectonic delimited by the predominant, modern tectonic tradition (cf. Parcell 2012: 22). Even Aristotle testifies to the grading, since ancient times, of poiētikē technē in his discussion of sophia, used in reference to not only wise philosophers but also those who are ‘the most perfect masters of their art (technas)’, to which he adds, ‘wisdom (sophia) merely signifies artistic excellence (aretē technēs)’ (Nicomachean Ethics 1141a). This implies that there are different levels of technic and tectonic know-how, and that the concept of tectonics is not in itself sufficient to be identified as paradigmatic skill or knowledge, nor is architecture, which is still not an independent skill; neither is there a word for such a ‘discipline’ in Homer.
In the earliest ancient Greek tradition to which Homer belongs, what we today understand by architecture falls under tectonics, and tectonic craftsmanship can entail technē to a higher or lesser degree. In the passage from the Iliad, cited at the beginning of the introduction, the Trojan prince Alexandros, also known as prince Paris, had assembled the best tektones in the land to help him build a palace. The Homeric word for best, aristos, is the superlative form of being good at something, and it is closely related to aretē, which indicates that the tektones in question are wise and have reached the same kind of perfection of which Aristotle speaks. Homer even says that Alexandros built the palace himself, together with these men, which raises the question of whether he himself was a tektōn or just took part in the building process because of his status and power. The verb used for Alexandros’ engagement in the construction of his own palace favors the first reading: The verb teuchein, often used for fabrication and handiwork, is semantically close to tektōn and technē, and it seems logical that if he worked together with the best tektones to build his beautiful palace, he himself must also have had some knowledge of tectonics. However, if we read on, the text explicitly states that it was the excellently skilled tektones who made — epoiēsan — the sleeping quarters, the main part of the palace and the courtyard; almost nothing is left of which Alexandros himself could be the master (Iliad VI 313–316; cf. Iliad V 59–60).
Although we cannot know for sure what role Alexandros played in the building of his palace, posing the question about his engagement may be more important than giving a straight answer. The question points to an obscure realm which also remained unclear in ancient Mesopotamia, in the classical era of ancient Greece and later in the Middle Ages: Those who were hailed as master builders or who took credit for the built environment were rarely the ones who built the edifices, and were more often the powerful patrons standing behind and sponsoring the activities (Coulton 1977: 18; Kostof 2000: 5; Ettlinger 2000: 115; Hellmann 2002: 50–55).5 Maybe Alexandros was such a man, a precursor of the classical architect, who did not, according to Plato, take part in the construction of buildings with his own hands, but supervised the whole process (Statesman 259e).
If we come back to the tektones in Homeric epic, their principal activities are described with words such as teuchein, arariskō, harmoniē and poiēsis, which involve the manipulative and creative skills of the craftsman, who uses his hands or tools to cut, shape and assemble materials.6 Technē is poiēsis elevated to a high level of craftsmanship and it can be elevated to still higher levels; poiēsis flows out into all the arts and is not limited to poetry. The poets belong to the same category as, for instance, metalworkers, carpenters and weavers, in so far as they are all involved in poiēsis.
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However, as we have seen, not all craftsmen or artisans are highly skilled — men felling trees in a forest are not, for instance — but the tektones involved in building Alexandros’ castle are and they created something beautiful that was held in high esteem throughout the ancient Greek tradition. Beauty shines forth in the works of those tektones who also possess knowledge or wisdom, often referred to as epistēmē or sophiē, which goes beyond mere pragmatical know-how.
