INTRODUCTION
The British School's excavations at the sanctuary of Orthia at Sparta, inaugurated in 1906 under Bosanquet, revealed an uncommon trove – actually two discrete and intentional deposits either side of the temple – of terracotta masks, dating from the end of the seventh century through the fifth. Many thousands of fragments and hundreds of more or less complete masks were found, and are now kept principally at the Sparta Museum, at the National Archaeological Museum in Athens and at the British Museum. Their initial publication, in this journal (Bosanquet Reference Bosanquet, Wace, Dickins, Dawkins and Tillyard1906), connected them with literary descriptions, a mode that persists. The last major study of the masks, Carter's Reference Carter1987 article (Carter Reference Carter1987), concerns itself with the masks’ origins, looking especially towards Phoenician sources (cf. Di Clemente Reference Di Clemente, Menozzi, Di Marzio and Fossataro2008). Importantly, Carter calls into question some of the equations of masks with literary accounts of rituals in honour of Orthia that Dickins, who was responsible for their treatment in the excavation's final publication (Dawkins Reference Dawkins1929), makes.
Scholarly treatments of the masks seldom consider all of their types (Dawkins Reference Dawkins1929 settles on seven). It is clear that the masks were commingled in the deposits, and there would have to be a very good reason indeed – and I know of none that has been advanced – to suppose that the masks do not correspond to a single phenomenon. This provoked the study below: there is no satisfactory account of the masks because scholars tend to focus on the most unusual examples, especially the ‘grotesques’, and either to generalise from them or to ignore the others. With this in mind, my first concern is to describe more accurately the masks’ forms. Then I shall analyse their function, and finally propose some conclusions.
FORM
The scale drawings in Dawkins Reference Dawkins1929 and personal observation demonstrate that most of the masks are rather smaller than life-size. The excavators found some below but many more above the ‘sand layer’ that was made in preparation for the new temple of Orthia in a sanctuary of the goddess on the western bank of the river Eurotas, just east-south-east of Sparta.Footnote 1 This layer is dated by Dawkins et al. to 600 bce,Footnote 2 by Boardman in this journal to 570/560 (Boardman Reference Boardman1963, 4) and (tentatively) by Catling to c.590 (Catling Reference Catling1977, 24–42). Since masks emerging from the same mould have been found either side of the sand (Dawkins Reference Dawkins1929, 164), the building of the temple did not particularly alter their forms. Because there are few comparanda, it is difficult to parse their style for indications of date, especially as there must be accommodation for some sort of use-life before inhumation. The earliest might therefore be dated to the late seventh century, though Dickins compares their style to Laconian III, which begins (by Boardman's reckoning) c.580. A very precise date may not be plausible, but c.615–575 for the earliest masks is reasonable. The series continues perhaps to the end of the fifth century, becoming truly miniature.
Dickins's seven types are fairly straightforward: old women, youths, warriors, portraits, satyrs, gorgons and caricatures (Dawkins Reference Dawkins1929, 166–9). Though some of the names are difficult to accept, the division is clear enough. Some, in the service of their arguments, have sought to collapse or unite some types, as Carter (Reference Carter1987, 35), who would recognise only ‘heroes’ and ‘furrowed grotesques’, to include satyrs and gorgoneia. Dickins's satyrs, portraits and gorgoneia cease by the end of the sixth century,Footnote 3 leaving a fourfold division, though many of the types bear subdivision.
The masks are made of local clay like that used for vases, and are unpainted about two-thirds of the time; Dickins writes that most were mould-made (Dawkins Reference Dawkins1929, 169), though, intriguingly, Bosanquet (Reference Bosanquet1906, 338 – by which point some but not all masks had been excavated) suggests that most were handmade. This can in fact have little effect on the final form, as there was a great deal of hand-working even on mould-made pieces, such that no two are identical. The fabric is quite friable, and generally a pinkish grey, though it can appear orange or yellow. Dickins attributes variation to firing (Dawkins Reference Dawkins1929, 169) but does not acknowledge that there are in fact several different fabrics used, ranging in colour but also in coarseness, inclusions and thickness. This seems to indicate several workshops.
