INTRODUCTION
When the sanctuary of Orthia at Sparta was first unearthed at the start of the twentieth century it revealed a number of surprises, not least the wealthy array of finds in ivory, bone, bronze and terracotta dating to the eighth and seventh centuries BC. Such evidence for artistic prowess combined with early material connections to Crete, Mesopotamia and the Levant, prompted the excavators to remark on ‘the artistic reputation of the early Spartans, which had been buried beneath the militarism of their descendants’ (Droop Reference Droop1929, 52). While acknowledging the sensationalism in this statement, it is hard to overestimate the cosmopolitan nature of the early finds from this sanctuary that tied Sparta into long-distance artistic, technological and socio-religious networks (Marangou Reference Marangou1969, 206) traditionally referred to as the ‘Orientalising Period’.Footnote 1
Two pieces within the ivory corpus caused some consternation among the original excavators because of their rarity within the ivory corpus and in Laconian art more generally. The pieces comprise mirror-image prothesis scenes on relief plaques. Richard Dawkins (Reference Dawkins1929b, 211), in his chapter on the ivories, stated: ‘These reliefs seem to have no place in the regular development of the art as shown by the great majority of examples found … a foreign origin is possible’ (cf. Fragkopoulou Reference Fragkopoulou, Cavanagh, Cavanagh and Roy2011; Morgan Reference Morgan2016, 229). My aim in this paper is to suggest that these prothesis plaques, while displaying imagery that is rare if not completely unknown in Archaic Laconia, nonetheless express ideologies very much in line with the semantic relationships encompassed in the ivory corpus as a whole. These relationships express heroic and eschatological ideals that have been recently emphasised in the iconographic programmes of a number of different media across the Archaic Greek world (Petit Reference Petit2011; Reference Petit2013; Reference Petit2019), and the prothesis plaques are integral to this messaging in the ivory corpus.
This analysis will take place on several scales, from the prothesis plaques themselves, to the ivory corpus, to comparisons to other examples of complex figural art in the Archaic period. These multiple scales also allow for the fullest semantic reading of this prothesis scene, by placing it within its iconographic and historical contexts (Petit Reference Petit2011, 17), and they provide an inroad to a deeper understanding of the interlocking symbolisms of the larger votive assemblage. I begin with an introduction to the ivory corpus, focusing on chronology and display within the sanctuary. I then turn to the prothesis plaques, first articulating their connections to the Greek prothesis ritual, but emphasising subtle references in their imagery to a possible specific mythological episode, which serve to enhance the more generic aristocratic ideal of the attainment of immortal kléos. I turn next to the broader ivory corpus, comparing the configurations of imagery in the assemblage to other iconographic programmes on cultic implements as known from textual and archaeological sources to further elucidate the stress on kléos and the afterlife woven through complex figural compositions. Throughout, I consider the broader social and religious setting of this corpus. This multiscalar analysis allows us to contextualise a previous anomalous image within its ritual assemblage, and a previously anomalous assemblage (the ivory corpus) within the socio-religious landscape of Archaic Sparta.
THE SANCTUARY OF ORTHIA AND THE IVORY CORPUS
The ivories from the sanctuary of Orthia
The sanctuary of Orthia was excavated by the British School at Athens under the direction of Richard Dawkins from 1906 to 1910, and subsequently published in a single volume in 1929.Footnote 2 The most conspicuous remains of the sanctuary are Roman,Footnote 3 but the original Doric temple dated to the sixth century BC and was refurbished in the Hellenistic period (Fig. 1) (Dawkins Reference Dawkins1929a, 3). Slightly to the south of this Doric temple, however, was an earlier deposit with evidence of an earlier temple whose northern half was cut through by the building of the later Doric temple, and an earlier Archaic altar (Luongo Reference Luongo2011, 84–5; Reference Luongo2015, 73–4, fig. 9). Below these structures the excavators uncovered an even earlier altar, partially underneath the earlier Archaic altar, along with remains of a peribolos wall and cobble-stone paving.Footnote 4 Excavations concentrated in this general area and, importantly, distinguished a thick layer of sand below the level of the sixth-century Doric temple, dated by the excavators to c. 600 BC, and associated with an extensive restructuring of the site (Dawkins Reference Dawkins1929a, 15–16). Below the sand layer was ‘a rich stratum of dark earth containing votive offerings in great abundance; its upper part was marked by pottery later to be identified as Laconian I and II [identified as contemporary with the earlier Archaic temple] while the lower part, resting on the virgin soil, was full of sherds of Geometric vases’ (Dawkins Reference Dawkins1929a, 4). This rich earth was thick – as much as half a metre thick in the centre – and it covered around 30 m2, reaching to the Archaic altar, and possibly beyond (Fig. 2) (Luongo Reference Luongo, Pontrandolfo and Scafuro2017, 595–6). Charred bones were found in the deepest sections of this deposit alongside Geometric pottery, although no structural remains were found this deep except for a small piece of wall (Dawkins Reference Dawkins1908–9, 11; Luongo Reference Luongo2011; Reference Luongo, Pontrandolfo and Scafuro2017).
The majority of the ivories were unearthed underneath the sand layer, and most came from the stratum of dark earth, which Dawkins (Reference Dawkins1929a, 18–19; Reference Dawkins1929b, 203–4) dated as early as the tenth century BC.Footnote 5 In the Reference Dawkins1929c publication, Dawkins classified 44 ivory and 38 bone plaques into eight styles (Styles I–VIII), noting that the ivories in particular were found almost solely under the sand layer, associated with Geometric, Proto-Corinthian and Laconian I and II pottery (Appendix 1, Table A1:1).Footnote 6 While early reviews of the Reference Dawkins1929c volume accepted the stratigraphic dating via pottery below the sand layer (Wade-Gery Reference Wade-Gery1930; Kunze Reference Kunze1933), subsequent studies reoriented Dawkins’ stylistic and stratigraphic dating of the early finds, notably those by John Boardman in Reference Boardman1963 and Lila Marangou in Reference Marangou1969 (see also Lane Reference Lane1933–4). Their works have been discussed elsewhere (Carter Reference Carter1985; Léger Reference Léger2017, 132), but, in general, Boardman lowered the dates of associated pottery by several decades, and re-dated the crucial sand layer from 600 to 570/560 BC based on the pottery, while Marangou rearranged many of Dawkins’ stylistic categories of the ivories, pushing the earliest ivories (Dawkins’ ‘Style I’) down to the first quarter of the seventh century (Appendix 1, Table A1:2).
The Orthia ivories have been connected to Assyrian and North Syrian schools of the ninth and eighth centuries BC via Crete (Marangou Reference Marangou1969, 203–13; Carter Reference Carter1985, 126; Tournavitou Reference Tournavitou, Lemos and Kotsonas2019, 641–2), and Jane Carter (Reference Carter1985) stressed similarities to the local Iranian style at Hasanlu, destroyed c. 800, which also borrowed from Assyrian and North Syrian motifs and styles.Footnote 7 The enrichment of Orthia's sanctuary in the eighth and seventh centuries was likely a direct result of Sparta's conquests in Messenia and its inclusion, via newfound wealth and political power, into long-distance artistic and technological networks (Cartledge Reference Cartledge2002, 103–4). These networks and styles were wrought, in large part, by the cultural authority of the expansive Neo-Assyrian Empire. The acquisition of materials like ivory and the necessary crafting skills reflected local Spartan elites’ management of this new connectivity, as well as their self-definition within both Laconia and larger eastern Mediterranean exchange networks (Gunter Reference Gunter2009, 5, 12; cf. Feldman Reference Feldman, Maran and Stockhammer2012; Reference Feldman2014). The Orthia ivories reveal not only striking stylistic connections to Crete and the Near East, but also religious and mythological ones as well, most notably with the numerous appearances of the Mistress and Master of Animals (Fig. 3). Furthermore, these long-distance connections somewhat temper Boardman's and Marangou's lower dates for the ivories. Konstantinos Kopanias, in his study of stylistic parallels between the earliest Orthia ivories (Dawkins’ ‘Style I’) and those from the Idaean Cave and the Northwest Palace at Nimrud, suggests a date around the late eighth–early seventh century for these early plaques. These parallels suggest a transference of techniques and/or craftspeople from the Idaean Cave to Sparta at this time.Footnote 8
While stylistic and subject-matter affinities between Sparta, Crete and Assyria/North Syria may be noted in the earliest ivories, these evolved in subsequent ivory styles (Styles II–V) to reflect more immediate tastes, particularly through showing heroes such as Heracles and Perseus alongside the Mistress of Animals. Indeed, while Dawkins (Reference Dawkins1929b, 248) considered the ivory plaques to derive from Near Eastern inspiration, he also cautioned that ‘in front of whatever foreign influences there were and strongly submerging them, we must recognise a very definite local character’.Footnote 9 Plaques from Styles II–V show mythological scenes such as Perseus killing Medusa (Fig. 4), Heracles battling the Hydra, Heracles killing a centaur, a man wrestling monsters, and Prometheus attacked by an eagle. Other plaques display more generic scenes of beasts, warriors and rituals. Numerous other ivory objects, including combs, protomes and seals, also made up this corpus. These include ivory figurines displaying couchant beasts, in particular sheep and lions devouring animals, often with relief carvings on their undersides. Related plaques and figurines were made in bone, which were occassionally found below, but more frequently above, the sand layer, suggesting that bone eventually replaced ivory as a medium for carving.Footnote 10
Displaying and dating the plaques
How these ivory plaques may have been displayed is significant for understanding the prothesis plaques, as is the chronology of the corpus. Given the small size of the earliest (Style I) plaques, averaging around 4–5 cm in length, Dawkins suggested that they were affixed to the catch-plates of fibulae, which also turned up within the sanctuary finds, a suggestion repeated in later publications (Dawkins Reference Dawkins1929b, 204; Marangou Reference Marangou1969; Carter Reference Carter1985, 124; Reference Carter1989, 369–70; Cavanagh Reference Cavanagh, Lemos and Kotsonas2019, 660). The Style I plaques are smaller, using shallower carving techniques than those used in Styles II–V. These early pieces, which most closely resemble those from the Idaean Cave, Nimrud and Hasanlu, may have been used on fibulae, or at least were quite dissimilar to Styles II–V – Dawkins noted that the Style I plaques were found solely with Geometric pottery.