In the Homeric epic, these two words do not mean the same thing as epistēmē and sophia of classical times, when Plato and Aristotle praise both for being the highest of theoretical skills. Still, neither word should be reduced to mean mere pragmatic knowledge in Homer. The word sophiē in Homeric epic does indeed refer to pragmatics in the sense that it has to do with the knowledge of how to handle and manipulate things in order to make them well wrought. Ancient commentaries had already noticed this, for example in the Suda: ‘Homer used the term “sophia” only once, although not to denote the development of character through word and deeds, but rather tectonic technē (tēn tektonikēn technēn)’ (cit. from Squire 2011: 112).7
However, the tektōn, who is said to possess sophiē, is able to create wonders out of matter by rendering visible an invisible and immaterial order. In fact, shipbuilding was considered to be magical in that it brought to light something hidden. A shipbuilder would be praised as being in possession of sophiē, insofar as he shows some extraordinary, detailed knowledge of what a ship and its navigator need to adapt to under changing circumstances; he consequently builds the ship according to these navigational needs and takes into account the interplay of materials, construction principles and the forces of the universe. Such a ship would be beautiful in the sense of being harmonious and fitting into the world order. We shall later return to shipbuilding, which is one of the principal tectonic disciplines from which architectural craftsmanship springs. The architect rises out of the high order tectonic crafts, and a wise tektōn has a deep insight into the cosmological world order that grants him the status of being in contact with divine powers (Kurke 2011: 99). This is one of the main reasons why he can create such well-fitted and marvelously crafted things — daidala, as these beautiful wonders are often called in Homer.
One of the most famous tektones in the ancient Greek tradition was Daedalus. Considered to be divine, his name is intimately related to daidala. In Homer, the name only appears once, remarkably enough in a comparison with Hephaestos (Iliad 590–592), probably the earliest mention of Daedalus in European writing. The name springs from the praise of daidala, which most often refers to shiny and splendid things whose extraordinary beauty almost makes them come alive (Morris 1992: 10–13; Steiner 2015: 26–30).8 The daidala are described as lively and wonderful, created by god-like masters belonging to the same tectonic tradition as Hephaestus, who is considered to be, together with Pallas Athene, the teacher of technē (Odyssey VI 233–234, XXIII 160–161). But these incredibly gifted craftsmen also have something more than other technites (technicians), namely the capacity to work so intricately with matter and in ways so well proportioned that the result is endowed with life and soul.
The Fall of the Tektones
In the 5th century BC, Socrates recalled Daedalus’ incredible skill in making his sculptures so realistic they appeared to move and come alive, which shows that the best of the ancient tektones still formed part of the classical canon (Euthyphro 11c–e). Indra Kagis McEwen goes so far as to claim that it is ‘through the Daedalus legend that the architectural beginnings of Western thinking are to be understood’ (McEwen 1993: 79). The status of the rest of the tektones, however, was fading, and there is an ironic tone in Socrates’ comment on Daedalus’ skill: The great tektōn may have made matter appear as if it could move itself, but according to Platonic philosophy of which Socrates is the spokesman, the skill is still about mere appearance. In his dialogues, Plato has Socrates looking behind the worldly phenomena for immovable ideas which only ‘the mind’s eye’ can see and connect to. If there is a connection between Daedalus and Socrates, it is not that Daedalus animates things but that he possesses the wisdom that allows him to see ideal forms either in or beyond material appearances.9
After Homeric times, the name of the tektones, together with their craft, which basically consists of cutting and combining, was borrowed by other artists, first of all the poets, and even Plato uses the term ho tektainomenos to designate the world god, the demiourgos (Timaeus 28 c). The legendary poet Pindar deploys tektones to refer to speakers and singers, associating the former with wisdom and harmonies (Pythian Odes 3.113–14, Nemean Odes 3.4–5), which means that rhetoric and music also form part of tectonic craftsmanship. Verbal forms of tectonics can express linguistic trickery, such as fabricating lies or deceiving (Heraclitus 1987: 20; Euripides 1998: 409) by making something unreal look real or playing with the intricacies of the spoken word. This evolution of the meaning of tectonics is not unrelated to Homeric epic in which we can find examples of verbal weaving (Iliad III 212) and the weaving of lyrics (Odyssey V 59–62, X 220–28; cf. Schmitt 1967: 296–301; Woodard 2014: 228–234), but despite these connections between the arts, tectonics as described in Homeric epic remains occupied principally with material work.