So much for material; a wide variety of techniques was used in the forming of the masks. One of the best-illustrated and best-preserved mask fragments (Fig. 1), now in the British Museum,Footnote 4 demonstrates several. The mask was worked particularly heavily with tools, as opposed to the softer modelling executed by fingers visible in other masks. This is evident on the inside of the mask (Fig. 2), where small gouges with rough edges are the imprint of the process of hollowing the shape. While the fabric is not the thinnest of surviving masks’, it is not as coarse as others’. The hole in the chin is a sign of this: it removes an otherwise solid mass of clay that would be prone to crack or explode in the kiln because of the difference in water content and temperature between it and the mask's thinner portions. The nostrils (concavities rather than holes) serve the same purpose. The hole at the edge of the rim, however, must be for fastening. The hole is not positioned for the mask to sit flush like a protome, but is at an angle, suggesting either suspension or fastening to a rounded object. Some do have a flat rim but are unpierced – perhaps for display on a horizontal surface.
Turning to the exterior, the ‘wrinkles’ stand fully outside the smooth contour of the rest of the mask, which indicates two distinct processes: building them up past the surface and then excavating furrows. As is clear in the wrinkles furthest from the mouth and higher up the face, the tool used was flat or v-shaped, creating a straight slope rather than a curve. The sharp edges are visible too at the lips, with the ninety-degree ledge of the lower lip and the clean ridge of the upper lip. The lips are remarkably graphic; the corner of the mouth does not fade into the naso-labial fold but stands distinct. Perhaps this is an indication of paint on the lips; traces of black and yellow slip elsewhere on the mask point to polychromy.
By way of contrast, consider the upper part of a second mask (Fig. 3) composed of two joined fragments. The hair is parted in the middle, and there are five surviving holes in the forehead (for a wreath? radiate crown? fillet? individual tresses?). At its thickest 2.5 cm/1 in., this mask is in every way coarser than the previous one. The fabric is more orange and contains many more inclusions, though most are small. At a weight of 316 g/11.1 oz – the complete mask perhaps triple that at just under 1 kg/2 lb – this would have been difficult to wear, even though its size would allow it to fit over a very small face (in turn making the weight even more difficult to support). The technique of execution also differs from that used on Fig. 1; a broad, flat tool has been used to smooth the inside of the mask, leaving very clear marks (Fig. 4). The furrows of the outside are simply dug into the surface, allowed by the exceptional thickness, by a tool with a rounded-v profile – others (e.g. BM 1999.11-1.115) have furrows with u-shaped profiles, perhaps made by fingernails.
Features could also be indicated by means of added clay, more or less smoothed to appear integrated or to stand proud (as in Fig. 1). This ridge on the right cheek is difficult to interpret; perhaps it is meant purely decoratively, rather than as a referent to an anatomical feature, though it could be a tress of hair. This technique in particular raises issues of the connection of the surviving votives with the masks for which they stand in. If, as nearly every scholar who has written on the masks accepts, the masks are a durable replacement for ‘original’ masks made of linen or wood (vel sim.), we must concede that the connection is not perfectly straightforward; for example, working upwards from the surface via addition is not plausible (especially in wood). To use the terms of Gombrich, because of the variation of the output when the ephemeral medium is translated into the durable medium, we cannot distinguish the permanent (linen/wood) components (p) from the mobile (variations in the execution of the ceramic masks) components (m), since we see only their product (pm) (Gombrich Reference Gombrich1982, 126–9).
Dickins sees no influence of woodcarving in the technique of the masks,Footnote 5 though how precisely this would manifest is hard to say. Probably the moulds, if used, were themselves wooden, as wood draws moisture from clay, which eases its removal. This would account for no moulds having been found. The thick stacks of parallel lines that have been called wrinkles are very reminiscent of the graining of wood, which perhaps was their origin; compare the sixth-century Cypriot mask of a grimacing Bes (Fig. 5), whose ‘wrinkles’ are much more clearly wooden; the characterisation of Bes as facially expressive is long-standing in his iconography. What is remarkable about the Orthia masks is that some – one might be permitted to say the finest, e.g. that illustrated in Fig. 1 – have wrinkles that correspond to a deep anatomical understanding of the facial muscles’ motion. This motion is perhaps the key to better understanding the masks’ function.