The latter styles, which include the prothesis plaques, are later stratigraphically and stylistically than Style I, but they are not necessarily ordered chronologically – Dawkins considered Styles II and III contemporary, while Style V was considered a more developed version of Style II (Style IV was reserved for the prothesis plaques – discussed below), but not necessarily much later in date. Style II plaques were found with Geometric to Laconian I pottery, and were given a wide date range, from the early eighth century to c. 650 BC, while one plaque from Style V was dated to c. 740–710.Footnote 11 Marangou (Reference Marangou1969) subsequently rearranged pieces from these groups into new groups on more refined stylistic grounds, dating them primarily from the 660s to the 620s BC (Appendix 1, Table A1:2), yet the connection between stylistic and stratigraphic dating has proven difficult to sustain in some cases, and several of Marangou's stylistic groupings have been subject to criticism (e.g., Carter Reference Carter1985, 140). In their analyses of lead figurines from the Meneleion excavations Cavanagh and Laxton (Reference Cavanagh and Laxton1984) found that contextual and stratigraphic data did not map cleanly on to typology or style (cf. Braun and Engstrom Reference Braun and Engstrom2022). Dawkins seems to have recognised this issue. Discussing the Style V plaques, he noted, ‘When the examples are thus arranged according to what we have of stratigraphical evidence, it is not possible to trace any actual development from one to another’ (Dawkins Reference Dawkins1929b, 211). Yet, almost in the same breath, he cautioned against relying on associated pottery to arrive at fixed dates, suggesting that the stratigraphical evidence ‘must not be too closely pressed in its details and only accepted as a general guide’ (Dawkins Reference Dawkins1929b, 211). While a close re-analysis of the excavation notebooks and a reconstruction of the stratigraphical contexts of the ivories and other early finds is certainly a desideratum (see Luongo Reference Luongo2011; Reference Luongo2015; Reference Luongo, Pontrandolfo and Scafuro2017), this paper will take Styles II–V as a unit for reconstructing their iconographic programme, leaving out Style I as likely earlier chronologically, and Styles VI–VIII as later, seeing as most pieces from these latter groups were found above the sand layer. Styles II–V roughly map on to Marangou's Groups B–H. She treats some pieces from Style V separately and included two of Dawkins’ Style I plaques in Group B.
The reason for taking Styles II–V as a general unit ties into how they were displayed, and how their iconography worked together in a larger semantic programme. Importantly, Dawkins recognised that some plaques, particularly those from Style III, could not have been affixed to fibulae (Dawkins Reference Dawkins1929b, 209). More recent interpretations have suggested some of these pieces may have originally decorated furniture (Kopanias Reference Kopanias, Cavanagh, Gallou and Georgiadis2009, 130 and nos 62 and 63) or other implements.Footnote 12 The dedication of decorated furniture to the gods in their sanctuaries is known from the ancient sources, in particular the Chest of Cypselus at Olympia, the Throne of Apollo at Amyclae (in reality not a throne but a much larger monument) and the Throne of Zeus from the Idaean Cave.Footnote 13 Some of these plaques very possibly did decorate one or more cultic implements or furniture pieces – a few are quite large, approaching 10 cm in length. Some specimens, namely from Style II, have small holes along their vertical axis, possibly to attach them to bronze fibulae (Marangou Reference Marangou1969, 19; Carter Reference Carter1989, 369). Yet most plaques from Styles III and V, as well as the prothesis plaques (Style IV), do not in fact appear to have holes, meaning they could have been inlaid into furniture or other implements. Even when holes are present, these do not necessarily indicate that they were meant for fibulae. Indeed, Carter (Reference Carter1989, 369) suggested that the later bone plaques, some with their backgrounds cut away (à jour) and others with drill holes in the corners, were instead affixed to chests. Many ivory plaques from the Levant and Assyria, for instance, show drill holes in various places along with grooves for attachment, which were interpreted as means of affixing them to furniture (Feldman Reference Feldman2006, 141–2; see artefacts in the Metropolitan Museum of Art: 61.197.1; 59.107.21; 57.27.5; 61.197.11). One of the plaques from the sanctuary of Orthia also displays curvature in its profile, suggesting it was attached to a rounded object (Dawkins Reference Dawkins1929c, pl. XCVII:1). Even if some pieces from Styles II–V did belong to fibulae or came from separate objects, I propose that the iconographic programme of these styles as a whole was more unified than previously surmised. The prothesis plaques in particular, grouped together as Style IV (Marangou's Group G), provide an inroad to examining this unified programme, modifying previous assumptions that these images were anomalies in the corpus.
SYMBOLISM ON THE PROTHESIS PLAQUES
The prothesis plaques
The prothesis scenes, shown on two separate plaques (Fig. 5ab), appear atypical at first glance.Footnote 14 One plaque is mostly present, but very damaged (Fig. 6a), measuring 8.7 cm high and 7.6 cm in width. The second plaque is only about one-sixth complete, but the remaining relief is in quite good shape (Fig. 6b). Like terracotta plaques, they were presumably painted (Salapata Reference Salapata2014, 50), but the surfaces are too worn for any paint to remain. In their complete form, the two plaques were mirror images of one another. The scene shows a bearded male corpse wrapped in a shroud and lying on a bier. Behind the corpse, at the head, stands an old man leaning on a staff in a long cloak. He is facing two women in long dresses whose hands are raised in mourning. The one in front has one of her hands on the corpse, a common gesture in Attic prothesis scenes (Richter Reference Richter1942, 83; Taylor Reference Taylor2014, 16). At least one of the females wears a polos. The female standing closest to the male on the more complete plaque is, unfortunately, fragmentary, but given the amount of space between her head and the border of the plaque, and the similarities in dress between the two females, it is likely that she also wore a polos.
Dawkins (Reference Dawkins1929b, 211) assigned these plaques to their own category – Style IV – and noted how different they were in artistic style and subject matter, suggesting a foreign origin. Recent interpretations continue to suggest that they came from outside Sparta (Fragkopoulou Reference Fragkopoulou, Cavanagh, Cavanagh and Roy2011, 91–3; Morgan Reference Morgan2016, 229), although little elaboration is offered on these interpretations beyond Dawkins’ assumption. Furthermore, these more recent studies do not take into account the stylistic analyses by Marangou (Reference Marangou1969) and Carter (Reference Carter1985) that place them more or less in the sequence of Laconian ivory carving. Seeing as they were found with Geometric pottery yet also some lead figurines, Dawkins (Reference Dawkins1929b) originally assigned them a date range of c. 900–740 BC. Boardman (Reference Boardman1963) assigned them a date on or before 650 BC, while Marangou (Reference Marangou1969, 51), in her revised stylistic scheme, placed them in the 640s, stating that the form of the plaques, while modelled in low relief was ‘rein lakonisch’. Carter (Reference Carter1985, 148) agreed with Marangou on this date, noting the large, ringed eyes with plastically rendered eyeballs, which grow out of earlier reliefs from Marangou's Group B and Group E, dated anywhere from 660 to 620 BC.Footnote 15 These plaques thus fit squarely within the general carving styles of the ivory corpus, negating Dawkins’ original assumption that they must have been of foreign origin.
The prothesis plaques, while fitting into the Laconian stylistic corpus of ivory carving, nevertheless portray highly anomalous subject matter. The prothesis is virtually absent from Archaic Laconian imagery, a lacuna some scholars attribute to Sparta's social reforms in this period that limited personal displays of luxury.Footnote 16 The prothesis imagery, which seems to have its origins in Amarna-period Egypt and Late Minoan (LM) IIIA2 Crete, proliferates in first-millennium Greece on Attic Geometric pottery.Footnote 17 The mature Geometric style, particularly that of the Dipylon Painter, portrays elaborate scenes full of individuals mourning the deceased, reminiscent of episodes from the Homeric epics (Fig. 7).Footnote 18 The portrayal of the prothesis continues in Black Figure plaques (Fig. 8) along with loutrophoroi and phormiskoi of the seventh and sixth centuries and on white-ground lekythoi in the fifth century, with scenes becoming increasingly private and domestic in nature.Footnote 19 Additional examples of this funerary rite come from Italy, Anatolia and Egypt.Footnote 20 Can we fit the prothesis plaques into the general characteristics of the Attic prothesis from this same period?
