Chryse (island) explained

Chryse (; Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: Χρύση|Khrýsē|Golden), also called Lemnian Chryse, was a small island in the Aegean Sea near Lemnos, mentioned by Homer and Sophocles. By the second century, Pausanias[1] and Appian[2] say that it had sunk below the sea. Its location is unknown.

The island's main feature was said to be its temple to Apollo, and its patron deity was the goddess Chryse. The Greek archer Philoctetes stopped there on his way to Troy and was bitten by a viper. Lucullus captured three men there in an ambush during the Third Mithridatic War.[3] The island seems to have disappeared by the second century AD. An ancient oracle (written by Onomacritus) may have predicted this end.[4]

The Description of Greece says:

Proposed sites

An amateur underwater archaeologist claimed to have rediscovered the island in 1960, identifying it with "a sunken land mass known as Kharos Bank, a 10-sq.-mi. area near the island of Lemnos" (39.9167°N 25.55°W), listed on British naval charts and located about 40feet below the surface. White building blocks (presumably from Apollo's temple) were said to be visible on the sea floor.[5] The Kharos Bank is mentioned by others as a possible site, but there does not appear to have been further work on it.[6]

Another theory proposes that the remains of Chryse are on a small islet only 70–80 m off the north coast of Lemnos, locally known as Varvara (39.9984°N 25.1537°W). Though the islet has a "heavy concentration of ancient foundations and fragments of pottery", and a large mound at its summit surrounded by walls (possibly an altar), it has not been excavated. It was apparently larger in antiquity, and large parts have sunk because of tectonic activity.[7]

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Pausanias, Description of Greece 8.33.4
  2. Mithridat. c. 72 et seq.
  3. Book: Gillies, John. The history of ancient Greece: its colonies and conquests; from the earliest accounts till the division of the Macedonian empire in the East. Including the history of literature, philosophy, and the fine arts, Volume 4, Part 2. T. Cadell and W. Davies. 1820. 4. 249. XXVII: From Alexander to Augustus. https://books.google.com/books?id=rUAZAAAAYAAJ&q=Appian%2BChryse+Island&pg=PA249.
  4. Onomacritus the Forger, Hipparchus' Scapegoat?. Javier Martínez. Fakes and Forgers of Classical Literature. Madrid. 2011. 225. 978-84-7882-725-1.
  5. Philoctetes Was Here. https://web.archive.org/web/20070322192009/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,873343,00.html. dead. March 22, 2007. . December 19, 1960.
  6. Harrison. S. J.. Sophocles and the Cult of Philoctetes. The Journal of Hellenic Studies. 1 January 1989. 109. 173–175. 10.2307/632045. 632045. 161913467 .
  7. Constantine Lagos, "Lemnian Chryse in Myth and Reality", E. Close, G. Couvalis, G. Frazis, M. Palaktsoglou, M. Tsianikas, eds., Greek Research in Australia: Proceedings of the Biennial International Conference of Greek Studies, Flinders University, June 2007, p. 11–20