In the 4th century BC the terminology related to tectonics underwent a profound transformation, as did the status of its representatives. Richard Sennett observes that ‘If the artisan was celebrated in the age of Homer as a public man or woman, by classical times the craftsman’s honor had dimmed’ (Sennett 2008: 22; cf. Holloway 1969: 289; McEwen 1993: 42, 75; Parcell 2012: 31). Not unlike the fall of public man, the subject of Sennett’s diagnosis, the tektones suffer a fall from their high public position of old. The meaning and the function of tektōn is now reduced to that of a worker, most often a carpenter, who works in wood without having any direct relation to architecture to which he could only contribute under the supervision of an architect. The Greek word, which Sennett uses about the publicly celebrated artisan, is demiourgos, and for Plato the art of tektonikē is a form of demiourgikē, entailing some skill (Protagoras 322d; Gorgias 455b; cf. Angier 2010: 6), but it is mere technical knowledge, which, except for the tectonic wisdom of the god-like demiourgos, does not rise above matter and take into account the whole order in which it partakes. To be more exact, the art of tectonics falls under the manual worker’s domain, cheirourgía, practical handicraft knowledge (Statesman 258d–e), which is not the same kind of higher knowledge that allows the architect to rule: ‘Every architect (architektōn), too, is a ruler of workmen (ergatōn archōn), not a workman himself’ (Statesman 259e). Plato understands the profession of the architect quite literally as the master who rules over the workers, among whom we also find the tektones. The prefix of the word architect, archē, means both beginning and rule, and it seems to be an undisputed truism throughout the ancient Greek tradition that the person at the head of something, who thus comes first, would be in the privileged position of having the power to rule. Aristotle follows Plato in his elevation of the architect above other workers and states that the architect is more honourable and wiser than other craftsmen (cheirotechnōn), who do not know why things are done in a certain way (Metaphysics 981a 25–31).
The classical Greek understanding of the tektōn as a carpenter gave rise to the misunderstanding that the tektones were originally only working in wood, which again led, mistakingly, to the definition of the architect as ‘master carpenter’ (Kostof 2000: 11–12; Callebat 1999–2000: 48; cf. von Hesberg 2015: 140). A more correct translation of architektōn would be ‘master builder’, which is also the most common one, but it does not give us any clue as to what lay behind this change in nomenclature and relegated the tektones to a lower rank in the working order. Another Greek philosopher contemporaneous with Plato and Aristotle, Xenophon, extends the low status of the tektones to cover all the artisanal crafts and claims that they are ‘held in utter disdain in our states’ (Oeconomicus 4.2–3). Yet this degradation of the crafts may have been more widespread among philosophers than among the common people. In the 3rd century Herodas describes poor people who cling to the archaic belief that there are tektones in possession of extraordinary skills: ‘Who is the tekton of this (marble)stone?’, a woman asks, amazed by the high artistry of a votive in a shrine of Asclepius, and together with another woman she marvels at the lifelikeness of the dedications (Steiner 2015: 23).
The First Architects
Did the first architects start out within or outside the circle of the tektones? One of the few scholars who addresses this question, J. J. Coulton, believes that the Greek architects did not rise out of a tradition of master builders, but instead learned their new profession themselves, either by travelling or studying. He recognises, however, that many architects were versatile, prestigious craftsmen: ‘the earliest monumental architects cannot have been just humble craftsmen trained in traditional skills’. The reason for this is that during the 7th century BC, ‘a large number of new techniques was introduced and the temple changed radically in form and structure’ (Coulton 1977: 23; cf. Parcell 2012: 30). In the wake of this evolution, around the late 7th and the early 6th century BC, building projects grew so large that both highly skilled and multi-skilled craftsmen were needed to supervise the whole enterprise (Burford 1972: 86, 94). The first architects fulfilled this role. In fact, there is more evidence that they did it from within the tectonic tradition than from outside it (cf. Burford 1969).