While certainly stemming from similar traditions, the scene differs from many Attic depictions of the prothesis in that a male stands at the head of the corpse rather than females, as is customary on Attic vessels and plaques from the seventh century.Footnote 21 Furthermore, specific details of the figures on the ivory plaques diverge from Attic traditions, which only in rare cases lend themselves to mythical, divine or narrative interpretations.Footnote 22 The prothesis plaques, in fact, seem to anticipate fifth-century white-ground lekythoi scenes in terms of the smaller number of mourners and the inclusion of idiosyncratic features, although these plaques lack the private nature of the fifth-century examples, as will be discussed below.Footnote 23 The old man on the Spartan prothesis plaques is in very plain dress, while the two women wear elaborate skirts and poloi. Furthermore, the man seems to have shaved or cut his beard: stippling on the chin, more apparent on the fragmentary plaque, suggests the presence of the ‘five o'clock shadow’, whereas all other males on contemporary ivory plaques from the sanctuary have protruding beards. On Attic Black Figure plaques showing the prothesis, all males likewise have full, protruding beards.
It is possible that these plaques are referencing a specific death, to be discussed in the next section. My intent, however, is not to pinpoint a precise, fixed identity for the deceased and the mourners; rather, I intend to use these plaques to illuminate ideologies of kléos through death via the intertwinement of mythical paradigms and actual ideals of Spartan citizens, which can also be read through the broader ivory assemblage at the sanctuary. In the next sections, I demonstrate the narrative and normative meanings of this particular prothesis scene through its iconographic significations, before turning to the broader ivory corpus.
The death of a hero: narrative and normative considerations
Marangou (Reference Marangou1969) suggested that the context of these plaques – namely Orthia's sanctuary – must mean this scene symbolised a mythical death, of either a god or hero. In his Reference Förtsch2001 monograph Reinhard Förtsch argued instead that this scene could not be a mythical prothesis (p. 97). Förtsch asserted that the character of these plaques was more in line with the private funerary nature of Attic Black Figure plaques, and that the Laconian pieces must have represented brief attempts by the aristocracy to assert their distinction before this tradition was suppressed. Their prominence was derived from heroism achieved through battle in service to the state, as described by poets like Tyrtaeus (Förtsch Reference Förtsch2001, 98–9). Yet there are several points of divergence from Attic models, as discussed above. Furthermore, that the plaques may represent an actual death does not negate the imagery having divine or mythical connotations (Whitley Reference Whitley1991, 52). As Luca Giuliani (Reference Giuliani and O'Donnell2013, 30) asserts, ‘To position “everyday life” and “mythological narrative” as alternatives only creates confusion because the two do not operate on the same level and therefore cannot function as opposites that exclude one another.’ I would take this statement further and suggest that not only are they not opposed to one another – these two spheres inform and intersect with one another in striking ways. Nanno Marinatos (Reference Marinatos and Des Bouvrie2002, 154) argues that genre and myth, the normative and the narrative, can be intertwined in iconographic programmes:
… genre and myth meet at an axis defined by social tradition: myth and genre express the same values. Thus, genre imagery can easily be turned into a specific story by the addition of a single inscription which specifies the name of the hero … if normative rather than narrative considerations determine the choice of motifs, the same scene could be used with or without minor alterations to designate many different characters and the message would remain the same. [emphasis added]
Likewise, Jeffrey Hurwit (Reference Hurwit2002, 1–2) writes ‘We now recognize categories of imagery in which the distinction between the generic and the mythological, between the mortal and the heroic or divine, is not as strict.’ Many other Geometric and Archaic scenes – for instance, ship ‘abduction’ scenes – have likewise been read as mythical paradigms evoking general heroic atmospheres (Langdon Reference Langdon, Rystedt and Wells2006, 207). Hurwit (Reference Hurwit2011, 13), however, argues that we should not write off specific mythical/narrative meanings that would ultimately enhance the link between the achievement of heroic status and the sentiments and ideologies expressed in a particular myth: ‘the assimilation would be easier, the identification more complete, and the status more exalted and secure when the myth or hero was specific rather than vague’. These porous boundaries form the very heart of the matter, and are key to understanding the ideological aspirations expressed through this scene and through the ivory corpus as a whole. Key within these interpretations of course is the larger symbolic system into which a particular image, with its narrative and normative meanings, is inserted. Thierry Petit (Reference Petit2011, 15) rightly points out that, just as the decoding of languages requires complete sentences rather than isolated words, ‘ce sont les documents qui présentent ces combinaisons de motifs et la “syntaxe” de leur articulation sémantique qui doivent avoir notre préférence’. This methodology essentially asks us to interpret singular instances of iconography as parts of larger systems of symbolism that worked in concert with one another, whose overall meaning could be read by ancient viewers. Such an approach allows us to mine the deeper social meanings inherent in seemingly anomalous imagery, a good example being the Judgment of Paris scene on the Chigi Vase, analysed by Jeffrey Hurwit (Reference Hurwit2002) as referencing broader themes of elite paideia, on which more below. This syntax will be examined in the following sections, first within the larger ivory corpus and comparative Archaic figural compositions, and then within the archaeological context of the sanctuary.
Turning for now back to the prothesis plaques, we can first consider their narrative meanings. There are a few major reasons to see this prothesis scene as having mythological connotations, which serve to enhance – rather than negate – its association with more generic ideals of heroic kléos arguably expressed by the plaques and the corpus as a whole. The unique placement of the (living) older male and two females is telling, as is the shaven face of the older male. The two main mythological contenders for this scene in its Laconian context are: (1) the death of Hyacinthus, a Spartan prince accidentally killed in mythical traditions by a discus thrown by his lover Apollo and worshipped near the village of Amyclae,Footnote 24 and (2) the prothesis of Hector as known from Book 24 of the Iliad, a suggestion originally put forth by T.J. Dunbabin (Marangou Reference Marangou1969, 53; Förtsch Reference Förtsch2001, 97).
Certainly Hyacinthus is an attractive candidate at first glance: the Spartans faithfully mourned his death on an annual basis in the Hyacinthia, and Pausanias (3.18.9–3.19.5) described a tomb to Hyacinthus underneath an altar and statue of Apollo alongside a famous ‘throne’ wrought by Bathycles (see below). The sanctuary at Amyclae shows more-or-less continuous activity from the end of the Bronze Age into the Archaic period. Its votive findings and associated myths seem to suggest cults to the mortal Hyacinthus and to Apollo.Footnote 25 While the death of Hyacinthus is thus enticing as an interpretation, it is difficult to sustain an argument that incorporates the full range of iconography on these plaques. Hyacinthus’ death by Apollo, furthermore, is known from Hesiod's Catalogue of Women (Frag. 102, Oxyrhynchus Papyri 1359 fr. 3), but the Hyacinthia's first mention is in Herodotus (9.6–7). Scholars suggest this festival developed earlier than its first literary mention – namely in the late eighth or early seventh century, when Amyclae was incorporated into the Spartan polis and evidence of cultic activity increased within the sanctuary (Vlachou Reference Vlachou, van den Eijnde, Blok and Strootman2018, 95; cf. Vlachou Reference Vlachou, Tsingarida and Lemos2017; Conde Reference Conde2008; Dietrich Reference Dietrich1975). But there is less certainty that all of the elements associated with the later known festival were in place (the fullest description is found in Athenaeus’ Deipnosophistae (4.139d–f)). Marangou (Reference Marangou1969, 53) pointed out, moreover, that the festivities mourning Hyacinthus seemed to have nothing to do with his prothesis, nor does he have a clear relationship to Orthia.Footnote 26
The particular combination of two females, one older male with a shaven face, and a mature deceased male makes the second suggestion – the prothesis of Hector – more attractive. Indeed, Marangou (Reference Marangou1969, 53) ultimately favoured this reading as ‘die einzige “wahrscheinliche, wenn auch nicht zu beweisende” Interpretation’. This latter understanding allows us to identify all four figures, with an old man, Priam, facing Hector's wife Andromache and mother Hecuba, and all three mourning a deceased Hector. Another possible extant example of Hector's prothesis is witnessed on two metopes from the north frieze of the first temple of Hera at Foce del Sele in southern Italy, which dates to the sixth century BC and portrays a number of episodes from the Trojan War. In one metope, two women raise their hands in mourning, interpreted as Helen and Andromache. One woman holds a child, possibly Hector and Andromache's son, Astyanax. The metope next to this one shows the prothesis of a corpse on a bier, with another figure, possibly Hecuba, standing over it (van Keuren Reference Keuren1989, pl. IV). According to Pausanias, the Throne of Apollo at Amyclae also showed a scene of Trojans bearing libations to Hector (3.18.16).
In examining comparanda for the depiction of Hector's prothesis in Archaic art, we might draw further connections to Crete. While this island was likely the source for early ivory carving styles, as discussed above, it also furnishes a possible image of a deceased Hector from a sanctuary setting in the form of an incised one-handled cup from the Iron Age/Archaic sanctuary of Kommos dating to the seventh century, originally published by Maria Shaw (Reference Shaw1983), and recently reinterpreted by Antonis Kotsonas (Reference Kotsonas2019a). The cup is incised in similar fashion to contemporary vessels in Gortyn, and may come from this site. It shows three individuals, one lying face-down in an elaborate frame. Kotsonas identifies this figure as Hector's body lying, dishonoured, in the camp of the Achaeans (see Iliad 22.395; 23.24–5; 24.18), with Priam (the figure on the left) arriving before Achilles (on the right) to beg for his son's body.
