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Art and Archaeology

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 October 2017

Extract

Visitors to modern Istanbul struggle to imagine how the city as created by Constantine appeared. But the elongated promenade now usually indicated as Sultan Ahmet Parki, but also known as the At-meidam (‘Horse-Square’), is vaguely conceivable as the ancient Hippodrome, the centre of public life in imperial Constantinople; and of the numerous monuments that once adorned this area, a trio persists along the site of the ‘spine’ of the ancient racetrack. Two obelisks are still conspicuous; between them lurks the ‘Serpent Column’, which was already a piece of antiquity when Constantine had it removed from Delphi. Of all bronzes to survive from the classical world it is perhaps the most deserving of its own ‘cultural biography’. This is what Paul Stephenson offers with The Serpent Column. He starts in the broadest possible terms – mankind's general phobia of snakes – and then guides the reader through two and a half millennia of the vicissitudes endured by a sacred object wrenched from its ‘pagan’ purpose and somehow accorded special status within first Christian and then Muslim theocracies. Several times damaged, but never destroyed, the structure originally erected to mark the Greek victory over the Persians at Plataia in 479 bc now serves as a sort of talisman against snakebites. Stephenson calls upon some esoteric sources to inform its symbolic genesis – though disappointingly attempts no reconstruction of how it originally supported a tripod with cauldron – and shows how that symbolism could be adapted in biblical terms. Constantine's motives for relocating the monument remain obscure; nonetheless, we can surely dismiss Gibbon's conclusion that the emperor reveals merely ‘the rapacious vanity of a despot’. Recall the tradition that in his new forum he buried, beneath a pillar, an ensemble of relics comprising the Trojan-Roman Palladium, Noah's axe, Mary Magdalene's ointment jar, the crosses of the two thieves, and twelve baskets used by the apostles at the feeding of the five thousand. Superstitious he may have been; yet, by his choice of objects, Constantine also shows a fine sense of cumulative tradition at the juncture of Europe and Asia.

Type
Subject Reviews
Copyright
Copyright © The Classical Association 2017 

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References

1 The Serpent Column. A Cultural Biography. By Stephenson, Paul. Onassis Studies in Hellenic Culture. New York, Oxford University Press, 2016. Pp. xxii + 275. 92 half-tones, 8 line drawings. Hardback £47.99, ISBN: 978-0-19-020906-3 Google Scholar.

2 Trophies of Victory. Public Building in Periklean Athens. By Shear, T. Leslie Jr., Princeton, NJ, Department of Art and Archaeology, Princeton University, in association with Princeton University Press, 2016. Pp. xxiii + 475. 123 illustrations. Paperback £54.95, ISBN: 978-0-691-17057-2 Google Scholar.

3 Textile Production in Classical Athens. By Spantidaki, Stella. Ancient Textiles 27. Oxford and Philadelphia, PA, Oxbow Books, 2016. Pp. xxvii + 228. Illustrated. Hardback £38, ISBN: 978-1-78570-252-5 Google Scholar.

4 Dangerous Perfection. Ancient Funerary Vases from Southern Italy. Edited by Kästner, Ursula and Saunders, David. Los Angeles, CA, J. Paul Getty Museum, 2016. Pp. 212. Illustrated Hardback £40. ISBN: 978-1-60606-476-4 Google Scholar.

5 See, e.g. Bordignon, G. (ed.), Scene dal mito. Iconologia del dramma antico (Rimini, 2015)Google Scholar, containing a series of valuable case studies.

6 Greek Myths in Roman Art and Culture. Imagery, Values and Identity in Italy, 50 bc–ad 250. By Newby, Zahra. Greek Culture in the Roman World. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2016. Pp. xx + 387. 114 b/w illustrations, 15 colour plates. Hardback £74.99, ISBN: 978-1-107-0722-4 Google Scholar.