transcript
Speaker 1:
[00:00] On the night of July 21st, 356 BC., the sky of the city of Ephesus glowed with the flames of one of the most famous fires in world history. The destruction of one of the most famous temples in the ancient world was not the result of an encroaching army or a dispute between empires. It was history's most famous act of arson, carried out by a man who wanted his name to live forever. However, the temple came back bigger and better than before. Learn more about the Temple of Artemis and its several creations and destructions on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. This episode is sponsored by fastgrowingtrees.com. Spring is here, which means it's time to plant and landscape. If you want to make things easier on yourself, check out fastgrowingtrees.com. FastGrowing Trees is America's largest and most trusted online nursery, with thousands of trees and plants and over two million happy customers. In addition to everything you might need for your yard, they also have a wide selection of indoor plants and trees as well. I got two indoor ficus trees from fastgrowingtrees.com. It was super easy to take them out of the box and the process was much cleaner than if I had to go to a local nursery. Right now they have great deals on spring planting essentials, up to half off on selected plants. And listeners to my show get 20% off their first purchase when using code DAILY at checkout. That's an additional 20% off better plants and better growing at fasttrees.com using code DAILY at checkout. fastgrowingtrees.com code DAILY. Now is the perfect time to plant. Let's grow together. Use DAILY to save today. Offer is valid for a limited time. Terms and conditions may apply. This episode is sponsored by Quince. Steve Jobs is famous for having multiple versions of the same outfit that he wore every day. And I'm not saying I'm Steve Jobs, but I do have a rather simple wardrobe, a habit I developed through years on the road living out of a bag. My Quince cashmere sweater is something I've mentioned before, and I've come to wear it almost every single day. Not only does it look good, but it's incredibly durable. And the best part is that Quince's prices are 50 to 60 percent lower than those of similar brands. Quince works directly with ethical factories and cuts out the middleman, so you're paying for quality, not brand markup. Everything is designed to last and make getting dressed easy. Two things that I really care about. Refresh your wardrobe with Quince. Go to quince.com/daily for free shipping and 365-day returns. Now available in Canada too. Go to quince.com/daily for free shipping and 365-day returns. In a previous episode, I covered the seven wonders of the ancient world. The seven wonders were part of a list that is attributed to the Greek historian Herodotus. The modern popularity of that list is attributed to a Dutch book of etchings from 1572 called the Octomundi Miracula. I have done episodes on two of the wonders, the Great Pyramid and the Lighthouse of Alexandria, and today I want to focus on one of the other seven wonders, the Temple of Artemis at Ephesus. Artemis was the ancient Greek goddess of the hunt, wilderness, wild animals, childbirth and the moon, often depicted as a fiercely independent protector of young women and nature. She was the twin sister of Apollo, which is the reason why the most recent moon program was named after her. The tales of Artemis in Greek mythology often focused on her swift, disproportionate punishment to those who acted unjustly or immorally. Her protections made her widely revered among the Greek gods. While there were many temples dedicated to Artemis, the center of the cult was in the city of Ephesus, on the west coast of modern-day Turkey. There were several different versions of the Temple of Artemis, which were built over the centuries after earlier versions were destroyed. The first temple is believed to have been constructed in either the 7th or 8th centuries BC. Excavations of the earliest temple completed in the 20th century produced gold, ivory and glass artifacts of veneration to Artemis. While sacred artifacts were expected, the discovery of thousands of early coins ultimately proved to be the most significant find, completely altering our understanding of the site. The temple, frequently referred to as the Artemisian, functioned as more than a mere religious sanctuary. From its very beginning, it acted as a financial institution, a role confirmed by the discovery of numerous coins. The first version of the temple was destroyed by flooding around the year 560 BC. However, it was the later two reincarnations of the temple that ultimately cemented its place in history. Work on the second temple commenced soon after the destruction of the first. It was financed by a surprising patron, King Croesus of Lydia. During the 6th century BC, control over Asia Minor was in a state of flux. The