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The Colossus of Rhodes
The island of Rhodes was an important
economic centre in the ancient world. It is located off the
southwestern tip of Asia Minor where the Aegean Sea meets the
Mediterranean. The capitol city, also named Rhodes, was built in 408
B.C. and was designed to take advantage of the island's best natural
harbour on the northern coast. In 357 B.C. the island was conquered
by Mausolus of Halicarnassus (whose tomb is one of the other
Seven Wonders of the Ancient World), fell into Persian hands
in 340 B.C., and was finally captured by Alexander the Great
in 332 B.C..
When Alexander died of a fever at an early age,
his generals fought bitterly among themselves for control of
Alexander's vast kingdom. Three of them, Ptolemy,
Seleucus, and Antigous, succeeded in dividing the
kingdom among themselves. The Rhodians supported Ptolemy (who
wound up ruling Egypt) in this struggle. This angered
Antigous who sent his son Demetrius to capture and
punish the city of Rhodes. The war was long and painful.
Demetrius brought an army of 40,000 men. This was more than
the entire population of Rhodes.
When
Demetrius attacked the city, the defenders stopped the war
machine by flooding a ditch outside the walls and mining the heavy
monster in the mud. By then almost a year had gone by and a fleet of
ships from Egypt arrived to assist the city. Demetrius
withdrew quickly leaving the great siege tower where it was. To
celebrate their victory and freedom, the Rhodians decided to build a
giant statue of their patron god Helios.
They melted
down bronze from the many war machines Demetrius left behind
for the exterior of the figure and the super siege tower became the
scaffolding for the project. According to Pliny, a historian
who lived several centuries after the Colossus was built,
construction took 12 years. Other historians place the start of the
work in 304 B.C..
The statue
was one hundred and ten feet high and stood upon a fifty-foot
pedestal near the harbour mole. Although the statue has been
popularly depicted with its legs spanning the harbour entrance so
that ships could pass beneath, it was actually posed in a more
traditional Greek manner: nude, wearing a spiked crown, shading its
eyes from the rising sun with its right hand, while holding a cloak
over its left.
The architect of this great construction was
Chares of Lindos, a Rhodian sculptor who was a patriot and
fought in defence of the city. Chares had been involved with large
scale statues before. His teacher, Lysippus, had constructed
a 60-foot high likeness of Zeus. Chares probably started by
making smaller versions of the statue, maybe three feet high, then
used these as a guide to shaping each of the bronze plates of the
skin.
The Colossus stood proudly at the harbour
entrance for some fifty-six years. Each morning the sun must have
caught its polished bronze surface and made the god's figure shine.
Then an earthquake hit Rhodes and the statue collapsed. Huge
pieces of the figure lay along the harbour for centuries.
It is said that an Egyptian king offered to pay
for its reconstruction, but the Rhodians refused. They feared
that somehow the statue had offended the god Helios, who used
the earthquake to throw it down.
In the
seventh century A.D. the Arabs conquered Rhodes and broke the
remains of the Colossus up into smaller pieces and sold it as
scrap metal. Legend says it took 900 camels to carry away the
statue. A sad end for what must have been a majestic work of art.
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