FUNCTION
The use of the ceramic masks is not really at issue: they are dedications that were displayed in the temple or its temenos and eventually were cleared when they became too numerous or were no longer relevant to the cult.Footnote 6 Most of the ceramic masks are quite simply too small to be worn; moreover, wearing a clay mask is very restrictive, and is not practicable in the execution of the dances that were doubtless taking place.Footnote 7 Since the masks were buried together, it makes sense to consider them to have had a single function, so if most could not be worn, the whole lot was not intended for use; indeed, few believe that these masks were ever worn for performance or indeed any purpose at all. What has fascinated scholars and spurred their theories is the recapture and study of a vanished class of object that stands in some relation to those that survive, and what the use of those masks might have been.
The first theory, advanced by Bosanquet in this journal, and accepted by nearly all scholars, was that these masks were replicas of those used in some sort of ritual behaviour as described in Pollux and Hesychius (Bosanquet Reference Bosanquet1906, 338); Dickins, in the final publication of 1929, accepts and pursues this connexion. Pollux, writing of Spartan dances in a larger section on dance, names the βαρυλλικά, giving an eponymous ‘founder’ Βαρύλλικος, explaining them to be dances carried out by women for Artemis and Apollo.Footnote 8 There is no mention of masks. Hesychius has several similar headwords: βρυαλίκται,Footnote 9 βρυδαλίχα, βρυλλιχισταί (Lexicon, s.vv.), but to his or his source's knowledge, the masks are worn by men (or men and women, though this is ritually unlikely) and specifically impersonate women.Footnote 10 Dickins tries to defend the discrepancy in the mask-wearers’ sex as reported by Pollux and Hesychius, but it is not at all clear that the two are describing the same phenomenon.
Pausanias discusses Spartan Orthia, and disassociates her, notably, from Artemis – unlike Pollux.Footnote 11 He does not mention masks at all, but instead the whipping of boys at the altar, of which much has been made by Calame and by Vernant (Reference Vernant, Breglia, Doria, Ellinger, Frontisi-Ducroux, Lepore, Montepaone and Vernant1984, 26–7).Footnote 12 Which types were worn by ephebes donning masks as part of the embrace of humiliation? Parker suggests that they would don sometimes a shameful (old woman, grotesque, caricature, satyr, gorgon[?]), sometimes a heroic mask (warrior, portrait[?]; Parker Reference Parker and Powell1989, 152). In this case, the Spartiate absorbs the helot and forms a complete set, self and other married with a mask.Footnote 13 This certainly acts as a type of theatre, if not in a form that we would easily recognise.
Yet Bosanquet makes another suggestion in his 1906 publication, one that has not gained so much traction among later scholars: that these masks (i.e. the ‘originals’) were used more light-heartedly, ranging from rustic fertility rites to outright comedy, of which there is a description in Athenaeus:Footnote 14
παρὰ δὲ Λακεδαιμονίοις κωμικῆς παιδιᾶς ἦν τις τρόπος παλαιός, ὥς φησι Σωσίβιος … ἐκαλοῦντο δ’ οἱ μετιόντες τὴν τοιαύτην παιδιὰν παρὰ τοῖς Λάκωσι δικηλισταί, ὡς ἄν τις σκευοποιοὺς εἴπῃ καὶ μιμητάς.
Among the Spartans there was a certain ancient type of comic pastime, as Sosibios says … the participants in such a pastime are called image-users by the Spartans, while others call them prop-makers (mask-users?) and imitators.
