Seite - 81 - in The Power of Urban Water - Studies in premodern urbanism
Bild der Seite - 81 -
Text der Seite - 81 -
5 Fountains andBasins inGreekSanctuaries 81
independent structure.70 In all cases, however, the propylon or the framing of the entrance to
the sanctuarydominated themostly simplebasins and fountains. Those are subordinate to the
gatebuildings.
The ritual cleansing ceremonies –washing and perirrhansis– thereforemostly took place
in front of the propylon orwhen entering it. A real integration of thewater resources into the
propylon is not proven.71 Rather, as shown, water resources are occasionally placed directly
behindanentrance, for example in theAsclepieiaofKosandCorinthor in theDemeter sanctu-
aryofPriene.Also, inEpidauros there isacircularwell shaft severalmetresbehindthepropylon
and thusalready in the sanctuary’s area. Itmayevenhavebeenpossible topositionperirrhan-
teria in the interior of thedistrict, behind thepropylon, asdemonstratedbya tripodbase in the
sanctuary of Athena in Pergamon, forwhich a perirrhanterion is known from an inscription.72
Theuseof these facilities for ritual cleansingcan innocasebeconclusivelyproven,butat least
forEpidauros therearesome indications for it. Judgingby the formsof theclamps, the fountain
originates fromArchaic times.Before theerectionof thepropylon in the4thcentury, it lay isolat-
ed at the temenos border, so that a corresponding use is reasonable.73 For the later period,
continuous use can at least have been achieved by repairing the rim, which emphasises the
importance of the well. When building the propylon, however, no explicit consideration was
obviously given to the ritual boundary and no attemptwasmade to tie thewell closer to the
propylon.
Conclusion
Aswasshown,water installations,be they fountainswith flowingwaterorsimplebasins, rarely
were given amonumental shape or an architectural form in theGreek sanctuary. This applies
both to sources thatwereofgreat importance for thecult and to sources thatwerepresented to
visitors as worth seeing for other reasons. Architecture was therefore not used in this case to
increase andexplicitly stage this significance.
In those cases in which water installations received an architectural emphasis, this was
usuallynear theentranceoracentral access roadwithin theshrine. Ingeneral, theywereoften
located inparticularlyprominentplaces,whichwereofdecisive importance for the structuring
of the sanctuary’s area. However, it was not water structures or water monuments that were
used todefineor stage thoseboundariesbyarchitecturalmeans,butmonumental gatesor spe-
cially designed access paths, such as ramps and staircases. Inmost cases, thewater installa-
tionswere subordinate or assigned to thesebuildings.
This is particularly remarkable, because at the same time water was intensively used in
rituals that definedboundaries. It is only through theuse ofwater, i.e. throughaperformative
act, thatwatergainsacentralandthenexplicitlyspace-constitutingmeaning.74Theassociation
withthesepossibleusescanneverthelessassignamarker functiontothesometimesverysimple
70 For another example fromSicily, see Chiarenza, this volume. The exception is the basin fed by clay pipes in
front of thewesternmost columnof thepropylon inMegalopolis, cited above.
71 It was different in Roman times. For example, in the LesserPropylaea of Eleusis in the later Imperial period,
two basins were installed as part of its inner façade: Hörmann 1932, 43–45. 110. He explicitly emphasizes the
usability of thebasins forwashing.
72 Bohn 1885, 55pl. 18; LSAM12, 7–9;Ortaç 2001, 153.
73 Though the well is recorded in most of the plans, it has remained as yet nearly unpublished. For a short
description, the dating, and its lustral function, cf. Tomlinson 1983, 46 fig.3; Kerschner 1996, 110; Riethmüller
2005, 173.
74 Hölscher 2013, 51has alreadypointed out that actions play an important role in the constitution of borders in
Greekurban space ingeneral.
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 Müller
- 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