Seite - 173 - in The Power of Urban Water - Studies in premodern urbanism
Bild der Seite - 173 -
Text der Seite - 173 -
10 SyracusanWaterNetworks inAntiquity 173
resources and whose population had experienced significant population and economic
growth.51ThecitywasevendescribedbythepoetPindaras themostbeautiful cityof the living.52
Thebuildingof aqueducts inAgrigento initiatedby theEmmenid tyrant encouragedhistorians
toattributea similarpolicy to theSyracusan leader, especially asancienthistoriographyattrib-
uted tohima strong international preponderance after the victory ofHimera in480BC.Most of
thesemajorprojectswerepartof aneraofurbanupheaval that transformedsmall colonial cities
into largeurbancentres.According toDiodorusofSicily,53 andeven ifweshould consider these
figures tohavebeen lower,Agrigentowouldhavecountednearly 200,000 inhabitants, ofwhich
20,000were citizens.54 Even thoughwe have no figures for Syracuse, we could suggest that it
was as densely populated, if notmore. The Deinomenid Gelon chose towipe out a number of
rival cities on the eastern coast of the island and deport their inhabitants to the Syracuse site.
Facedwith Greekswho blamedhim for his recent origins, he asserted himself as the spring of
Greece55 andwanted to create ametropolis to rival thegreat cities of theAegeanworld,Athens,
SamosandtheCorinthianmetropolis.Heenlarged thecity,gave it townplanningandareligious
architecture capable of embodyinghismajor ambition. The urbanized area then extended from
50ha toanareawhichmusthavebeenabout 250ha, according to the limits given to the city of
theDeinomenids.Ortigia Island, theheartof theoldcity,wasreservedfor the tyrant,his relatives
andpoliades cults, and the source ofArethusawasno longer accessible to thepublic.Wemust
consider other water resources and the tyrannical context of the period that encourages us to
seetheestablishmentofatruewaterproject inthecity,aswellas thatofmonumentalbuildings,
which is even easier, given that the Epipolai plateauwater table is rich and of good quality.
Moreover, it is likely that the twodynasties,whodevelopedmanyties,diplomaticandmatrimo-
nial inparticular,practiceddomesticpoliciesofasimilarnature.Thecreationof theKolymbetra
in Agrigento, this reservoir basin in which Agrigento inhabitants would have farmed fish for
publicbanquetsandswansfor thepleasureof thepopulation,mustbeunderstoodinthebroad-
er context of ostentatious representationbyWestern sovereigns. I suggest to read thiskolymbe-
tra as a reproduction of the Persian paradise, set up by the Great Kings in Asia Minor and
intended to show the extent of their power. Agrigento is not the only placewhere theWestern
Greeks created lushandabundantgardens, as indicatedbyAthenaeus inhis bookon luxury.56
He citesDiodorusof Sicily andevenadded that theKolymbetrawasbuilt forGelon:57
Diodorus of Sicily, in his On the Library,58 reports that the inhabitants of Acragas constructed an expensive
swimming pool almost amile around and 30 feet deep for Gelon; river- and spring-water was diverted into it,
and it servedasa fishpondandprovided largenumbersof fish to supportGelon’s luxurious, hedonistic life-style.
A flockof swansalso settledon it, lending it an extremely attractiveappearance. Later on, however, it siltedup
and disappeared. Duris, in Book IV of his OnAgathocles,59 [says] that a lovely, well-watered grove is pointed
out near the city ofHipponium, and that a spotwithin it is knownasAmaltheia’sHornandwas constructedby
Gelon.SilenusofCalacte, inBookIIIof theHistoryofSicily,60 reports that there isanexpensivelyplantedgarden
near Syracuse calledMythus,where KingHieron conducted his business. The entire area around Panormus in
Sicily is referred toasagarden,because it isall full of fruit-trees, according toCallias inBookVIII of hisHistory
involvingAgathocles.61
51 Bouffier 2000.
52 Pind. Pyth. 12, 1.
53 Diod. Sic. 13, 84.
54 Cf.DeWaele 1980.
55 Hdt. 7, 162.
56 Ath. 12, 541f–542a (TranslationbyOlson 2010).
57 This assertionparticularly deserves tobe commentedon.
58 Diod. Sic. 11, 25, 4.
59 FGrHist 76F 19.
60 FGrHist 175F4.
61 FGrHist 564F 2.
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