cnidus

Venus: The Top Ten

Venus’ beauty became the obsession of an empire. Borne of her Greek cousin Aphrodite, the demur deity became synonymous with love, luck and fertility – and her sultry curves were worshipped in countless statues, reliefs and paintings of antiquity. Endless epithets still seduce throngs of open-jawed snappers the world over – but which sculptures have wowed just that little bit more over the centuries? Heritage Key puts glasses to lips in quiet contemplation, as we take you through the top ten Venuses of all time.


10) The Aphrodite of Frejus (early 1st century BC – end of 1st century AD)

About The AuthorSean Williams
Sean is an English Literature graduate, who currently works as a writer and journalist in London. He enjoys ancient history, theatre and sport. He does not enjoy Big Brother.

A Lion, a Turkey And a load of Marbles

Lord Elgin isn't the only Brit taking the blame for removing some of ancient Greece's greatest marble treasures - and the Parthenon is far from the only place raided by a zealous Brit in a bid to bring the ancient world to the smoggy streets of London. During an extensive dig carried out between 1857-59, Newton and his merry band of hacks travelled to the Ottoman - now Turkish - peninsula of Datca, where they began excavating the famous merchant city of Knidos - a picturesque Monte Carlo of the ancient Greek world, famous for its wealth, opulence and magnificent treasures. Not content to take a few snaps and enjoy the landscape, Newton and his men hauled many of the marbles aboard their ship and set sail for Blighty, a move which would have had far graver consequences a couple of thousand years back.

Lion of Knidos

080308 NTC BM c

Key People

The Lion was found in 1859 by British architect Richard Pullen.

The Lion of Knidos is a colossal 6-8 ton fearsome lion sculpture formed from one giant lump of Pentellic marble. It lay on a funerary base at the top of a 200ft cliff overlooking vessels sailing on the Mediterranean past its home in the ancient Greek city of Knidos, on the modern-day Datca Peninsula in Turkey. Its dates are disputed - some believe it to have been built as a celebratory piece following Conon's triumphant defeat of the Spartan fleet at the city in 394 BC; others relate it to the Doric style of the tomb it accompanied, dating it to around 175 BC. Its now-hollow eyes may have been inset with glass which would have allowed sailors to pinpoint the cliff from their ships. However it would have also been used as a symbol of power, wealth and pride, scaring sailors from the outpost.

The Lion was first discovered in 1859 by the British architect Richard Pullen, under Charles Newton's excavation. It was then transported to the British Museum - where it now resides in the museum's Great Hall as a pinnacle of ancient Greek marble work. As with many marbles owned by the British Museum - including most famously the Elgin Marbles - the Lion has been the subject of an ownership wrangling between Britain and Turkey, though for now it looks to be going nowhere.

Images
080308 NTC BM c
IMG_0849
Lion of Knidos, British Museum atrium

Put your Flickr photos of this object into the Heritage Key group, and tag them with keyobject-3747, to see them here!

Knidos

080308 NTC BM c

Key Dates

The city began around the 6th century BC.

It was an important cultural centre by the time Conon defeated the Spartans at the Battle of Cnidus in 394 BC.

The city was first signalled out for excavation by the Dilettante Society in 1812.

Key People

Conon, who defeated the Spartans in 394 BC.

Knidos, or Cnidus, is an ancient Greek city which is now located on Turkey's Datca peninsula, near the popular tourist spot of Tekir. From the 6th century BC onwards it became a vital strategic military and trading post at the edge of the Mediterranean, thanks to its vantage point at the summit of a cliff directly overlooking the sea. The city was already a prominent place by the time the Athenian general Conon defeated the belligerent Spartan fleet at the Battle of Cnidus in 394 BC, and it soon had an odeon, temples and was the focal point for a Venus sex cult. However the city is most famed for its illustrious marbles, most notably Praxiteles' statue of Aphrodite, now lost yet recreated in the British Museum, and the famous Lion of Knidos which now takes pride of place in the BM's Great Hall.

Knidos remained a strategic stronghold throughout the ancient Greek empire, yet switched allegiance to the Romans upon their defeat of Antiochus I Soter. It later became a Byzantine highlight, characterised by a large number of dwellings from the time. It became a point of western interest via the Dilettante Society of 1812, and was first excavated under C. T. Newton in 1857-58.

Related Structures

Marble of naked Aphrodite, British Museum.

Lion of Knidos, British Museum.

Images
080308 NTC BM c
IMG_0849
Lion of Knidos, British Museum atrium

Put your Flickr photos of this object into the Heritage Key group, and tag them with heritagesite-3746, to see them here!
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