Certainly τις τρόπος παλαιός suggests the recollection of a very distant past.Footnote 15 Moreover, δικηλιστής refers specifically to the wielding of a δείκηλον, an image or representation of some kind.Footnote 16 Athenaeus goes on to compare other words for the same practice – φαλλόφοροι, φλύακες – that clarify what sort of plays these were: depending in large measure on specific props, rather than on scripts (as Poetics 1449a9–14) or plot.Footnote 17
This is not to accord Athenaeus special status; quite simply, neither he nor any of the other ancient authors whom previous scholars have cited – Hesychius, Plutarch, Pollux, even Xenophon – can possibly have seen the Orthia masks, for they were buried intentionally many centuries before any of them wrote. The words of Athenaeus (and the others) are of value because they contain, perhaps, kernels of echoes of the practices at Orthia's sanctuary. Only Athenaeus’ account corresponds to what we know of early Greek drama by comparison to other dramas (ancient and modern) and by the account of Aristotle (Poetics 1448b22–4 and passim). Athenaeus is valuable for describing the first stage in the shift from a ritual drama to a non-ritual drama.Footnote 18
Carter's central argument is that the masks of Orthia are the relics of a ritual drama depicting the hieros gamos of Orthia and her consort or ‘the fiends who pursue and kill’ him (Carter Reference Carter1987, 383). Yet there are no masks depicting Orthia herself (despite her frequent representation in other media: bronze, ivory (e.g. Fig. 6), terracotta); if any of the males depicts her consort (of whom there is only little evidence), he has no particular traits or characteristics; and the ‘grimaces’ of the masks are not aggressive but aggrieved. Rather, the abundance of masks and the total lack of representations of the god for whom they were worn (or dedicated) should fairly straightforwardly banish the idea of a ritual drama. Instead, there remain masks of various types and, at their finest, masks of unusual subtlety and expressivity.
Not all, of course, were expressive; the classes of ‘heroes’ and satyrs largely lack facial expression. But many called ‘old women’ or ‘caricatures’ and ‘grotesques’ – categories not without problems – are emotionally expressive, setting them quite apart from contemporary surviving objects. Classical (tragic) theatrical masks, or rather representations of them, are essentially apathic.Footnote 19 There is a reason for this, viz. the varying emotions of a single character as seen in existing drama – though especially tragedy – and the use (generally) of a single mask for a character throughout a play.Footnote 20 Strong facial expression prevents both the viewer from projecting his own assignations of emotion and the actor from making subtle physical changes that can affect the mask's appearance, as practiced in Noh theatre.Footnote 21
Let us look again at Fig. 1. Dickins labels this a caricature, presumably his type ii.b (Caricatures of ‘Old Women’), though he was hesitant about the assignation of sex.Footnote 22 Perhaps not a beautiful face, the only feature that might separate it from an entirely naturalistic rendering is the wrinkling beside the mouth. The wrinkles are not particularly deep or broad (unlike other masks’ wrinkles) – though if the carving is too subtle or shallow, the mask will be less discernible, especially in low light or at a distance – but fade and thin as they move away from the mouth. Compare a Japanese Noh mask of the ‘Kojo’ type (‘old man’, Fig. 7), which is similar in its expression and uses wrinkles in much the same way.Footnote 23 Not all the masks’ wrinkles are so closely connected to the movement of facial features,Footnote 24 but the wrinkles serve to enhance expression by shadows’ underscoring motion. To call a heavily wrinkled face a ‘caricature’ of an old face ignores the communicative purpose of a mask.
The expression of the mask illustrated in Fig. 1 is characterised by the opened and downturned mouth. The single tooth indicates old age. The muscle most active in this expression, the depressor anguli oris, the muscle lowering the corner of the mouth, is visibly contracted, creating a strong distension over which the wrinkles bend. Its action causes the lower lip to appear horizontal when viewed frontally and to curve back in profile; and the upper lip curves downward frontally and back in profile – a physiological accuracy not seen again until the Parthenon (e.g. London BM GR 1845.5-13.1).
In the upper portion of the fragment, two features are notable. One is the flaring of the right nostril, which is a companion muscular movement for strong contractions of the depressor anguli oris. More deliberate is the distension of the upper cheek that is the result of the contraction of the orbicularis oculi, the muscle surrounding the eye, which makes the eyes squint and brings the cheeks and brow closer together. If this was indeed the motion of the upper part of the complete mask, then the expression as a whole is of fear or pain.Footnote 25
The greater part of the study of masking is devoted to tragic masks, which were largely expressionless; what of the expressive masks? Wiles writes:
The principles of the expressive mask are directly relevant to comedy, where distortions of the face encourage the actor to develop distorted patterns of movement, and it is a general truth that masks determine how the body will move.Footnote 26
This depends, of course, on what is meant by ‘distortions’: the mask of a ‘crétin’, with his bronchocele and mangled face;Footnote 27 or simply a face altered, perhaps violently, from its neutral state by emotion? Presumably it is the latter, in which case the pejorative connotations of the word must be ignored. Since the sanctuary lacked a theatre at this period, one type of distortion to rule out is optical; the strong incline of a cavea produces an angled aspect – stronger higher – that literally shapes perception (see above, n. 21). Strong facial expression must belong to the permanent characteristics of the masks (Gombrich's p), since the ways of rendering the expressions are inconsistent and various (m).Footnote 28 It is difficult, perhaps, to associate expressions of negative emotions – fear, pain, distress – with comedy or satire or farce;Footnote 29 perhaps more difficult still to see what such a drama would have to do with the worship of Orthia.
