Seite - 62 - in The Power of Urban Water - Studies in premodern urbanism
Bild der Seite - 62 -
Text der Seite - 62 -
62 NicolaChiarenza
After taking in the view of the baywith the harbour to the east, the visitor entered the upper
terrace andadmired the sacredbuildings.
During thisbuildingphase, thesouthentranceof thesanctuarywaspartially changed, too.
The so-called south building – a stepped structure whichwas likely used as a theatre –was
built to thewestof theentrance,against thesouthwallof the temenos.61 Itallowedworshippers
to attend sacrifices and other ritual performances (e.g. processions and sacred dances). The
southbuilding to the left and theArchaicoikoi to the right framed thisentryway.Thevisitorgot
only a partial glimpse of the sanctuary from the entrance and only at the end of the entryway
was there a complete viewof TempleCand its altar.
Two other constructions can probably be dated between the end of the 6th and the first
decadesof the 5th centuryBC: the two-roomedbuilding to thenorthof thehall62 and–slightly
later– theporticoattachedto the latter.63Wehaveno informationabout the two-roomedbuild-
ing and can only speculate that it was somehow involved in the religious activity within the
sanctuary.
Theportico attached to the two-wingedhallmight havebeenbuilt as a consequenceof an
increase in thenumberofpeople takingpart insacrificesandfeasts. Itprovidedacoveredspace
to theworshippers attending the ritual activities or visiting the sanctuary.
The two new constructions (the two-roomed building and the portico) affected both the
perception of the (social) space and the ritual practices performed in it. The new building to
the north of the hall enclosed definitively the space to the east of Altar C and interrupted the
last possible visual connectionbetween this sector of the temenos and the easternhillwith its
temples. The building therefore contributed to defining the social space of ritual practices and
probably reinforced the sense of community and togetherness perceived by the worshippers
takingpart in sacrifices and feasts.
The building activities of this phase also consistently affected the ritual practices in the
sanctuary. The sequence of tapered door, lower terrace, and long stairmade it impossible for
processionswith animals to enter the temenos from this side.64 Ritual practices to the east of
AltarCprobably changed too,because theporticocovered thestructurewith squaredopenings
next to the south entranceof the two-wingedhall.65
Another important change occurred in the sanctuary (possibly in the east sector) during
thisphase. Itwas theconstructionor reconstructionofamonumentalaltarconsecratedtoApol-
lo Paian andAthena, as an inscription dated to the second quarter of the 5th century BC indi-
cates.66 Even if we donot know the reasons for the changes that occurred during the first de-
cades of the 5th century BC, it is interesting to consider somemore or less contemporaneous
events and iconographies related to rivers andwater at Selinous.
61 ClementeMarconidates this structure to theendof the6thcenturyBC(Marconi2018, 181 fig. 7).ClemensVoigts
argues for a slightly later date (Voigts 2017, 48–57 fig. 35).
62 I consider the two-roomedbuilding to be later than the hall for two reasons: the confined space between the
hall and the two-roomedbuilding seems to indicate that the latterwas built later; the south-east side of the two-
roomedbuildingcovers thenorth cornerof thehall’s foundation (seeMerten2003,Beil. 4;Helas 2011, Faltbeil. 2).
63 On the features indicating that theporticowasattached later to thehall, seen.38.
64 Processions had to enter by theWest and South entrances. The theatrical structure (South building) next to
theSouth entrancemight be related to this phenomenon (see above).
65 Seen.40.
66 The inscription contains adedication toApollo Paian andAthena. The inscribedblockwas retrievedbetween
TemplesCandDandbelongedtoamonumentalaltar,but itsoriginal location isunknown(Marconi 1999;Marconi
The Power of Urban Water
Studies in premodern urbanism
- Titel
- The Power of Urban Water
- Untertitel
- Studies in premodern urbanism
- Autoren
- Nicola Chiarenza
- Annette Haug
- Ulrich MĂĽller
- Verlag
- De Gruyter Open Ltd
- Datum
- 2020
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-11-067706-5
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 28.0 cm
- Seiten
- 280
- Kategorie
- Technik