Greg Nagy
Last updated at
July 9, 2020, 6:02 p.m.
{"blocks":[{"key":"c4fve","text":"The building next to the Theater of Dionysus, rebuilt after its destruction in first century BCE, is none other than the Odeum of Pericles, a spectacular structure that projected the glories of the Athenian Empire as the cultural heir of the Persian Empire of Xerxes. It was this ideological projection that inspired the builders of this building to give it a shape that re-enacted, as it were, the Great Tent of the King of Kings. I comment at length in HC 4§§115–124, 174–180, especially with reference to Plutarch Pericles 13.6-15. I offer here an epitome of HC4§178:","type":"unstyled","depth":0,"inlineStyleRanges":[{"offset":517,"length":8,"style":"ITALIC"}],"entityRanges":[{"offset":455,"length":4,"key":0}],"data":{}},{"key":"a8g6","text":"The idea of the Odeum as a visual imitation of the Skēnē or ‘Tent’ of the Great King of the Persian empire, as described in Plutarch’s Pericles, is a most fitting expression of imperial prestige. The Odeum, as the ‘Scene’ for the monumental Panathenaic performances of Homer in the age of Pheidias, was monumental in its own right. On the inside, its “forest of columns” matched the spectacular effect achieved at the Telestērion or Great Hall of Initiation at Eleusis. In fact, the Odeum was even more spacious than the Great Hall, and the enormous seating capacity of such a monumental building made it a most fitting venue for spectacular events of state, including juridical and political assemblies.","type":"unstyled","depth":0,"inlineStyleRanges":[{"offset":51,"length":5,"style":"ITALIC"},{"offset":135,"length":8,"style":"ITALIC"},{"offset":418,"length":11,"style":"ITALIC"}],"entityRanges":[],"data":{}}],"entityMap":{"0":{"type":"LINK","mutability":"MUTABLE","data":{"href":"https://chs.harvard.edu/CHS/article/display/3244","url":"https://chs.harvard.edu/CHS/article/display/3244"}}}}