Coulton himself points to the fact that Greek architectonics was based on ‘traditional craft design’, performed by eminent craftsmen, who earned little more than other skilled craftsmen. As an example, he draws attention to the gifted Theodorus as one of the first architects to work in many fields and on many worldly wonders, both the temple of Hera at Samos and the temple of Artemis at Ephesus. Theodorus invented new tools, fashioned unique gems, such as Polykrates’ ring, and wrote a book on architecture, around the same time that the first Ionic philosophers, or physiologoi, Thales and Anaximander, wrote about their discoveries of the cosmological order (Coulton 1977: 23–24). Thales was also an inventor of tools and a practically oriented mathematician capable of measuring what had until then been unmeasurable. He was considered to be wise for his capacity to look deep into the nature of the cosmos and foresee an eclipse. Robert Hahn has advanced the thesis that the rationalising mentality of the first philosophers, especially Anaximander’s proto-scientific approach and invention of instruments and models, was inspired by the first architects’ technical know-how and practical form of reasoning that led them to create what amazed the philosophers about the cosmos: thaumata, wonders of the world (Hahn 2001: 1–2, 85, 220; see also McEwen 1993: 21–32).
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Solar System:A cosmological model in the second century A.D.The Greek philosopher Aristotle’s idea was elaborated by Ptolemy in the second century A.D.into a complete cosmological model.The earth stood at the centre surrounded by eight spheres that carried the moon, the sun, the stars, and the five planets known, Mercury,Venus,Mars, Jupiter and Saturn. The outermost sphere carried the so-called fixed stars, which always stay in the same positions relative to each other but which rotate together across the sky;wasn’t part of mankind’s observable universe.
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When Aristotle says that the architect is held to be wiser than other workers, he recalls the status the first-rate tektones enjoyed in the ancient tectonic tradition, namely that they were wise in the sense of being excellent in performing their art. In the earliest tradition of architectural craftsmanship the line between wisdom and art, theory and technical skill was blurred, which implied that ‘architects’ and ‘philosophers’ did not always see themselves as belonging to two distinct traditions, but rather as drawing on the same ancient tectonic culture to develop their visions of the world. While the first architects may not have risen out of a specific master builder tradition, they may still have been tektones themselves, albeit ones who had reached a high level of mastery of their craft through practice and research. If architectural craftsmanship grew out of traditional craft design and architects had more or less the same status as other craftsmen, it would be only natural if the first architects saw themselves as heirs of a tectonic craftsmanship that they may have then refined even further. Who other than the craftsmen, considered to be the most excellent of their generation, would be entrusted the daring task of steering the immense enterprises undertaken at the end of the 7th and the beginning of the 6th century? During this period, the most powerful people in Ionia and Samos, and on the Hellenic mainland, commissioned the huge, monumental temples that came to define the cultural landscape in the southeastern Mediterranean area.
From the archaeological evidence of 1100 to 700 BC found in this area, Mazarakis Ainian draws the conclusion that ‘the origins of the Greek temple are to be sought in the “royal” dwellings of the Dark Ages’ (Ainian 1988: 116; cf. Barletta 2001: 30). This evidence, says Ainian, shows that the rulers’ dwellings described in Homeric epic correspond more clearly to those dating from the Dark Ages than to those of the Mycenaean Period. There is enough continuity, tectonically speaking, between the ages to see the Homeric megaron or domos — that of Odysseus and Paris, for instance — as the model or skeleton for the later monumental temples (Ainian 1997: 363–366). Another perspective, however, is that the temples were the outcome of the monumentalization of Greek sanctuaries, which often only consisted of a small restricted area, a temenos, and an altar. In this scenario the temple would become the monumental shelter of the divine and, not unimportantly, from the 8th century and onwards, an important centre of craft production (Sourvinou-Inwood 2005: 7–8). Yet Ainian’s thesis is that the dwellings of rulers in the Dark Ages and the early Archaic Age also served religious purposes, and that the model for temple building, including the monumentalization of sanctuaries, came from the plans and tectonic details of houses the highly skilled tektones helped to build. Ainian’s studies support a view of the temple as the monumentalization of the archaic sanctuary, and supporting our thesis that the origins of architectural craftsmanship in ancient Greece are to be found in the higher arts of tectonic craftsmanship.
