Didyma
Didyma was a cult center for the city of Miletos It is located in the
present-day village of Yeniköy, about fifteen kilometers from the site
of Miletos. In ancient times, it was connected to its mother city by a
sacred road that had statues located on either side of it.
The Didymaion-the temple to Apollo and
its oracle at Didyma-was of considerable repute among the ancients.
German archaeologists excavating at the site have shown that the
earliest sanctuary here was built in the 8th century B.C. and that it
was enlarged into an enormous temple around 560 B.C. After their bloody
suppression of the lonian rebellion,
The Persians sacked and laid waste to Miletos (which they regarded as
the instigator) and the Didymaion in 494 B.C. It was during this assault
that the temple's cult statue of Apollo was carried off to Ecbatana.
After Alexander the Great defeated the Persians in 334 B.C., the lonian
cities regained their independence and work was begun on reconstructing
the Apollo temple. Around 300 B.C., King Seleukos I of Syria, who then
controlled western Anatolia, had the bronze statue of Apollo brought
back from Ecbatana to be installed in the new temple, to whose
construction he also provided monetary assistance. The new building was
designed by the architects Paionios and Daphnis. The former was from
Ephesos and was one of those who worked on the Artemision there.
The temple was planned on a much
grander scale than the original sanctuary and indeed it was the third
largest religious structure in the ancient world being surpassed only by
the Ephesian Artemision and a temple on this island of Samos. The
Hellenistic temple measured 109.34 by 51.13 meters and columns.
It was set on a seven-stepped platform
measuring 3.5 meters high and in the center of the east front there was
a separate flight of fourteen steps.
The construction of so huge a building
naturally took a long time and continued during the 3rd and 2nd
centuries B.C. One section was only completed in Roman times. While the
temple suffered repeatedly from fires and earthquakes, it sustained the
worst damage in an earthquake in 1493.
The columns still standing measure
2.40 meters in diameter and 19.70 meters in height. The double row of
columns surrounding the temple was covered over with a marble roof as
was the temple proper. The central courtyard measured 53.63 by 21.71
meters and was the site of the Archaic-period temple. During Hellenistic
times, a small temple (called a naiskos) was built here to house the
bronze statue of Apollo. Its surrounding walls were 25 meters in height
and decorated with gryphons. The cella was unroofed. East of the adyton
(sacred courtyard) is a great stairway of twenty-four steps measuring
15.20 meters wide. This flight of steps leads up to a windowless, three-doored
hall where the oracle was written down and delivered. The hall measured
20 meters high and had a marble roof. East of the chamber, a door 5.63
meters wide and 14 meters high leads to the pronaos. The pronouncement
of the oracles could only be listened to from outside the chamber.
Stairways led to the upper floor. On either side of the entrance are
doors measuring 2.25 meters high and 1.2 meters wide that each connects
to a narrow, vaulted tunnel leading to the adyton. At the far end of
each corridor is a small propylon-like room.
After viewing what is unquestionably
one of the most impressive temples of the ancient world, with take our
leave with amazement.