The other side of the cup, which is fragmentary, depicts individuals who seem to be engaged in a footrace, interspersed with birds, possibly running towards a ‘Tree of Life’.Footnote 27 A Laconian III kylix from Orthia's sanctuary likewise depicts four individuals racing around a tree (Dawkins Reference Dawkins1929c, pl. IX; cf. Pipili Reference Pipili and Powell2018), and the similarities between the Orthia votives and Gortyn have been noted elsewhere (Marangou Reference Marangou1969, 46; Carter Reference Carter1985, 156–7; Salapata Reference Salapata2009, 330 n. 4). These types of contests may have been staged at the death of an important individual, akin to the funerary games of Patroclus. Overall, if Kotsonas’ interpretation of the Kommos cup is accurate, then we have a more-or-less contemporary depiction of Hector's death – albeit a different stage of his death – from central Crete, a region with stylistic ties to Sparta through ivory carving, as well as political and social ties (Kotsonas Reference Kotsonas2019b, 399–400). Both examples derive from cultic settings, to be further explored below.Footnote 28
To consider the finer details of the plaques: Priam is frequently depicted as an old man in the Iliad (e.g., Iliad 24.560, 599, 618, 683). While we have no evidence from the Iliad suggesting that Priam shaved in mourning,Footnote 29 early fifth-century Attic red-figure vases show Priam with a stubbly face, including a kylix attributed to the Briseis Painter possibly showing Priam approaching Achilles (Fig. 9).Footnote 30 The comic word πριαμόομαι meant ‘I shave my head to look like a tragic Priam’, and the masks of Priam were seemingly shown as clean-shaven.Footnote 31 One issue with this interpretation is that the third female (Helen?) is missing, although this may simply be due to spatial constraints. Hector's prothesis is rare in Greek art, so there are no clear conventions for its portrayal.Footnote 32 Furthermore, not all early narrative art was inspired by Homer's works, given the large corpus of oral traditions circulating in the Greek world.Footnote 33 Even in cases where the subject matter reflects the Homeric poems – as arguably is the case with the prothesis plaques – we cannot assume, in this early period, direct knowledge of the Iliad or Odyssey in the forms that we presently know them (Snodgrass Reference Snodgrass1998, 150; Reference Snodgrass and Snodgrass2006; cf. Borg Reference Borg, Baumbach, Petrovic and Petrovic2010, 98; Hurwit Reference Hurwit2011, 4–5; Knodell Reference Knodell2021, 224). Finally, we should not assume a one-way translation from myth to iconography, but recognise that artists might take their own liberties with the portrayal of a particular scene, perhaps for mundane reasons (e.g., the space available), but perhaps to intensify narrative or normative meanings.Footnote 34 In the case of the plaques, the three mourning figures fit nicely into the space, and room is left to underscore the subtleties of the scene, including Priam's shaved beard, which invokes narrative meanings, and the females, whose headgear – the polos – suggests divinity (see below), which invokes normative meanings.
Divine females
We can take the intertwinement of the normative and narrative even further through turning to the females on the prothesis plaques, whose accoutrements underscore the normative ideas of the immortal kléos that heroes would enjoy. They wear the Cretan epiblema and embroidered skirts with similar – though not identical – designs composed of checkers and circles with dots in the centre. The fringed hems of the skirts were popular in Cretan art of the seventh century BC, and derived from Hittite and Syrian fashions.Footnote 35
The most distinctive iconographic element on the females, however, is the polos worn by at least one (and likely both of them), an accoutrement with links to divinity. Malcolm Bell (Reference Bell1981, 81, nos 64–84), for instance, noted a class of standing, clothed, polos-wearing females at Morgantina. Bell was adamant that they represented deities. From the seventh century BC, he argued, the polos was ‘the characteristic adornment of goddesses … There are few occasions, if any, when it is worn by mortals’ (Bell Reference Bell1981, 81; cf. Levi Reference Levi1945, 31; Marangou Reference Marangou1969, 29–30) In the Levant, Anatolia and Mesopotamia, female figures, often naked, wear the polos, and are frequently identified as goddesses.Footnote 36 The naked standing female with a polos appears in the Greek world in the Iron Age, particularly on Crete, possibly by way of itinerant Levantine artists or else the transfer of figurine and mould technology via Cyprus.Footnote 37 The nakedness alongside the polos is generally taken to denote a goddess in these cases.Footnote 38
More recently scholars have approached the assumption that the polos equals divinity with greater caution, and have instead suggested this accoutrement indicates mortal females engaged in ritual (Marconi Reference Marconi, Palagia and Wescoat2010, 327) or else draws a link between mortal and goddess.Footnote 39 Furthermore, the polos does not show up in prothesis imagery, but it is not absent from the realm of death. Cybele sometimes appears in divine funerary banquet stelae wearing a polos or mural crown across Italy, Greece and Anatolia, from the Archaic to Roman periods.Footnote 40 Greek funerary figurines often feature females in poloi (Bell Reference Bell1981, 82; Higgins Reference Higgins1954, nos 846–51, 860, pls 118, 122). Examples from the Archaic period show a seated female in a polos with a plank-body decorated with geometric designs holding a child, thought to represent the protective and regenerative power of a deity (Hadzisteliou Price Reference Hadzisteliou Price1978, 1–9; de Polignac Reference Lloyd1995, 44–5).
While the polos is often associated with deities, we should recognise that mortals may wear it in ritual settings, possibly in the likeness of a goddess. This link with divinity is significant when interpreting the normative, heroic meaning of the prothesis plaques. While the mythological reading would suggest we see these females as mortal characters – namely Hecuba and Andromache – the mourning of dead heroes by females took on special valency in epic, linked to the kléos of the deceased. This sense of kléos amounted to a heroic code that Michael Silk explains as ‘the logical chain which links death, glory, art, and immortality. Death is inescapable … yet certain acts … can achieve the glory that outlives finite life, so long as they are perpetuated in art’ (Silk Reference Silk1987, 70, cited in Perkell Reference Perkell and Suter2008, 93–4; see also Vernant Reference Vernant, Gnoli and Vernant1982; Nagy Reference Nagy1979, 149). The kléos of dead heroes was inscribed into memory first through funerary laments, the thrênos, and the góos.Footnote 41 These acts of commemoration had divine connotations, not least in their ability to bestow immortality upon heroes. Not all scholars agree that the góos sung by females was a medium for the bestowing of kléos (Derderian Reference Derderian2001, 43; Murnaghan Reference Murnaghan, Beissinger, Tylus and Wofford1999, 213; Holst-Warhaft Reference Holst-Warhaft1992), although Helen is frequently singled out from other women as having almost divine powers in bestowing kléos (R.P. Martin Reference Martin and Suter2008, 126; Clader Reference Clader1976, 2; Pantelia Reference Pantelia2002; Clarke Reference Clarke2019, 326–7). Furthermore, other females in the Iliad who spontaneously perform the lament upon first seeing a dead hero are likened to goddesses. At Iliad 19.282–6, Briseis is likened to ‘Golden Aphrodite’ when she catches sight of Patroclus’ body. As she begins wailing, she is ‘a mortal woman alike to goddesses’. At Iliad 24.697–706, Cassandra is also likened to Golden Aphrodite when she sees her father, Priam, returning with Hector's body, and breaks into a wail.Footnote 42 The linking of mortal females with divine power upon lamenting the deceased suggests subtle yet significant connections between the act of lamenting and the deceased's attainment of immortal fame through ritual and commemoration. Such sentiments may similarly be expressed subtly through the polos worn by the females on the prothesis plaques, and can also be read within the iconographic programme of the ivory corpus and the wider votive assemblage found at the sanctuary of Orthia.
The normative meanings: from myth to actuality
In terms of the normative meanings, who were the ‘actual heroes’ invoked through Hector's prothesis? I suggest this image – and its insertion in the wider ivory corpus – evoked ideals associated with the elites of Sparta, ideals which increasingly became applied to the wider citizen body in the seventh and sixth centuries, as evident from the contemporary poetry of Tyrtaeus. In later periods Orthia's sanctuary was the focal point of training and competition that became known as the agōgē, which reinforced social categories between citizenry (homoioi) and outsiders (perioikoi and heilotai) (Kennell Reference Kennell1995, 137; Ducat Reference Ducat, Safford, Shaw and Powell2006, 69–117; Des Bouvrie Reference Des Bouvrie, Fischer-Hansen and Poulsen2009; Waugh Reference Waugh, Cavanagh, Gallou and Georgiadis2009; Kõiv Reference Kõiv, Kämmerer and Kõiv2015, 52; Thommen Reference Thommen2017, 15; Flower Reference Flower and Powell2018, 431, 435). This system of initiatory trials included various athletic and choral contests celebrated in the summer festival known as the Gymnopaediae (Pettersson Reference Pettersson1992, 52–6; Kennell Reference Kennell1995, 75; Flower Reference Flower and Powell2018, 439–40), also connected to Orthia, based on inscriptions linking worship of Orthia to this festival (Rose Reference Rose1929, 406). Scholars have linked the eighth- and seventh-century finds, including the ivories, to early assertions of unity and power amongst Spartan elites (Morgan Reference Morgan2016, 237, 254; Des Bouvrie Reference Des Bouvrie, Fischer-Hansen and Poulsen2009), although there is no evidence for the homoioi or agōgē in the seventh century.Footnote 43 Nonetheless, the votive findings below the sand layer, which include bronze and lead jewellery, bronze and ivory figurines, and ivory plaques and seals, do suggest activities of elites who had the means to procure these materials and craft techniques, which could have extended to control over both the iconographic repertoire and ritual activities conducted at the sanctuary. In the final section I consider more practical aspects such as the accessibility of these votives to citizens within the sanctuary in the seventh century, but it is possible that these ivories were originally the result of a more exclusive elite. Nonetheless, the seventh and sixth centuries seem to be a transformative period in Sparta, when a greater number of citizens accessed communal cults in and around the sanctuary, and it is certainly possible that the symbolisms on the ivories could have gradually referenced a wider (male) citizen body over the course of this period.