Seen in the light of the new role of the highly skilled craftsman as head of the monumental building projects around 600 BC, it seems plausible, as Plato ventures, to understand the architect as the steerer of the tektones, but we should not leave out the other meaning of archē, which is related to origin and being the first, in this case first among the tektones to excel in the art of tectonics. In Pindar’s poems we find the word archedikās, meaning first right, and in classical times the prefix archi– is common, for instance in words for a ruler priest or a high priest, archiereus or architheōros. These two groups of words reflect both meanings: being first and being a ruler. Herodotus is one of the first to employ the term architectōn, in reference to the Samian chief builders, Rhoikos and Eupalinos, who were responsible for ‘the greatest works of all the Greeks’ (Histories 3.60).10 The Greek historian highlights the Temple of Hera by the former and the one-kilometre long aqueduct by the latter; both are the greatest, by which he seems to mean greatest not just in size of the works, but also in that they testify to the greatness of their masters. What becomes clear from Herodotus’ description is that an architect was not only a builder of temples and houses, but he could be involved in other projects whose extraordinary dimensions called for the skills of a tekton mastering his métier.
Archaeologists and engineers still consider the aqueduct of Eupalinos to be a unique achievement, not comparable to any other constructions of its kind in ancient times (Grewe 2008: 324–325; Kienast 1995: 178; Burford 1972: 115). The architect, originally a Megarian, according to Herodotus, demonstrated his practical and theoretical aptitude, as he embarked on the daring task to excavate from both ends and succeeded in connecting the two meandering groups of the tunnel. Planning the route ahead, constantly controlling and correcting the direction of advance, negotiating topographical obstacles and resorting to structural solutions, were all key to Eupalinos’ success. The tunnel embodies the ancient Greek ideal of tectonic wisdom as the ability to foresee, measure and create order in what appears to be unforeseeable, unmeasurable and disordered (Grewe 2008: 319–320; Senseney 2016: 65–70).
This accomplishment was probably what inspired the French poet and essayist, Paul Valéry, to praise Eupalinos for knowing how to make the invisible visible and to ennoble matter so it would vibrate with the human soul in an almost imperceptible way (Valery 1944: 23–24). In the same vein, another modern commentator wondered about the marvel it must have been to see such a gigantic temple as the Temple of Hera (Holloway 1969: 282), which, apart from requiring the most intricate and detailed tectonic know-how, demanded an amount of work force and logistic strategies never before witnessed in Greece, to get the stone from the quarry to the building site.
Rhoikos, a sculptor and metalworker, was often connected to the name of Theodorus, who would rival ‘that other, greater craftsman-inventor, Daidalos’, and together they were perceived as ‘larger than life’ (Burford 1972: 192). In a similar way, Coulton remarks that the architects of the first stone temple of Apollo at Delphi were celebrated as ‘legendary figures, almost on a par with Daidalos’, underlining that ‘the late seventh to early sixth century is the time when practical matters had the highest status in Greek society’ (Coulton 1977: 23–24). Moving into the 5th century BC, rationalization and self-reflection increased among artists and craftsmen, accompanied by a pronounced distance between them and their work, which takes on fewer and fewer lifelike features (de Angelis 2015: 77; Gensheimer 2015: 94). At the end of this movement away from the tektones’ involvement with their lifelike work, we find Plato’s Socrates, who turns towards theory and the architect’s overview of the whole building site without getting involved in the work (Parcell 2012: 31–38). In classical times, more people than just the architect oversaw the monumental building projects; the legendary sculptor, Phidias, worked as overseer (episkopos) for Pericles at the Parthenon together with other architects, according to Plutarch (Life of Pericles 13.4). There seems to have been a clear order between the architektōn, the hyparchitektōn and other assistents inspecting the buildings and the sites (Kostof 2000: 22).