With so many theories of Orthia's nature and role, it is little surprise that scholars have sought such far-flung explanations for the masks. Orthia has been variously described as a vegetation goddess, a male fertility goddess, a female fertility goddess, a livestock fertility goddess, a child-birthing or child-protecting/rearing (κουροτρόφος) goddess and a goddess of the transition from childhood to adulthood.Footnote 30 Association with Artemis yields several other familiar roles – and some unfamiliar.Footnote 31 Fertility is the realm most often associated with Orthia, but this seems to be the collective fate of gods (especially goddesses) about whom little is known. The pattern exposes a rift in scholarship (long-standing if the accounts of ancient authors be considered) of the Orthia cult, viz. that some – Rose,Footnote 32 Calame (Reference Calame1986), Frontisi-Ducroux, Parker, Vernant on the evidence of Hesychius, Pausanias, Plutarch (Lycurgus 18.1; [Plutarch] Apophthegmata Laconica 239C) and Xenophon – consider it a (male) ephebe-initiation cult, and others – Calame (Reference Calame1977), Carter and Themelis (writing specifically of Messenian Orthia) on the evidence of Alcman,Footnote 33 Plutarch (Theseus 31.2) and Pollux – consider it a female cult, one in which Helen and the girl-choruses of Alcman might take part. Surely these ought to be exclusive functions, or at least to operate at different times (of the year?), since one of the near-universal characteristics of initiation cults is the separation of the sexes.Footnote 34 If she served both functions, it ought to have the effect of weakening the association with either.
The origins of Orthia herself are somewhat clearer: she is a Dorian goddess, not found in any Mycenaean texts, who was worshipped elsewhere and eventually became associated, though never quite identified, with Artemis. The cult statue was a small wooden pillar-like frontal representation of the Orthia.Footnote 35 The cult of Artemis Orthia at Messene represents a later stage of development, with most of the trappings of Artemis;Footnote 36 it was an essentially female cult, with female priests and a marked concern with childbirth. It is difficult to reconcile this with the cult of Orthia at Sparta in the Classical period being ‘a male initiation cult’,Footnote 37 though only thirty miles distant.
Of Spartan Orthia's nature one thing is certain: it was not stable over the course of her worship. Gorgoneia and representations of the potnia theron cease; the masks are made over perhaps 150 years of her ten-century worship, records of the contests of endurance (perhaps equivalent to the scourging of boys described in texts) exist only from the end of the fourth century, her association with Artemis grows more prominent over time. What persists is the location of the cult, just outside of Sparta on the west bank of the Eurotas river. As a suburban sanctuary, it enjoyed easy access from city-dwellers, and its location in the ancient swamp called Limnai shaped its character.Footnote 38
Bouvrie (Reference Bouvrie2009) asks whether Orthia is to be classed as a goddess of nature or of culture but does not consider whether she is both. Dionysos is god of both, and his connexion to drama in Athens is the index of that duality, as Aristotle articulates: as improvised drama migrates from country to town, its components become genres and diverge, and what is felt to be lost from the narrowing of one gives rise to others. The masks of Orthia are various, but most scholars focus on the grotesques, the caricatures, and the old women, yet exclude the male, the young, the ‘portraits’, even the satyrs. Their burial together makes clear that the masks were used together and were somehow in dialogue, yet few theories of their use account for the whole range. This must, at any rate, be a criterion of future theories.
