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- The ancient city of
Ephesus is located outside the
modern city of
Selçuk on
the Mediterranean coast of present-day Turkey. Although
the region was settled as early as 5000 BC,
the
city whose ruins we see today dates from the 3rd BC and
are the product of Hellenistic city planning and Roman
renovations.
Lysimachus, the Thessalian general of Alexander the
Great, relocated Ephesus to its present site and
constructed the city using the then modern principles of
urban development envisioned by Hippodamus of Miletus.
Although Lysimachus is often credited with building the
"Great Theatre" at this time, there is no evidence of a
theatre in the initial construction phase of the city.
Stefan Karwiese of the Österreichisches
Archaologisches Insitut questions the existence of a
theatre at Ephesus prior to 100 BC but acknowledges the
possibility that Lysimachus may have chosen the building
site prior to his death in 281 BC.
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- The magnificent theatre
is set into the side of a steep hill at the center of the
ancient city. Its design, location and conception may
have benefited from Hellenistic influences but its size
and ornamentations are the products of Empirical Rome.
The theatre was built at the end of the Hellenistic
period, but it was significantly altered and enlarged by
the Romans during the following five centuries. The
theatre remained in use until the 5th century
AD.
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- A major Hellenistic
construction phase in Ephesus at the end of the 3rd
century BC most likely produced the
initial theatre that featured a cavea with a single tier
of seats, an orchestra with a drainage channel, and a
simple one-story scaenae (stage
house). Under the
Romans, beginning about 40 AD, the theatre was expanded
and renovated to become the
massive structure that we see today.
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- The city of Ephesus grew
considerably during the reign of Augustus and the Theatre
expanded accordingly. During the reign of Nero in 54 BC,
the scaenae was enlarged to eight rooms opening off of a
central hallway. This phase of renovation was finished in
66 AD.
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- Between 87 and 92 AD, a
renovation of the theatre, dedicated to the Emperor
Domitian, enlarged
the stage (pulpitum) and included a richly decorated
two-story façade (scaenae
frons). The
open
pardoi of the Hellenistic theatre were enclosed to
produce covered side
entrances (aditus
maximus) to the cavea. At this time, the size of the
cavea was increased by adding an additional tier of
seating supported by vaulted substructures and reinforced
by external retaining walls (analemmata). Sometime prior
to 262 AD, a third story was added to the scaena and a
third tier of seats was added to the cavea.
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- Earthquakes
between 359 and 366 destroyed the upper cavea, and
although repairs to the northern retaining walls were
completed Under Arkadios (395-408 AD), the upper cavea
was abandoned. An
epigram celebrates the proconsul Messalinus, who was
responsible for the completion of the repairs. By the 8th
century AD the
theatre had been incorporated into the defensive
fortifications for the
city. The theatre
continues to be used each May at the Selçuk
Ephesus Festival of Culture and Art.
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- The
Roman cavea at Ephesus is larger than a
semicircle, with
three tiers of seats separated into wedges (cunei) by two
diazomata and 58
staircases. The
first tier of seats has twelve staircases, while the
second and third tiers had twenty-three each.
Made
of marble, the cavea held 17,000 to 22,000 spectators and
measured 140 by 95
meters. The
steepness of the rows increases above each diazomata for
the benefit of those sitting at the back of the theatre.
There was a colonnade above and behind the uppermost tier
of cavea seating. An awning (velum) that provided weather
protection to the cavea was added in the middle of the
second century AD. The velum was still in use a century
later as records show repairs to the awning in 205 and
240 AD. The theatre was never covered by a roof.
Vitruvius writes that theatres in Asia Minor also
featured bronze or clay sounding vessels placed around
the cavea to help improve acoustics. These may have been
present at Ephesus.
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- Water
run-off channels surrounded the semicircular orchestra.
In Roman times
the orchestra was covered with slabs of marble, some of
which were green. When the Roman stage was completed it
projected twenty feet into the orchestra. Thus, compared
with Vitruvius' model scheme of the Hellenistic theatre,
the proscenium cuts into the "basic circle" of the
orchestra by three and a quarter feet; however, this
amount is made up for almost exactly by the reduction in
the radius of the orchestra caused by the water drain.
The stage was eight and a half feet tall and rested on
supporting piers. The
proskenion, which was the same length as the stage,
featured Doric columns five
and a half feet high that rested on three-foot wide stone
supports. The
columns were spaced at twenty-one foot
intervals. The
central interval was wider than the rest, and held a
stairway leading from the stage into the orchestra. The
colonnade architecture of the scaenae frons included
niches for statues and seven large rectangular openings
(thyromata), which may have been used as doors or
contained scenic elements, depending on the production
requirements.
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- In
the 4th century a high peripheral wall was built around
the orchestra to protect the audience from injury during
the often-violent gladiatorial contests and circus-like
entertainments that
had become popular. The orchestra was also made
waterproof and served as a kolymbethra (water filled pool
used for aquatic displays). Before the wall was built
there had been an iron railing between the orchestra and
the cavea.
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- St. Paul argued with the
silversmith Demetrius at the theatre at Ephesus.
Demetrius responded to Paul's preaching by encouraging
the crowd in a chant of "Great is Artemis of the
Ephesians!" Demetrius' alleged motive was to protect the
business he had selling silver statues of the Goddess.
The theatre was probably still under construction when
Paul spoke at Ephesus in the mid-1st century
AD.
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- Ephesus was first
excavated by British archaeologist J.T. Wood from
1863-1874. He was primarily concerned with the Artemision
(Temple of Artemis), which he located in 1869. Austrian
excavations of the site began in 1894 under W. Wiberg.
The theatre was one of the first sites the Austrians
excavated. Austrian excavations continued until the
outbreak of World War I, resumed 1926-35 and have
continued from 1954 to the present in connection with the
Österreichisches Archäeologisches Institut. In
the 1970s and from 1993-8, the cavea was excavated and
restored. Since 1997 the work on the theatre has focused
on the reconstruction of the scaenae frons. Excavators
are photographing, drawing, and cataloguing all the
fragments of the scaenae frons that were found collapsed
in the orchestra. Austrian teams will analyze this
information to determine how the reconstruction of the
scaenae frons should proceed. As of 2001, the Ephesus
excavations were under the direction of Fritz Krinzinger.
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- - Author: Amanda
Heffernan (student research assistant), Whitman College.
2003
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-
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