A good deal of exuberant praise has gone into the description of the first Greek architects. These texts allows us to reestablish the connections back to the older tectonic tradition that was not completely forgotten, and to see that not all the tektones at that time work under the order of an architect. Rhoikos and Theodorus, who became famous for their versatility and extraordinary insight into the art of tectonics, often worked together, which reminds us of the best of the tektones in Homeric epic, who also sometimes teamed up, or of the 6th-century team of Eurykles and Kharmophilus, who built a bridge on Samos and called themselves tektones (Hurwit 2015: 52; cf. Coulton 1977: 28). Rhoikos and Theodorus would surely benefit from each other’s knowledge, complementing each other, and their architectural fame is invested with all the distinctive attributes of the ancient tectonic tradition: They are highly skilled, versatile craftsmen with a divine status and they are in possession of the technical know-how to create wonders out of matter in hitherto unseen ways.
Architectural Imagery: The Temple and the Ship
In a text titled ‘Kosmos: The Imagery of the Archaic Greek Temple’, Clemente Marconi reminds us that the ancient Greek word for order in the world, kosmos, is used about the whole temple, ‘referring not just to the frieze, but also the columns, the entablature, and the statues. Kosmos signifies “ornament” and “splendor”, everything that goes beyond the purely structural and imparts beauty to the architectural form ’ (Marconi 2004: 211). This is, of course, not possible without a highly developed knowledge of harmoniously assembling well-adjusted pieces, i.e. a tectonic know-how of cutting, combining and making different materials fit into a greater whole. Even Plato, despite his ambiguous and at times pejorative attitude towards tectonic craftsmanship and the arts as such, lets the demiourgos in Timaeus proceed like a skilled tektōn, as he forms the world order according to ideal measures, which points to an essential aspect of the art of tectonics, namely its inherent quality of making apparently disparate phenomena fit harmoniously together. When describing the details of the demiourgos’ elaborative work, Plato employs terms from the vocabulary of tectonics to specify how the tangible and the intangible, matter and soul, become interwoven so as to create the cosmological world order (Timaeus 28b–29b, 32b–33a, 69a–70e).
Since Homer, no Greek poet or thinker appears to have doubted that what is well ordered, be it the human body endowed with a beautiful soul or an artefact brought to brilliant perfection, is also well built according to tectonic principles. As we have seen in Homer, the most eminently skilled tektones use their hands-on knowledge to make the intangible tangible, creating things that are experienced as amazingly well fitting. The world order as such presents itself in the tectonic creations and, not least, in the archaic temples, which are ordered, monumental compositions of different materials, joined together in such an artistic way that none of the parts stand out or appear as isolated pieces. The first architects were aligned with Daedalus and other masters of tectonic craftsmanship, such as Hephaestus, not because they worked in a particular material or developed certain structures, but because their skillful handling of matter enabled them to create things which had the stamp of something immaterial. The immaterial could take the form of a vision of the world order, like the one Hephaestus created on Achilleus’ shield in the eighteenth song of the Iliad, or some ethereal form pointing towards the sky, like the feathered wings Daedalus created for himself and his son to escape from Crete (McEwen 1993: 63–68) Figure 2.
Figure 217th-century relief, Daedalus and Icarus, Musée Antoine Vivenel (Wikimedia Commons).
As to the origins of the orders of ancient Greek temples, Barletta proposes to tackle this issue ‘by interweaving the tectonic and ornamental-symbolic interpretations’ (Barletta 2001: 143). Interweaving seems to be an equally adequate approach when searching for the origins of architectural imagery in tectonic visionary forms.
McEwen and John Onians have argued that the imagery the first architects and possibly also their fellow men saw realised in the monumental temples was of a seaworthy ship, a paradigmatic example of masterful craftsmanship for many maritime communities in ancient Greece Figure 3. In fact, a series of semantic and architectonic features of some of the temples support this speculative argument: The shrine, naos, of the god was semantically linked to vessel, naus (Hahn 2001: 87). Both were originally made of wood and had a similar cabinet design with what could be interpreted as prow, keel and stern, and ‘[T]he beak on a Greek war vessel occupied a similar position in the ship’s silhouette to the steps on the Ionic temple’ (Onians 2005: 54).
