Εμφανίζονται 2 τίτλοι με αναζήτηση: Πληροφορίες για τον τόπο στην ευρύτερη περιοχή: "ΥΜΗΤΤΟΣ Βουνό ΑΤΤΙΚΗ" .
ΥΜΗΤΤΟΣ (Βουνό) ΑΤΤΙΚΗ
(Humettos). A mountain in Attica, about three miles south of Athens, celebrated for its marble and its honey.
Separating the S end of the plain of Athens from that of the Mesogaia
to the E is the mountain range of Hymettos. About 20 km long, and broken into
two parts by a pass that crosses E-W from N of the civil airport at Helleniko
to Koropi, ancient Sphettos, the larger N section reaches a height of over 1000
m along its whale-back ridge, while the S, also called Anhydros (waterless), consists
of several peaks, the highest being 774 m.
In antiquity Hymettos was famous for honey and marble, and the scars
of the worked-out quarries can be seen concentrated for the most part on the W
slopes for a distance of 3 km S from Kaisariani. The bare summit performed a different
function: even as today, it gave the Athenians a reliable indication of weather
by the presence, or absence, of threatening clouds (Theophr. De sign. temp. 20).
Less than a km N of the highest point, excavations have disclosed two crude rectangular
foundations, possibly for altars, the one probably dedicated to Herakles, the
other most likely to Zeus. Near the latter was a pit full of sherds, the bulk
either Geometric and archaic or Late Roman. A large stele was also found with
cuttings for a small bronze statue, perhaps that of Zeus Hymettios mentioned by
Pausanias (1.32.2). As for the altar ascribed to Zeus, its location makes it a
suitable candidate for that of Zeus Ombrios described in the same passage. The
altar of Zeus Epakrios (Etym. Magn. s.v. Epakrios Zeus) should have been on the
very summit. All ancient remains, however, have been recently obliterated by military
building operations.
Another, and better preserved, pair of foundations has been cleared
at the Church of Prophet Elias, a little more than 3 km due S of the summit, on
the E slopes of the peak Zeze, overlooking the Mesogaia, with the ancient deme
of Sphettos immediately to the E below. Beneath the church are the remains of
a small temple, consisting of a cella with pronaos and opisthodomos. Twenty-five
m away another temple of similar size and general disposition was discovered.
Both were built in the 6th c. B.C. The one on the site of the church was apparently
destroyed at the beginning of the 5th, restored in the second half of that century,
and survived until Roman times. The other was destroyed in the 3d c. B.C. About
midway between the two temples is a prominent natural rock, several m high, which
may have served as an altar. No evidence exists for a firm identification of either
temple.
Finally, there are two caves that deserve notice. Near the N end and
on the mountain's E flank, 4 km from Liopesi, is the Lion Cave. Classical and
Roman sherds found within it testify to its long use in antiquity; perhaps Pan
was worshiped here. No doubt surrounds the deity honored in the second cave, the
famous one of Pan on the S slopes overlooking Van. Inscriptions, sculpture, votive
reliefs, and pottery make obvious the popularity in Classical times of this cult
of Pan, Apollo, the Nymphs and Graces. Chief among the worshipers was Archedemos
of Thera, a man of the 5th c. B.C. caught by the Nymphs, who carved in low relief
an image of himself as a sculptor carrying pick-hammer and square. A millennium
later, this cave was taken over by the Christians.
C.W.J. Eliot, ed.
This text is from: The Princeton encyclopedia of classical sites,
Princeton University Press 1976. Cited Nov 2002 from
Perseus Project URL below, which contains bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.
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