Tyrtaeus’ poetry may signal this social shift, offering striking examples of the normative meanings of kléos through death, using mythical characters to underscore values of collective heroism in defence of the polis. These poems seem to be a direct exhortation of a unified citizen body to fight for the polis in the contexts of the Second Messenian War (Suda iv.610.5 Adler), stressing the status of athánatos a dead warrior achieves through his kléos won in service to the state (10.1–2; 12.31–2).Footnote 44 Through his words Tyrtaeus brought male citizens together into a cohesive hoplite phalanx to defend the polis.Footnote 45 His poems expanded the illustrious genealogy from ‘unconquered Heracles’ to all citizens and not just the royal bloodlines (fr. 11.1), and thus the achievement of aretē to all who stood firm and fought in the face of bloody slaughter, contrasted with great shame for those who fled or allowed the elderly to die in front (fr. 12.1–14; cf. 10.1–10).Footnote 46
The appeal to kléos is strengthened by subtle allusions to Homeric heroes like Hector, who exhorted the Trojans with the reminder that it was not unseemly to die for one's homeland (Iliad 15.494–9) (Bowra Reference Bowra1938, 65; Tarkow Reference Tarkow1983, 53). Tyrtaeus in fact refers to death as kalòs thánatos (10.1–2, 30), which appears in the Iliad in the line πάντα δὲ καλὰ θανόντι περ (22.73), spoken by Priam in his plea to Hector. Both Tyrtaeus’ and Homer's passages contrast the great pity of an old man who lays dead with the beauty of those who die young, for whom ‘all is seemly’ (epéoiken) – even (or especially) when death comes in battle (Tyrtaeus 10.27; Iliad 22.71; Garner Reference Garner2014, 8–12). The compelling appeals to strive for such an honourable and beautiful death on behalf of the polis illuminate the normative messaging in the prothesis plaques. The connection to these lines from the Iliad augments the connection of honourable death with Hector, who, despite being a non-Greek, is a hero whose ideals are to be emulated, as one who fought and died for his city. As Marinatos (Reference Marinatos and Des Bouvrie2002, 168) notes, it is fitting that the Iliad ends with the mourning of Hector (cf. Whitley Reference Whitley2002, 227).
We cannot be absolutely sure that every viewer would have seen Hector in these plaques, particularly from the etic position of the ‘omniscient modern viewer’ (Lynch Reference Lynch and Nevett2017, 133–4). It is possible that an entirely different episode was intended, but the general themes of heroism, commemoration and immortal fame nonetheless cut through any specific reading. Indeed, the intertwinement of the specific and the generic in much of Archaic Greek art, as outlined by scholars like Hurwit and Marinatos (discussed above), allows us to grasp the complexities of this polysemic imagery, and to see meaning and interpretation as dynamic rather than fixed. In other words, recognizing this intertwinement allows us to speak in terms of ‘both … and …’ rather than ‘either … or …’, highlighting the porous boundaries between categories we often impose on ancient art: these plaques can reference an actual hero, but may also reference more generic ideals of dying a death worthy of mourning and commemoration, one which bridges mortality and everlasting fame. These porosities, indeed, seem to be a hallmark of complex figural art in the Archaic period, to which I turn next.
PLACING THE PROTHESIS PLAQUES IN THE IVORY CORPUS
The prothesis plaques are but two small pieces of a larger corpus, and while they appear anomalous, a closer consideration of the interlocking symbolisms of the corpus suggests an iconographic programme analogous to arrangements and symbolisms on other Archaic-period media, some extant in the archaeological record and some known only from textual sources. A comparison with these other media can thus be instructive for understanding how the varied iconographies of the ivory corpus could have been interwoven into larger figural compositions that expressed normative messages to viewers. Fig. 10 shows the subject matter of the ivory plaques from Styles II–V, leaving out ivory combs, seals and protomai. These other objects will be discussed, alongside iconography in other media, such as bone, terracotta, lead and limestone, but it is important to consider the plaques as a unit, given the suggestion that many of these pieces may have decorated furniture or cultic implements. The first task is thus to consider how the ivory plaques may have worked together as a series of interwoven iconographies, and I will use several examples of Archaic figural art to clarify their overall composition. I take as a starting point two well-known pieces described by Pausanias and connected to Laconia that were rife with iconography, each of which ended up in sanctuaries and contained connections to Laconian art and ritual, in order to explore how we might envision the Orthia ivories working together. I then turn to extant pieces of art from the seventh and sixth centuries to clarify some of the deeper semantic meanings of these compositions focused on death and kléos.
Archaic figural compositions in text and art
In Book 5, Pausanias provides an extensive description of a famous dedication at Olympia, the so-called Chest of Cypselus (5.17.5–5.19.10; cf. Herodotus 5.92), the second longest descriptive excursus in his work (Snodgrass Reference Snodgrass and Snodgrass2006, 424). He depicts it as carved out of cedar wood with figures sculpted in ivory, gold and the cedar wood itself, and describes five horizontal scenes, with the second and fourth divided into smaller, separate panels (not unlike metopes) and the first, third and fifth registers forming longer compositions (similar to an Ionic frieze). One remarkable feature of the Chest is the extensive use of text, including hexameter epigrams, which are clearly integral to Pausanias’ ability to identify characters and scenes.Footnote 47 While it is worth considering to what extent Pausanias is truthfully describing the art, Barbara Borg (Reference Borg, Baumbach, Petrovic and Petrovic2010) notes how precise he is in describing the direction he takes around the chest. He expresses instances where he cannot figure out certain schema, including why Artemis has wings on her shoulders (5.19.5).Footnote 48 Others have suggested that the compositions he describes match iconographical schemes and inscriptions on Middle Corinthian pottery from the early sixth century (Payne Reference Payne1931, 125; Amyx Reference Amyx1988, 397–429; Splitter Reference Splitter2000, 51–3; Carter Reference Carter1989, 362; Borg Reference Borg, Baumbach, Petrovic and Petrovic2010, 84). Nonetheless, the chest was unique in its use of allegory and personification (Borg Reference Borg2002), matched only perhaps by the Shield of Heracles (Ps.-Hesiod, Shield 139–317).
Pausanias suggests that Eumelus of Corinth was the sculptor (5.19.10), and some scholars argue the Chest was a work of Corinth (Snodgrass Reference Snodgrass1998, 109; Splitter Reference Splitter2000, 50–3). Jane Carter, conversely, suggested that the carvers may have been Laconian, based on a number of ivory à jour relief figures from a hoard, discovered in 1939 at Delphi, containing gold, ivory, silver and bronze objects damaged in a fire and placed in two bothroi around the end of the fifth century BC (Carter Reference Carter1989; Amandry Reference Amandry1939). These à jour reliefs contained various scenes, including the Calydonian boar hunt, the ambush of Troilos, and the departure of Amphiaraos, among others (Carter Reference Carter1989, 357–8). The excavator compared the choice of scenes to those on the Chest of Cypselus (Amandry Reference Amandry1939, 105), although there have been debates over their stylistic origins (Amandry Reference Amandry1939, 106; Marangou Reference Marangou1969, 191–2). Carter (Reference Carter1989) suggested that the Delphi reliefs were the product of a Laconian school of carving, based on a number of stylistic markers noted in the Orthia ivories. The decline in ivory sources at Sparta meant that carvers had to use the cheaper medium of bone after c. 570, and may have welcomed the opportunity to apply their skills at Delphi on ivory. Given the close association between the Delphi reliefs and the Chest of Cypselus, Laconian carvers may have also been involved in the creation of the latter.Footnote 49
It is worth considering another piece dedicated in a sanctuary that was rife with iconography, and which was located much closer to the sanctuary of Orthia, namely the Throne of Apollo at Amyclae. This monument was also discussed by Pausanias (3.18.9–3.19.2), who tells us that Bathycles of Magnesia made it. Unlike the Chest of Cypselus, Pausanias does not give as detailed a description of this monument (3.18.10). Perhaps the greater brevity given to the Throne as opposed to the Chest was because this ‘Throne’ was in reality a much larger monument. The various imaginative reconstructions going back to the early nineteenth century suggest the difficulty of envisioning what it actually looked like, however (Faustoferri Reference Faustoferri1996; Bammer Reference Bammer2008; Delivorrias Reference Delivorrias, Cavanagh, Gallou and Georgiadis2009). The precinct of Apollo at Amyclae was known to contain a circular stepped altar, which formed the base for the xoanon statue of Apollo that stood in the middle of the Throne and under which the tomb of Hyacinthus was located (Pausanias 3.19.1–3).Footnote 50 Delivorrias (Reference Delivorrias, Cavanagh, Gallou and Georgiadis2009, 134) suggests that the throne was a three-storey construction, made out of marble and wood using Doric and Ionic details, with the images described by Pausanias painted on wooden pinakes.
