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Agrigento Temple - Photo (c)
laurenz
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Agrigento and Selinunte
Two of the great cities of Magna Graecia -- or what's
left of them -- can be explored along Sicily's southern coast. Both
Agrigento and Selinunte knew greater glory than they experience today,
but the remains of what they used to be are still relatively rich in
spite of the looters and conquerors who have passed through. Of the two,
Agrigento is the far greater attraction.
Once known as the Greek city of Akragas, Agrigento
has seen many conquerors in its day, from the Romans to Byzantines and
Arabs. The year 1087 saw the arrival of the Normans.
Agrigento's remarkable series of Doric temples from
the 5th century B.C. are unrivaled except in Greece itself. All of the
modern encroachments, especially the hastily built and often illegal new
buildings, have seriously dimmed the glory of Agrigento, but much is
left to fill us with wonder.
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Ancient Akragas covers a huge area – much of which is
still unexcavated today – but is exemplified by the famous "Valley of
the Temples" (actually a misnomer, as it is a ridge, rather than a
valley).
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This comprises a large sacred area on the south side of the
ancient city where seven monumental Greek temples in the Doric style
were constructed during the 6th and 5th centuries BC. Now excavated and
partially restored, they constitute some of the largest and best
preserved ancient Greek buildings outside of Greece itself. They are
listed as a World Heritage Site.
The best preserved of the temples are two very similar
buildings traditionally attributed to the goddesses Juno Lacinia and
Concordia (though archaeologists believe this attribution to be
incorrect). The latter temple is remarkably intact, due to its having
been converted into a Christian church in 597 CE. Both were constructed
to a peripteral hexastyle design. The area around the Temple of
Concordia was later re-used by early Christians as a catacomb, with
tombs hewn out of the rocky cliffs and outcrops.
It was scarcely possible to be more judicious and fortunate than the
Agrigentines were in the choice of a situation for a large city; they
were here provided with every requisite for defense, pleasure, and
comfort of life; a natural wall, formed by abrupt rocks, presented a
strong barrier against assailants; pleasant hills sheltered them on
three sides without impeding the circulation of air; before them a broad
plain watered by the Acragas, an agreeable stream from which the city
took its name, gave admittance to the sea-breeze...... the port or
emporium lay in view at the mouth of the river....
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Henry Swinburne, Travels in the Two Sicilies
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Selinunte - Photo (c)
Nicoḷ Compostella
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Selinunte, in contrast, was never built over as
Agrigento was, and holds extensive remains of the acropolis, though none
quite equal the charm of Agrigento's Valley of the Temples.
As you stand in the midst of a carpet of mandrake,
acanthus, capers, and celery growing wild at Selinunte, you'll have to
work hard to imagine what the city must have looked like at the apex of
its power.
According to the Athenian historian Thucydides, Selinus was founded by people from Megara Hyblaea, a city on the east
coast of Sicily, in the 7th century BC. The city had a very short life
(about 200 years). During this time its population grew to a total of
about 25,000. A wealthy trade center, Selinus was envied by the
Carthaginians.
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Selinus had an almost permanent conflict with Segesta,
which allied itself with Athens. However, the Athenians were defeated by
the Syracusans, and Segesta now asked help from Carthage.
Diodorus
Siculus tells that the Carthaginian commander Hannibal (not to be
confused with his more famous namesake), in 409 BC destroyed Selinus
after a war that counted about 16,000 deaths and 5,000 prisoners. The
city was besieged for nine days by an army of 100,000 Carthaginians.
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Selinunte - Photo (c)
pablolemosochandio
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(c) 1997-2008 E. Massetti
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