Greeks regarded the Lydians as barbarians, and while barbarian may sound harsh, the Lydians' high tribute demands likely soured Greek opinion of them. Croesus and the Lydians wanted good relations, knowing the Greeks were hard to govern, so they funded the new temple to honor Artemis. The Lydian funding was generous given the massive construction costs. Historical estimates of the original temple held that it was nearly twice the size of the Greek Parthenon. Croesus was sending a message to his Greek subjects with his generosity. However, despite his generosity, the Lydian's dominion over the Anatolian coast was short-lived. Only three years after the temple's completion, it fell to the expanding Persian Empire. The second and third temples gained much of their fame because they sat at the terminus of two important trade networks. Ephesus' location, between the Ionian coast and the Persian royal road, made it a critical trade hub. As commerce and pilgrimage brought people to Ephesus, the temple's lore naturally spread through the merchants and pilgrims who arrived to venerate Artemis. The Greeks tended to build larger temples on marshy ground. Earthquakes are a common scourge in the region, and ancient builders believed that water-saturated ground protected the massive structures. The engineers faced challenges similar to those at the Taj Mahal, which is also built on water-saturated ground. Unlike the Taj Mahal's stone columns, Ephesian engineers laid down charcoal topped with sheepskin. The charcoal acted as a buffer between the watery soil and the stone foundation. The charcoal's porousness allowed water to expand without shifting the monument's base. The sheepskin was a dry barrier to protect the charcoal layer from impurities from above. The result was a marvel of engineering that supported a massive stone monument the size of a modern football field. The temple retained its structural integrity for nearly two centuries until the events of July 21st, 356 BC. Coincidentally, the exact same day that Alexander the Great was born. That night, the temple was deliberately set on fire by a man named Herostratus, whose motive, according to ancient sources, was simply to achieve lasting fame through a shocking act of destruction. I mentioned Herostratus in my episode on Demnatio Memori. Authorities reportedly executed Herostratus and attempted to erase his name from history by forbidding anyone to mention it. But historians later recorded it anyway, creating an enduring term, Herostratic Fame, meaning notoriety gained through destructive deeds. The arson had a profound effect on the marble structure because many of the building's supports were massive cedar and cypress beams. The building contained tapestries that allowed it Herostratus to saturate the sacred fabric with oil, which slowly burned towards the roof supports. Historical engineers hypothesized that the fires inside reached 800 degrees Celsius or 1500 degrees Fahrenheit. At that temperature, a process called calcination occurs. In scientific terms, the marble's surface began to flake, crumble and turn into a soft, powdery chalk. Even if the column looked intact, its structural integrity was compromised. The first-century Roman architect and engineer, Vitruvius, analyzed the temple's destruction centuries after it burned, and explained the fire's effect on the marble structure. He said, For the secret of this is that, like all other bodies, stone are composed of the four elements. When they are cast into the kiln and are scorched by the fire, they lose their former property of hardness. Their strength being exhausted by the great heat of the fire, they are left with their pores open and void. The Roman statesman Pliny the Elder is the primary source for the temple's third iteration, basing his descriptions on personal observations. Pliny's records indicate that the construction of the third temple took approximately 120 years. Charred fragments from the second temple formed a stable base for the third. Pliny referred to it as the most wonderful monument of Grecian magnificence. Pliny also provided measurements of its size. The full length of the temple was 425 feet or 130 meters, and its width was 225 feet or 70 meters. Perhaps the most impressive feature of the building was its 127 columns. According to Pliny, each column was a gift from a different regional king and soared more than 60 feet or 18 meters high. Pliny was intrigued by the composition of the third temple's Artemis statue. He noted, quote, As to the statue of the goddess herself, there is some doubt, but it is generally supposed that it is made of ebony. Moucianus, however, who was three times consul and one of the most recent authors to have seen it, states that it is made of vinewood. End quote. Centuries later, the temple of Artemis would face destruction once again, this time during the protracted decline of the Roman Empire. The Goths plundered