Both the Chest and the Throne thus provide examples of large, multi-scene iconographic compositions that appeared in sanctuaries, and were connected in some way with Laconian artists, whether through similar style and medium (the Chest, via the Delphi ivories) or through location (the Throne). Whether or not Laconian artists made the Chest and/or the Throne is less important than using these pieces to envision how the Orthia ivories from Styles II–V may have worked together as a complex iconographic composition. The breakdown of the subject matter in the ivory corpus (Fig. 10), the Chest (Fig. 11) and the Throne (Fig. 12) reveals propensities towards scenes showing agonistic acts (heroes battling monsters, battle scenes and horsemen), monsters and ritual scenes (including deities) (see Appendix 2, Tables A2:1 and A2:2, for iconography included in each category). There are finer-grained connections too: both the Chest and Throne show the Judgment of Paris/Alexander, a type not popular in figured pottery, although it appears on the Chigi Olpe (see below) and on an ivory comb from the sanctuary of Orthia.Footnote 51 Singular scenes of hunting appear on the Chest (5.19.2 – Calydonian Boar) and the Throne (3.18.5 – Melanion and Atalanta holding a deer), and may be suggested by one of the Orthia ivories showing a man in short dress with spear and hunting dog.Footnote 52 Subtler connections exist between the Throne of Apollo and the Orthia ivories: both show Perseus killing Medusa (3.18.11; Medusa's sisters chase Perseus on the Chest: 5.18.5) and Heracles battling the Hydra (3.18.13) and centaur (3.18.12, 16). Both contain sphinxes and wildcats (3.18.4). Furthermore, the Throne contained an image of Trojans bearing libations to Hector (3.18.16), which may connect to the prothesis plaques arguably showing the mourning of Hector. The two scenes of apotheosis on the Throne – Hermes bearing Dionysus to heavenFootnote 53 and Athena leading Heracles to heaven (3.18.11)Footnote 54 – also suggest similar themes that centre on the attainment of fame and even immortality for heroes at their death, particularly Heracles, through kléos won via their glorious deeds in life.
There are some obvious differences as well. Both the Chest and Throne show several abduction/rape scenes (e.g., Ajax and Cassandra on the Chest at 5.19.5 and the rape of the daughters of Leucippus on the Throne at 3.18.11), imagery that is largely absent from the Orthia ivories.Footnote 55 The obvious propensity towards the Mistress of Animals on the Orthia plaques is absent from the Throne's imagery. Pausanias inadvertently identifies a singular Mistress of Animals on the Chest by describing Artemis as winged and holding a lion and leopard (5.19.5). Despite some differences, the overall thematic arrangements suggest a focus on mythical models that combine agonistic scenes (battle, hunting, athletics) and ritual scenes. Jennifer Neils (Reference Neils, Shapiro, Iozzo and Lezzi-Hafter2013), in her reading of the scenes on the François Crater (see below), proposes interconnecting themes that draw from nuptial, agonistic and political/religious contexts, and these same contexts can be seen as interwoven throughout the monuments that Pausanias describes, as well as the Orthia ivories. This brief comparison with the Chest of Cypselus and the Throne of Apollo, combined with the argument that many of the plaques from Orthia's sanctuary decorated furniture, suggests that we could have a forerunner to these famous monuments described by Pausanias in the ivory plaques, particularly those from Styles II–V. Even if not all of the plaques belonged on the same monument, envisioning their iconography as a unified programme allows us to articulate the deeper semantic meanings this imagery may have held for worshippers at the sanctuary, and moreover allows us to position previously anomalous pieces like the prothesis plaques as inherently linked to these meanings.
Eschatological themes in Archaic figural art
With the prothesis plaques in mind, it is necessary to consider the interweaving of funerary themes throughout complex figural art in the Archaic period. The Throne of Apollo contained eschatological themes, as discussed above, including apotheosis and ritual scenes connected to death (e.g., Trojans bearing libations to Hector). Other elements include the use of sphinxes, one each under the horse of each of the two sons of Tyndareus (3.18.4), creatures which often frame heroic compositions of hunting and battle and which frequently signify the transition to the afterlife (see below). The context of the sanctuary of Apollo at Amyclae, which held the tomb of Hyacinthus, Apollo's lover who met a tragic end and was mourned yearly by the Spartans (see above), also underscores the mortuary connotations that were laced through these elaborate compositions, such that the Throne is sometimes referred to as a funerary monument (e.g., Bammer Reference Bammer2008, 89). These mortuary connotations point towards a life full of glorious feats that resulted in immortality, whether through apotheosis, as with heroes such as Heracles, or through kléos, as with many of the other heroes who appear in these compositions, including Hector.
If we turn to other media that show multiple figured scenes, namely painted pottery, we can see similar combinations of agonistic and ritual scenes celebrating the upbringing of elite males that also hint at the transition to a glorious afterlife through kléos gained from these activities. The Chigi Olpe, a work of Corinth dating to c. 630 BC and discovered in the main chamber of a tomb at Monte Aguzzo, shows several registers of figural scenes.Footnote 56 The progression from the bottom of the vase, which shows nude youthful hunters ambushing hares, to a middle register showing a procession of horsemen and a lion hunt, to the top register, displaying warriors in full hoplite regalia, has been interpreted as an idealised maturation of aristocratic males through agonistic activities: ‘a Corinthian paideia loosely comparable to the three-stage agōgē that marked the public education and military training of males at Sparta’.Footnote 57 This messaging may have had particular valence within the interrelated contexts of banqueting and funerary rituals, where an olpe would be used (Osborne Reference Osborne1996, 165; Hurwit Reference Hurwit2002, 2; Petit Reference Petit2019, 433–4; Tuck Reference Tuck1994). The François Crater, discovered in an Etruscan elite tomb in the necropolis of Fonte Rotella near Chiusi and dated to c. 570/560 BC, likewise demonstrates an idealised representation – in this case using specific mythical episodes. The Crater contains 270 figures and 121 inscriptions, signed twice by the painter Kleitias and the potter Ergotimos. Scholars have suggested it nonetheless contains a coherent programme of subjects and symbolisms, akin to Archaic poetic compositions, which celebrate the life cycle of the hero.Footnote 58 This life cycle included not only agonistic activities but also nuptial and ritual ones as well, particularly marriage: the François Crater shows the wedding of Peleus and Thetis as well as the dance of Theseus and the youths (Hedreen Reference Hedreen2011; Olsen Reference Olsen2015). The Chigi Olpe contains one of the earliest extant scenes of the Judgment of Paris, which resulted in marriage, in the middle register, a tale known from the Kypria and featured on the Chest of Cypselus, the Throne of Apollo and an ivory comb from the sanctuary of Orthia (Hurwit Reference Hurwit2002, 12). This scene was frequently interpreted as out of place on the Chigi Olpe, yet Hurwit (Reference Hurwit2002, 16) fits it into the vertical progression of the vase which represents the movement from boyhood to manhood, thus integrating it into the larger iconographic syntax. This scene represents another essential stage in the route to manhood, namely marriage (Hurwit Reference Hurwit2002, 18). The dangers associated with this particular marriage perhaps hint at the broader perils a hero must inevitably face, alongside hunting, war (the outcome of Paris’ marriage) and, ultimately, death.
There are further motifs on this vase that are often written off as decorative or ‘orientalizing’ elements, which link the life cycle of elite youths centred on agonistic activities with the ideals of commemoration through kléos following death, ideals which arguably underlie the prothesis plaques. The alignment of the frontal-faced antithetical sphinx on the Chigi Olpe with the gorgoneion on the shield of one of the hoplites in the above register suggests a sense of apotropaism at work (Hurwit Reference Hurwit2002, 17; cf. Giuliani Reference Giuliani2016/17, 199–200; Winkler-Horaček Reference Winkler-Horaček2015, 287–90). Yet the sphinx's persona is more than simply apotropaic: this creature derives from royal funerary and political contexts in Egypt and the Near East over the Bronze Age, as a guardian of divine and royal power, frequently placed on thrones or in gateways (López-Ruiz Reference López-Ruiz, Price and Zelnick-Abramovitz2020). On the Chigi Olpe it seems to function as a ‘boundary marker’ between the equestrian procession to the left and the lion hunt on the right (Fig. 13). Thierry Petit (Reference Petit2019, 441) has argued that the sphinx forms a key element in signalling the transition to an illustrious afterlife, where one's glory through agonistic activities is commemorated, signalled by the sphinx's place as a large and imposing figure next to the lion hunt with the only human casualty on the vase (see also D'Acunto Reference D'Acunto and Muglione2012, 60; cf. Torelli Reference Torelli2007, 66–7). The sphinx's role in the transition to the afterlife is reflected in slightly later vase painting beginning c. 560 BC showing the creature actually carrying deceased youths (Tsiafakis Reference Tsiafakis and Padgett2003, fig. 7). No doubt this creature retained its broader associations with high status derived from the east: it can thus be connected to the agonistic glory of elite youths in life that wins them commemoration in the afterlife, just as Hector's agonistic glory won him everlasting kléos.Footnote 59 As a boundary marker, the sphinx also signalled the transit to the afterlife in the Archaic period, appearing on vessels like loutrophoroi (Louvre CA 2985) and atop grave stelae (e.g., Metropolitan Museum of Art 11.185).Footnote 60 A funerary epigram on the base of a funerary column that once held a sphinx from Demetrias in Thessaly even spells out the vital role of the sphinx as guardian of the tomb.Footnote 61
Turning to the François Crater, we find four sphinxes: two flank the Calydonian boar hunt, turned towards the action, each with a foreleg raised towards a chain of palmettes and lotuses (Fig. 14). Two more sphinxes flank an animal fight in the fifth register, again with foreleg raised towards vegetal motifs. These are often regarded as framing elements for hunts (Neils Reference Neils, Shapiro, Iozzo and Lezzi-Hafter2013, 154) and as signifying a thematic parallel between human hunting on the top register and the brutal animal hunt below (Barringer Reference Barringer, Shapiro, Iozzo and Lezzi-Hafter2013, 159). But the sphinxes also link vertically with a central character on the François Crater, namely Dionysus, who occupies a central place in the wedding of Peleus and Thetis, and is portrayed returning Hephaestus to Olympus (an act for which he wins the right to sit among the other Olympian gods) (Isler-Kerényi Reference Isler-Kerényi, Oakley, Coulson and Palagia1997, 529; Torelli Reference Torelli, Shapiro, Iozzo and Lezzi-Hafter2013, 98; Petit Reference Petit2019, 440–1). The Throne of Apollo also shows Dionysus’ apotheosis (Pausanias 3.18.11), which, alongside Heracles’ rise to heaven, underscores the end goal of a life centred around illustrious activities. To mortals, the illustrious afterlife came about not through becoming a god per se, but through the immortality of kléos, commemorating dead warriors through memory and celebration, as underscored by Tyrtaeus.
