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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: DEM-DIO |
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DIDYMI, or DIDYMA (mod. Hieronta) , an ancient sanctuary of Apollo in Asia Minor situated in the territory of Miletus, from which it was distant about to m. S. and on the promontory Poseideion. It was sometimes called Branchidae from the name of its priestly caste which claimed descent from Branchus, a youth beloved by Apollo. As the seat of a famous oracle, the original
exile was believed to be voluntary, the priests having betrayed their treasures to the Persian; and on this belief Alexander the Great acted 150 years' later, when, finding the descendants of the Branchidae established in a city beyond the Oxus, he ordered them to be exterminated for the sin of their fathers (328). The celebrated cult-statue of Apollo by Canachus, familiar to us from reproductions on Milesian coins, was also carried to Persia, there to remain till restored by Seleucus I. in 295, and the oracle ceased to speak for a century and a half. The Milesians were not able to undertake the re-building till about 332 B.c., when the oracle revived at the bidding of Alexander. The work proved too costly, and despite a special
When Cyriac of Ancona visited the spot in 1446, it seems that the temple was still standing
" Rothschild Expedition" of 1873 under MM. O. Rayet and A. Thomas sent a certain amount of architectural sculpture to the Louvre. But no excavation was attempted till MM. E. Pontremoli and B. Haussoullier were sent out by the French Schools of Rome and Athens in 1895. They cleared the western facade and the prodomos, and discovered inscriptions giving information about other parts which they left still buried. Finally the site was purchased by, and the French rights were ceded to, Dr Th. Wiegand, the German explorer of Miletus, who in 1905 began a thorough clearance of what is incomparably the finest temple ruin in Asia Minor.The temple was a decastyle peripteral structure of the Ionic order, standing
capital , e.g. heads of gods, probably of Pergamene art, spring from the " eyes " of the volutes with bulls' heads between them; (3) the massive building two storeys high at least, which served below for prodomos, and above for a dispensary of oracles (xprlaoyp&aa mentioned in the inscriptions ) and a treasury; two flights of stairs called " labyrinths " in the inscriptions, led up to these chambers; (4) the pylon and staircase at the west; (5) the frieze
village
See Dilettanti Society, Ionian Antiquities, ii. (1821); C. T. Newton, Hist. of Discoveries, &c. (1862) and Travels in the Levant, ii. (1865) ; O. Rayet and A. Thomas, Milet et le Golfe Latmique (1877); E. Pontremoli and B. Haussoullier, Didymes (1904). (D. G. H.) End of Article: DIDYMI, or DIDYMA (mod. Hieronta) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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