Polyxena sarcophagus explained
The Polyxena sarcophagus is a late 6th century BCE sarcophagus from Hellespontine Phrygia, at the beginning of the period when it became a Province of the Achaemenid Empire.[1] The sarcophagus was found in the Kızöldün tumulus, in the Granicus river valley, near Biga in the Province of Çanakkale in 1994.[2] The area where the sarcophagus was found is located midway between Troy and Daskyleion, the capital of Hellespontine Phrygia.[1]
This is the earliest stone sarcophagus with figural reliefs ever found in Asia Minor.[2] The style is Late Archaic Greek and the sarcophagus dates to the last two decades of the 6th century BCE (520–500 BCE),[2] [3] or slightly later (500–490 BCE), based on stylistic analysis.[4]
The reliefs represent a funerary celebration on three of its sides, and on the back what is believed to be the sacrifice of Polyxena, daughter of the king of Troy, Priam, by Neoptolemos in front of the tomb of his father Achilles.[2] [5]
The description of the sacrifice of Polixena may be suggestive of a hero cult for Achilles, usually only involving animal sacrifice, on the spot of a Troad tumulus where he may have been buried.[5] Strabo (13.1.32) suggested that such a cult of Achilles existed in Troad:[6]
The men shown in the reliefs are Greek, while the women are Trojans.[7]
See also
Further reading
- Assur Corfù, Nicolas (2016). "Der Polyxena-Sarkophag von Çanakkale – archaisch oder archaistisch?" In: Numismatica e Antichità Classiche, vol. 45, pp. 43–66.
- Book: Draycott . Catherine M. . Audley-Miller . L. . Dignas . B. . Wandering myths: Transcultural uses of myth in the ancient world . 2018 . Berlin/Boston . 9783110416855 . 23–70 . Making meaning of myth. On the interpretation of mythological imagery in the Polyxena Sarcophagus and the Kızılbel Tomb and the history of Achaemenid Asia Minor.
- Geppert, Karin (2006). "Überlegungen zum Polyxena-Sarkophag im Museum Çanakkale". In: Kreutz, Natascha; Schweizer, Beat (ed.), Tekmeria. Archäologische Zeugnisse in ihrer kulturhistorischen und politischen Dimension. Münster: Scriptorium, pp. 89–106.
- Reinsberg, Carola (2001). "Der Polyxena-Sarkophag in Çanakkale". In: Olba, vol. 10, pp. 71–99.
- Reinsberg, Carola (2022). "Der spätarchaische Polyxenasarkophag". In: Antike Plastik, vol. 32. Wiesbaden: Reichert.
- Sevinç, Nurten (1996). "A New Sarcophagus of Polyxena from the Salvage Excavations at Gümüşçay". In: Studia Troica, vol. 6, pp. 251–264.
Notes and References
- Book: Rose . Charles Brian . The Archaeology of Greek and Roman Troy . 2014 . Cambridge University Press . 9780521762076 . 72–. en.
- [Çanakkale Archaeological Museum]
- Book: Burgess . Jonathan S. . The Death and Afterlife of Achilles . 2009 . JHU Press . 9781421403618 . 115 . en.
- Book: Rose . Charles Brian . The Archaeology of Greek and Roman Troy . 2014 . Cambridge University Press . 9780521762076 . 100 . en.
- Book: Burgess . Jonathan S. . The Death and Afterlife of Achilles . 2009 . JHU Press . 9781421403618 . 114 . en.
- Book: Burgess . Jonathan S. . The Death and Afterlife of Achilles . 2009 . JHU Press . 9781421403618 . 116 . en.
- Book: Rose . Charles Brian . The Archaeology of Greek and Roman Troy . 2014 . Cambridge University Press . 9780521762076 . 80 . en.