30 Oct 2019

The cosmopolitan tastes of the Agrigentines

In addition to sculptural finds of statues and bas-reliefs with delicate figures of leaves and bunches of grapes, substantial finds of fine tableware have been identified, including a group of no less than 519 examples of Italic terra sigillata pottery with its characteristic bright red colour that ...
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30 Oct 2019

Wonder for the eyes, tile by tile: mosaic floors

The mosaics found in Agrigentum are clear evidence of the contamination between Italic tradition - characterised by black and white mosaics - and Alexandrian tradition, brought to Italy by artists from North Africa and instead characterised by polychrome tiles. Some refined examples are the Casa de...
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30 Oct 2019

Logic and rationality of Greek urban planning: the Ambitus

Of Greek tradition, the ambitus were the water drainage channels between one house and another. In Agrigentum they also represented a separating element of the buildings, were functional for water regulation but also for the rationality of the orthogonal network of the Hippodamian Plan....
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30 Oct 2019

A mixture of cultures: the inscriptions

The Greek engravings found on the gymnasium seats are a fundamental key to understanding the atmosphere in Agrigentum where the Greek roots of the city in the Augustan age were still very present. The inscriptions confirm the presence of flamines in the city and the area’s use for sports: they ar...
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30 Oct 2019

Greek agonism, victories approaching Olympus

The Panhellenic games were sporting events involving all the cities of ancient Greece. The most important ones were held in Olympia in honour of Zeus, but there were also the Pythian Games in Delphi, the Nemean Games in Nemea and the Isthmian Games in Corinth, all dedicated to different deities. ...
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30 Oct 2019

Sport in Agrigento: a tradition since the time of Akragas

Through the words of Pindar, a lyrical poet of Theban origin (5th century BC), the deeds of the Akragantine athletes during some editions of the Panhellenic Games have been preserved. Two Olympic odes celebrated the victories of Theron, ancient tyrant of Agrigento, in the quadriga competitions in ...
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30 Oct 2019

Genius, veneration of people still alive

In ancient Rome, the genius was a deity of domestic worship, private to families, related to the ability of male individuals to generate new life. The genius was usually also attributed with all the abilities judged superior to an individual’s normal abilities, such as intellect or creativity. ...
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30 Oct 2019

The guardians of the sacred flame: the flamines

Unlike the Augustales, the flamines were priests assigned to a specific deity, from whom they took their name. Their task was to light and fan the flame on the altar during sacrificial rites; they could be picked out from the other citizens for the particular way they were dressed: they wore a pur...
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30 Oct 2019

From common mortal to god: the cult of Asclepius

The evolution of the figure of Asclepius, god of medicine, in Greek literature is very particular: Homer mentioned him in the 8th century BC for his widespread knowledge in the medical field, but he was still mortal; Pindar, three centuries later, called him the demigod son of Apollo and a mortal ...
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30 Oct 2019

Arula

From the Latin arŭla, a diminutive of ara, the word arula indicates a small altar usually made of terracotta. ...
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