The sphinx combined with the vegetal motif is significant for further apprehending its longstanding and cross-cultural funerary connotations. In the Archaic Greek and Cypriot worlds, vegetal designs show up on temple roofs, grave stelae, sarcophagi and pottery, frequently guarded by sphinxes.Footnote 62 These ornaments represent the Tree of Life, which had a long, variegated history of use across the Near East, Egypt and the Aegean (Lightbody Reference Lightbody2013; Echols Reference Echols and Estes2020; Balogh Reference Balogh and Estes2020). Its meaning is rarely discussed in ancient literature outside the Hebrew Bible (Echols Reference Echols and Estes2020). Yet its ubiquitous appearance across these regions suggests that explicit explanations were not needed; rather, this image contained a ‘constellation of interrelated meanings’ that connected earthly beings with the nurturing aspects of the divine (Balogh Reference Balogh and Estes2020, 32–3). Despite its complex meanings, the link with protection and rejuvenation in the afterlife is also apparent across numerous regions (Echols Reference Echols and Estes2020, 20–2; Balogh Reference Balogh and Estes2020, 46–50, 63–8). Echols (Reference Echols and Estes2020, 27) concludes his survey of the Tree of Life in Near Eastern literature by suggesting that the Tree and its equivalents functioned ‘as instruments of hope for immortality by people in most of the ancient Near East’. The sphinxes as guardians of the Tree marked them as guides to the afterlife: on the François Crater the Tree is signified by the vegetal ornaments that the sphinxes flank and raise a paw towards; on the Chigi Olpe this motif is represented in shorthand, with vegetation emerging from the head of the sphinx (Demisch Reference Demisch1977, 82; Petit Reference Petit2013, 217–18; Reference Petit2019, 441–2; cf. Fischer Reference Fischer2013). The Olpe and Crater thus allow us insight into how eschatological themes could be interwoven with broader heroic ideals in the Archaic period that included participation in agonistic activities.
Eschatological themes in the Orthia ivories
With the imagery from the pieces described above in mind, we can further expound upon the interlocking themes of the ivory corpus, focusing on iconography shared between these examples that straddle the heroic (agonistic activities in life) and funerary (commemoration for these activities after death) spheres. One of the ivory plaques from Styles II–V shows a sphinx with forepaws resting on a vegetal motif and vegetation emerging from the head (Fig. 15) (Dawkins Reference Dawkins1929c, pl. XCVII:1), while other plaques show lions or panthers with forepaws on vegetal motifs (Dawkins Reference Dawkins1929c, pls XCVI:3 and CXI). One ivory carving, heavily restored, shows an antithetical sphinx motif with one paw each on a vegetal ornament (Dawkins Reference Dawkins1929c, pl. CLXXVII). Two more ivory sphinx plaques, not included in Dawkins’ publication, appear in Marangou's (Reference Marangou1969, pls 34, 35) volume. These vegetal motifs along with the sphinx continue to be popular elements in the thousands of small lead figurines proliferating in the sixth and fifth centuries.Footnote 63 The motif of the vegetal ornament growing out of the head is witnessed on several sphinxes in the Orthia ivories as well as sixth-century Laconian pottery from Sardis and Samos.Footnote 64 Among the Orthia ivories, there is one instance of a winged goddess akin to the Mistress of Animals (but without animals in this case), with the vegetal design emerging from her head.Footnote 65
The imagery of warriors and horsemen appearing in the ivory corpus might also evoke eschatological themes, although they very well could be referencing actual Spartans and/or specific narratives now lost to us. Germane to the discussions above, agonistic themes relate to the idealised lives of citizens, but agonistic glory also looks forward to the everlasting kléos expected from deeds like war and hunting, expressed on examples like the Chigi Olpe, and underscored by Tyrtaeus. Earlier scholars such as Benson (Reference Benson1970) emphasised the significance of the horse, as well as the chariot, for ennobling the journey to the afterlife.Footnote 66 The horse more generally indicated high status and aretē.Footnote 67 In some cases the Dioscouri were represented by this motif – for instance on the Throne of Apollo, where they were also associated with sphinxes and wild cats; nonetheless, the divine associations of these twins, who straddle mortality and immortality, would be appropriate in these polysemic compositions.Footnote 68
The Mistress of Animals, already mentioned above, is another motif with a long history in western Asia that may augment the funerary meanings.Footnote 69 This imagery appears on Minoan and Mycenaean glyptic art in the Late Bronze Age, but does not re-emerge as an artistic subject in the Greek world until the ninth century (Barclay Reference Barclay, Laffineur and Hägg2001; Reference Barclay and De Angelis2013, 148). This image adopted multivalent meanings and forms across different regions, contexts and time periods, but it is important to note the Mistress of Animal's appearance in funerary art of the ninth–sixth centuries. There are around 200 documented examples, most dating to the seventh century BC, which were found either in graves or in sanctuaries (Fig. 16). In the seventh century, the Mistress of Animals was especially represented in grave assemblages. Corinthian alabastra and aryballoi also display this motif in the Black Figure technique, and were found in graves or sanctuaries around the Mediterranean dating to c. 650–600 BC (Spartz Reference Spartz1962, nos 92–123; Barclay Reference Barclay and De Angelis2013, table 1). Certainly, this distribution does not prove that votives and pottery with the Mistress of Animals were meant solely for the funerary sphere, and may simply indicate the final destination of these items. Yet several striking examples occur in cemeteries on Crete, painted onto funerary urns, including the ninth-century burial urn from Tomb 107 at the North Cemetery of Knossos, and later examples come from funerary contexts at Arkades (Coldstream Reference Coldstream1984; Marinatos Reference Marinatos2000, 126; Levi Reference Levi1945, pl. XII). The Mistress of Animals appears on the handles of the François Crater, standing over an image of Ajax bearing the body of Achilles, with her placement possibly signalling transitions in life stages, including to death (Fig. 17) (Lezzi-Hafter Reference Lezzi-Hafter, Shapiro, Iozzo and Lezzi-Hafter2013; cf. Neils Reference Neils, Shapiro, Iozzo and Lezzi-Hafter2013, 120). On the Orthia ivories she most frequently holds waterfowl, but there is one instance of her appearing with a horse and snake, both animals with heroic connotations.Footnote 70 Waterfowl may hold a special connection to the sanctuary, which sat in a flat, marshy hollow (Pipili Reference Pipili1987, 76), and evoke eschatological themes as creatures who leave and return with the seasons.Footnote 71
Other creatures suggest the interrelated heroic and funerary spheres, including the gorgon. This creature appears on a plaque showing Perseus murdering Medusa (Fig. 4), and on another small plaque showing a sphinx with a gorgon's head (Dawkins Reference Dawkins1929c, pl. CII:1; Marangou Reference Marangou1969, no. 37), a motif that remains ‘isoliert innerhalb der ganzen griechischen Kunst’.Footnote 72 It also appears on Laconian pottery from the sanctuary, including Laconian II lakainai (Dawkins Reference Dawkins1929c, pls VII–VIII), and on bone and ivory seals (Dawkins Reference Dawkins1929c, pls CXLI:3, CXLV:2l, CLXXIII:6). The gorgon, like the sphinx, is connected to death, appearing, for instance, on the fourth-century heroon of Limyra, a fifth-century sarcophagus from Golgoi and a sixth-century grave stele from Attica showing a winged gorgon running below a youth (Museum of Metropolitan Art 74.51.2451; Marinatos Reference Marinatos2000, fig. 3:17; Sourvinou-Inwood Reference Sourvinou-Inwood1991, 273; Hurwit Reference Hurwit2002, 17). The sphinx and gorgon represent, in life, challenges to be overcome for males (Marinatos Reference Marinatos2000, 64–7; Tsiafakis Reference Tsiafakis and Padgett2003, 78–83; Giuliani Reference Giuliani and O'Donnell2013, 37–44). They are integral in facilitating, through otherworldly trials, the achievement of heroic status worthy of kléos. This relationship may relate to the group of terracotta masks from mainly sixth-century levels at the sanctuary, which have also been interpreted as representing ritual enactments of heroes battling monsters.Footnote 73
Overall, if some of these plaques did indeed decorate a piece of furniture or other cultic implement, as with the Chest of Cypselus and Throne of Apollo, it is possible that these themes worked together in ways similar to the Chest and Throne, as well as figured pottery. The mirror-image prothesis scene in particular would be fitting as a symmetrical ornament on some type of cultic implement, surrounded by other symbolisms evoking the ideals of a proper life for Spartan citizens. Thus, rather than being anomalies in the corpus, their mirror-image symmetry very well could have served as a focal point for a semantic programme centred on agonistic activities in life leading to the promise of everlasting kléos after death by featuring a hero, possibly Hector, who fought and died to defend his city. This programme could have included a mix of scenes drawn from daily life, including warriors and hunters, combined with mythological scenes and images like the Mistress of Animals and the sphinx that evoked earthly trials for citizens and their promised commemoration as a result of these activities.