Like a ship, the so-called peripteral temples also had wings, ptera, which refers to the external colonnade of columns sustaining the temple, a unique feature of many of the ancient Greek temples which ‘had much to do with an early understanding of architecture both as embodied flight and as navigation’ (McEwen 1993: 103). When a ship takes on wings in Homer and Hesiod, it appears to be flying, and one can imagine that the oars stretching out from the side and moving in unison look like wings. People and goddesses, armour and words could also become ‘winged’, which suggests the presence of an extraordinary force that links the earth to the sky.
In different ways the temples underwent vertical alignments and refinements, causing in some cases ‘an overall upward thrust of the platform’, according to Nancy L. Klein, a thrust which conveys the impression that the temple swells or even soars (Klein 2016: 115–116). Insofar as the first architects looked for such an effect, they seem to have relied on the archaic art of tectonics to recreate a subtle, lifelike movement in symmetrical, harmonious orders. It is likely that the Ionic style of the Samos bases, with their torus and trochilus, meaning knot and pulley, reproduces ship-like features to a higher degree than other orders. Following the analogy, if the whole rows of columns were seen as wings or sails lifting the temples, the columns themselves could be imagined as masts or even looms holding textiles (Onians 2005: 55; Mcwen 1993: 100–111).
Further research needs to be carried out in this field of architectural imagery, which might change according to the cultural tradition and the available materials in each region of ancient Greece. Barletta has argued that the architectural orders, far from being direct translations from wood into stone, may differ and manifest small variations depending on the use of materials and symbolic representations. Archaeological remains point to certain temples that appear to be conceived and built in stone from the beginning (Barletta 2001: 7, 27), a possibility also opened up by our research on the multi-skilled tektones, who worked in stone. We should keep in mind that the tektones were not only carpenters and shipbuilders; if the first architects sought to convey tectonically well-built forms, they may not have relied exclusively on the symbolic imagery of vessels, at least not in all areas of and outside Greece. If the maritime imagery had any foundation in the architectural reality of ancient Greece, then it was most likely in the area around Samos and Ionia, with their architectural strongholds in the temples of Hera and Artemis at Ephesus respectively. Both lay close to the sea, and the first Heraion of Samos in particular was surrounded by wells and water, and little boats have been found inside it whose origin and function are still unknown (Kyrieleis 2005: 107–112).
It is hardly a coincidence that Herodotus highlights Samos as the cradle of the first architects. The island, which was the dominant naval power in the Mediterranean Sea in the 6th century, is found just off the Ionian coast, where the first big temples in the Ionian order were built, and it lies closer to ancient Troja and Egypt than to the Hellenic mainland. If around the 7th century BC there had been any knowledge left of the age-old arts of tectonics, it would without a doubt have been handed down to the Samian architects through traditions linked to the Trojan and Ionian past. We remember that the earliest testimonies of architectural craft in the Greek archipelago revolve around Daedalus, who built, according to Homer, a dance floor in Knossos on Crete, just south of Samos. Samos became the culturally most prolific island in the Mediterranean Sea in the 6th century, containing traces of Egyptian art, Minoan culture and Mycenaean occupation together with daedalic sculptures and some of the first large-scale monumental works in ancient Hellas (Shipley 1987: 25–27, 57–58). Legend has it that Daedalus came from the near East, at least from outside Greece, which may have been a way of putting into mythic words that the Greeks learned from other Mediterranean cultures, in particular Egypt, when it came to architecture.11 Diodorus had no doubts when he stated that ‘the rhythmos of the ancient statues of Egypt is the same as that of the statues made by Daidalos among the Greeks’ (Diodorus 1933: 1.97.6), the rhythm being the calm movement inherent in statues and temples which appear to come alive and lift themselves from the ground (Philipp 1968: 47; McEwen 1993: 115–116). Apart from being a sculptor, Daedalus was the famous builder of the labyrinth for the Minotaur on Crete from where he had to flee either by boat or on the wings he had himself made (McEwen 1993: 63–68).