the site in the year 262. A clear motive drove the destruction as the Gothic fleet of hundreds of ships, manned by captured sailors and Gothic warriors, squeezed through the Bosporus and into the Aegean. They weren't looking to conquer territory. They were looking for the temple that had acted as a bank. The Goths stripped the gold leaf from the ceilings, emptied the treasury and, in an act of sacrilege, even hauled away the silver staffs of the priests. The destruction of the third temple was perpetrated by thieves and concluded again by burning it down. The Ephesians tried to repair the statue inside the temple as best they could, but they were no longer an economic power and lacked the backing of an empire as they had during their first construction. After the Gothic disaster of 262, no benefactor stepped forward. The need to construct a defensive wall to address the city's heightened susceptibility to invasion severely depleted Ephesian resources. As a result, subsequent rebuilding efforts could only be modest. Much of the roof was left incomplete and open to the sky, nor did the Ephesians replace the damaged columns. Instead, they were braced much like the modern Parthenon to halt further deterioration. Despite the Ephesians' best efforts, the building faced one final devastating blow. The temple's final chapter unfolded after the Edict of Milan, which legalized Christianity in the Roman Empire. The construction of the Church of St. Mary in Ephesus marked a significant shift as the city became one of the first Ionian communities to establish a major Christian landmark, a move that only underscored the Temple of Artemis' spiritual and physical decline. As the appetite for tolerating Greco-Roman deities waned, funding for the reconstruction of their temples entirely disappeared. The building's final chapter came with a stroke of the pen of Emperor Theodosius in the year 391, when he issued an edict banning all Greco-Roman religious practices. He said, No person at all shall sacrifice an innocent victim to senseless idols in any place at all or in any city. If any person should attempt to perform such a sacrifice, he shall be reported, and shall receive the appropriate retribution. The temples shall be closed in all places and in all cities, and access to them shall be denied, so that the opportunity for sin may be lost to the guilty. St. John Chrysostom, the Archbishop of Constantinople, is credited with the temple's final destruction in the year 401, ten years after the Edict of Theodosius. He carried out this final act of destruction by recruiting a group of monks to act as foot soldiers to eliminate what he considered pagan atrocities. Cyril of Alexandria credited St. John with being the a destroyer of demons and overthrower of the Temple of Artemis. Armed with sledgehammers, the monks decapitated the statues inside and used levers and pulleys to topple the columns, and those that they couldn't bring down, they burned with fire. All that would remain of the Temple of Artemis was a few scattered columns and broken stone. A monument that had once meant so much to the believers in the Greco-Roman world had vanished into legend. The race for global antiquities in the second half of the 19th century restored the temple to the world's collective memory. An enthusiastic archaeologist named John Turtle Wood used the writings of Pliny the Elder and other ancient authors to find what he could about the lost temple. The monk's destruction of the temple was so complete that it took six years of digging to find any of the rocks that once made up the structure. Fragments of the Temple of Artemis discovered by Wood and his team are preserved today at the British Museum. Other fragments of the Temple still exist thanks to the Byzantine Emperor Justinian, who used pieces of the surviving stonework to create the Hagia Sophia in Constantinople. Today almost nothing remains of the Temple of Artemis at Ephesus, but scattered stones and a single reconstructed column rising from the marshy ground were one of the greatest buildings of the ancient world once stood. The Temple of Artemis was a symbol of wealth, faith, artistry and ambition, rebuilt more than once because people believe some places were worth restoring no matter the cost. Though the temple today is gone, it still endures in memory as one of the true wonders of the ancient world. The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel. The associate producers are Austin Oetken and Cameron Kieffer. Research and writing for this episode was provided by Joel Hermanson. My big thanks go to everyone who supports the show over on Patreon. Your support helps make this podcast possible. I also want to remind everyone about the community groups on Facebook and Discord as this is where everything happens outside of the podcast. As always, if you leave a review on any of the major podcast apps, you too can have it right in the show.