Further imagery includes females holdings wreaths, which may signify athletic victory or participation in festivals that employed wreaths such as the Gymnopediae (Pipili Reference Pipili1987, 78). In one scene a large female in fringed skirt, possibly Orthia (only her lower body remains), crowns a small youth who barely reaches her knees.Footnote 74 This combination of images would arouse familiarity on the part of the viewers, with scenes suggesting ideal activities for a Spartan citizen, but also a heightened awareness of divine meaning behind these acts that culminated in the promise of kléos, particularly when placed within the sanctuary of Orthia. The mythological and generic scenes are thus inherently polysemic: their meaning extends far beyond familiar stories and situations. We might borrow Paul Zanker's (Reference Zanker1987, 284) term in reference to Augustan reliefs, Andachtsbilder, ‘contemplative images’, which Karl Galinsky (Reference Galinsky1992, 471) elaborated on: ‘They are rooted in rich artistic, literary, religious, and mythological traditions … At the same time, it is not a matter of purely subjective and impressionistic understandings, which would lead to misinterpretation, but the variety of evocations operates within the framework of a clearly established overall meaning.’
ACCESSING THE IVORIES IN A CHANGING SOCIETY
The interlocking symbolisms of the corpus suggest an iconographic programme that emphasised agonistic ideals that resulted in kléos after death for citizens who lived up to those ideals. But if we are to relate the normative meanings expressed by the iconographic programme in the ivory corpus to the Spartan citizens who were arguably taking part in rituals in the sanctuary, how might they have engaged with these ivories? Who saw – or was meant to see – the implement(s) that these plaques decorated is a difficult question: they may have been commissioned by an exclusive elite group that controlled rituals at the sanctuary (alongside the procurement and carving of ivory). Any cultic implement they decorated may thus have seen restricted engagement if it was housed within the temple. Nassos Papalexandrou (Reference Papalexandrou2021, 42–3) suggests that the wealthy dedications at the sanctuary of Hera on Samos were kept inside the temple and saw a rather restricted audience, and certainly a passage from the Iliad reveals that worshippers at the temple of Athena at Troy needed to have the priestess unlock the doors for them (6.293–304). Whether as separate votive dedications (e.g., on fibulae) or as part of a unified programme on a single implement or set of implements, these plaques may have been sequestered from public view. Ioannis Mylonopoulos (Reference Mylonopoulos, Haysom and Wallensten2011, 284–8) on the other hand notes many instances in literature across the Archaic to Hellenistic periods where the interiors of temples do appear open and accessible, at least at certain times of the year, necessitating barriers around the most sacred part of the cella – the cult statue. No doubt entire ethnic and/or gender groups could see restrictions on their entry into the very temenos (Mylonopoulos Reference Mylonopoulos, Haysom and Wallensten2011, 287 n. 75), but for citizens, Greek temples were generally more accessible to the public than Egyptian temples or temples in the Near East (Miles Reference Miles and Miles2016, 219). It is thus difficult to imagine the implement(s) would have been completely and permanently kept out of public view.
The broader landscape around the sanctuary of Orthia in Limnai also seemed to be a burial ground in the Protogeometric and Geometric periods, raising further questions about who was accessing this area (Christesen Reference Christesen2018; Raftopoulou Reference Raftopoulou1998). Some evidence of votive deposits around these graves was noted by the original excavators of Orthia's sanctuary, as well as more recent research (Wace Reference Wace1905–6, 288–93; Pavlides Reference Pavlides, Cavanagh, Cavanagh and Roy2011a, 563; Salapata Reference Salapata2013, 195; Christesen Reference Christesen2018). Issues of starting dates for this votive activity, its continuity through time, and its relationship to actual hero or tomb worship are difficult to resolve with any certainty (see in general Antonaccio Reference Antonaccio1994; Reference Antonaccio1995; Ekroth Reference Ekroth2002). Most of these graves remained quite modest in their offerings (Christesen Reference Christesen2018, supplementary material; cf. Papapostolou Reference Papapostolou, Cavanagh, Cavanagh and Roy2011; Tsouli Reference Tsouli and Sporn2013, 160–1; Reference Tsouli, Draycott and Stamatopoulou2016, 369–71). Still, this activity around the sanctuary suggests a ritual focus on this area that extended beyond a narrow elite worshipping a deity.
Indeed, a concern with commemorating the dead by a wider community sees increasing emphasis in Archaic Sparta. Within and beyond Limnai, scholars have noted heroic imagery emerging by the late seventh century in the form of terracotta and stone plaques, both over graves and at hero shrines, that seem to evoke hero worship.Footnote 75 These plaques show the deceased enthroned, often associated with serpents, drinking vessels and smaller-sized worshippers. Pavlides (Reference Pavlides, Cavanagh, Cavanagh and Roy2011a, 551) has argued that they signify a shift in emphasis away from individual citizens and onto local heroes who exemplified a more communal ideology. The bestowing of kléos onto a wider citizen body is indeed notable in Tyrtaeus’ poetry, as discussed above (Fuqua Reference Fuqua1981; Tarkow Reference Tarkow1983; cf. Luginbill Reference Luginbill2002). Invoking this poetry, Massimo Nafissi (Reference Nafissi1991, 284) sums up this shift, arguing for funerals of the fallen as ‘un momento centrale per la manifestazione, in forme tradizionali, del prestigio aristocratico’, extending the traditional motif of personal and aristocratic kléos ‘ai valori ed agli interessi della collettività’.Footnote 76
The discussion of mortuary ritual in Archaic Sparta is not meant to force a direct association between grave practice, hero worship and the prothesis plaques, but is meant to spark reflection on how the iconography of the ivory corpus fits into this complex and changing social nexus, particularly in Limnai. We might locate the corpus at a transition point in Spartan society, as emphasised by scholars like Nafissi and Pavlides and reflected in the poetry of Tyrtaeus. Indeed, the similarity that the later, sixth-century, lead figurines above the sand layer display towards the seventh-century ivory corpus in terms of their iconography, including sphinxes and Tree of Life motifs, suggests this symbolism continued to have relevance for Spartans, even as ivory usage died out. While the cessation of ivory at Sparta was likely due to the decline of the ivory industry in the Levant starting in the eighth century (Wicke Reference Wicke, Orthmann and Meyer2013, 549–50; Çakırlar and Ikram Reference Çakırlar and Ikram2016), the emergence of this imagery on the tens of thousands of lead figurines does suggest a larger subset of the population using these motifs, rather than the advent of Spartan ‘austerity’ in the sixth century (Hodkinson Reference Hodkinson, Cavanagh, Gallou and Georgiadis1998). These iconographies thus could have relevance both for a narrow elite and a wider citizen body.
Ultimately, the plaques’ discovery as fragments underneath the sand layer may suggest that, at their time of deposition, they had been removed from their original contexts, possibly because of damage to the original implement they decorated, or as part of the broader refurbishment of the sanctuary. Yet, they likely remained the property of Orthia and had to be treated as such, buried underneath the sand layer with other early votives.Footnote 77 Thus, unlike at Olympia and Amyclae, Orthia's implement(s), decorated with ivory plaques showing themes similar to those on the Chest and Throne, had long since disappeared by the time Pausanias visited Sparta.
CONCLUSION
Having discussed the relationships between the prothesis plaques, the votive assemblage and the ritual landscape of the sanctuary of Orthia, it remains to return to the argument that these plaques represent – on one level – the mourning of Hector. While the prothesis plaques could plausibly indicate this mythic episode, they simultaneously could hold deeper normative meanings for viewers, emphasizing the attainment of kléos through magnificent deeds, particularly when placed amidst the other iconography in the corpus. These ideologies of immortal fame were therefore not relegated solely to myth, but were expressed in Archaic poetry and art within Sparta and beyond. Such arguments encourage a deeper understanding of the connection between mythical compositions and shifting social norms in this period, a connection that can be ‘read’ within the symbolism of the ivory corpus as well as the cultural context of this sanctuary. Within their seventh-century contexts, these plaques, when viewed in this multiscalar fashion, become an integral part of the iconographic programme represented by the ivory corpus rather than an anomaly within the assemblage. Despite Dawkins’ original puzzlement over their place amongst the ivories, their style and especially their funerary subject matter fit very profoundly into the symbolic repertoire of the sanctuary and, above all, into Spartan and broader Mediterranean mentalities of the seventh century BC, suggesting that Sparta, like the prothesis plaques, was not so anomalous in this period.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I would like to thank Toph Marshall, Clemente Marconi, Antonis Kotsonas, Alison Barclay and Steven Hodkinson for inputs on specific points in this article, and Thierry Petit, Franco De Angelis and Nigel Kennell for reading and commenting on earlier drafts. Thanks also goes to several reviewers whose critiques and guidance helped shape the final version. All mistakes and shortcomings are my own.
APPENDIX 1: IVORY AND BONE STYLES FROM THE SANCTUARY OF ORTHIA
APPENDIX 2: CATEGORIES ESTABLISHED FOR THE CHEST OF CYPSELUS AND THE THRONE OF APOLLO