Although the ancient Greeks learned from the Egyptians, ‘the great Ionic temples at Samos, Ephesos and Didyma rose to the Egyptian challenge, though using a substantially non-Egyptian vocabulary’ (Jones 2014: 96). This vocabulary contained references to wood and vessels, wings and masts, but probably also to other tectonic disciplines, such as sculpture and weaving. The temples rising ‘to the Egyptian challenge’ cannot be separated from the rise of the first architects out of the age-old tectonic tradition that had not been forgotten, but was very much present in the minds and the work of not only the architects, but also of the people working for them. It was because the temples incorporated solid, harmonious and well-fitting features which only the best of the tektones could produce that the first architects needed people from the tectonic disciplines to work for them, particularly shipbuilders, carpenters, sculptors, stone masons and metalworkers.
From around the 7th century BC, stone became the predominant material. The architektōn was that overarching figure who made possible the daring transition from the older wooden structures to the monumental construction of stone temples. Wood continued to play a small but important part in the monumental stone temples, especially in the roof construction, which was meant, not unlike the hull of a vessel, to be a barrier against water. There are striking resemblances between the roof constructions of some early shrines and the structures of a hull,12 but what links the temples to their tectonic past is the harmonious kosmos appearing in them through the joining together of well-adjusted elements in an intricately articulated way, elevating the architectural craftsmanship to a higher artistic level associated with a divine dimension of beauty and order.
Conclusion
The ancient tectonic tradition was still present in the minds and the works of the first architects, who rose out of it and relied on its wisdom in order to carry out the monumental works of the 7th and 6th centuries BC. The first architects were the most highly skilled tectonic masters, who dominated other disciplines and manipulated materials in a marvelous way surpassing ordinary technical skills. To succeed in creating harmonious order out of matter, particularly when erecting the monumental temples, they had to orchestrate the different units of workmen of the tectonic crafts. As most of the ancient tectonic know-how went into the building of the first temples, the orders of columns can be seen as representing everything that the ancient Greeks regarded to be well built according to tectonic principles of joining and interweaving members harmoniously together. In the Ionic order the temple’s resemblance to a ship is more manifest than in other orders, but whether the ordered structure of the columns is interpreted as representing a ship or a series of looms, the temple makes incarnate principles of tectonic craftsmanship and makes visible an invisible order on earth through harmonious, rhythmic orders. The first architects had the capacity, like the ancient masters of the tectonic arts, to make kosmos shine forth in well-crafted artefacts and monuments.
In the classical era the tektones fell from their high age-old status and were relegated by the philosophers to work under the rule of the architect, understood as the one in charge of supervising the tektones. The architects of the 5th and 4th centuries were no longer as deeply involved in the tectonic working process as the first architects, and a division occurred between the architect in charge of supervising the work and the workers themselves that relegated the tektones to a secondary place in the order of craftsmanship. Without having a particularly high status in the classical era of Greece, the architect was, nevertheless, elevated by Plato and Aristotle above the other workers, because of his theoretical knowledge and power to rule over the ‘vulgar’ artisans, among whom we also find the tektones. The architect is not himself in contact with matter, as Plato observes, but is, so to speak, set apart from the rest of the work force, and is thereby distanced from his past among the tektones. Although the arts of tectonics were still respected in the classical era, over time the rise of the architect meant the fall of the tektones, who were reduced to being woodworkers, whose only share in the principles of construction came through the orders of the architect.
R Löbl, (1997). TEXNH — TECHNE. Untersuchung zur Bedeutung dieses Wortes in der Zeit von Homer bis Aristoteles. Band I: Von Homer bis zu den Sophisten. Würzburg: Königshausen & Neumann.
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