CONCLUSIONS
Analysis of the material and technique of the terracotta masks shows that they vary in manufacture: fabric, size, thickness, tooling, piercing and polychromy are inconsistent. Taken with the masks’ inhumation together, this supports two theories. The first is that the terracotta masks were not worn; since most could not physically be worn, those that could were in fact not. This tallies with the difficulty in wearing clay masks for any kind of performance that includes vigorous movement, to say nothing of dance, as demonstrated by the Egyptian painting of a man in an Anubis mask steered by an unmasked aid (above, n. 7). What follows naturally from this is the second theory: that the masks refer in various ways to performance masks made probably of linen, but possibly of wood or other light and manipulable materials, posited by the masks’ excavators and widely accepted.
The reference was not direct, since the variations in appearance depend on the technique of working terracotta. Linen is manipulable in three dimensions but not so infinitely as clay, and its effect would have depended more on silhouette and two-dimensional decoration. Wood can be carved into like clay, but is not as freely manipulable and cannot readily be added to (as the ridges of the mask illustrated in Fig. 1 were added above the smooth surface of the mask). The makers of the clay masks must have taken some liberties in the execution of these durable dedications.
Our attention must then move to the perished originals: what did they look like and how were they used? To the first question we encounter the problem, as posed by Gombrich (see above), of isolating the permanent characteristics (p) (those that belonged to the linen [vel sim.] masks as a class) from the mobile characteristics (m) (the variations among the linen masks as well as in the translation of linen into clay), given that we see only their product (pm). I propose the following list of (p):
-
(1) Covering only the front of the face
-
(2) Plastic, i.e. modelled in three dimensions
-
(3) Pierced at eyes (perhaps wider than later masks)Footnote 39 and mouth
-
(4) Painted, with special prominence given to eyes and mouth
-
(5) Divided into types by facial structure, expression and decoration (both non-anatomical features, such as spirals, and anatomical features, such as wrinkles)
Characteristic (5) allows for the expressiveness so prominent in the masks labelled by Dickins as caricatures, old women and grotesques. Whereas Classical and later tragic masks serve primarily to identify role – slave, matron, ephebe – comic masks can portray nature (Aristotle's ἦθος), and thereby influence the movement of the actor (see above). Not all classes of masks from Orthia contain expressive examples – e.g. the ‘youths’ and ‘warriors’ – from which we may conclude either that they were part of a different type of drama, or that there was a single theatrical form in which there were ‘foils’ or ‘straight men’, as we find in satyr drama, e.g. Odysseus in Euripides’ Cyclops.Footnote 40
What might this Orthian humorous drama – one that seems to have prominently featured old women expressing painful emotions – look like?Footnote 41 A good comparison, contemporary with the middle of the series of masks (first quarter of the fifth century), is the scene depicted on the Beldam Painter's name vase (Fig. 8): five satyrs surround a woman (Lamia?) lashed to a palm tree and torture her.Footnote 42 The viewer is not asked to overlay a plot, but simply to regard the spectacle. There is little doubt that humour is intended, given the exaggerations of the woman's physique (Halm-Tisserant Reference Halm-Tisserant1989, 75), to say nothing of the mere presence of satyrs, who, when scripted, subvert expectations about proper behaviour. Halm-Tisserant (Reference Halm-Tisserant1989, 79) proposes that:
notre image laisse supposer que des anecdotes populaires, qui alimenteront par la suite le théâtre, circulaient dans les ateliers dès le début du Ve siècle, ou plus tôt.
The violent humour of the Lamia vase depends on her exaggerated (‘distorted’, to use Wiles's term) facial expression and body posture, which belong not to (Athenian) comedyFootnote 43 but to farce or mime, as do the masks of Orthia.
The claim made in the title of this essay – that the masks of Orthia have something to do with the origins of drama – required a review of a broad range of sources and scholarship. Many of the scholarly treatments partially disagree with their forebears. A typical example is Jameson's account (Reference Jameson, Hägg and Nordquist1990, 217) of the gorgoneion, in which he argues for the non-Phoenician origin of Orthia but otherwise accepts the other elements of Carter's argument. The literary parallels held up by the British excavators have caught the imagination of French scholars in particular, with their Frazerian descriptions of bloody ephebe-initiation, but evidence for these practices only begins several centuries after the masks. Scraping away the barnacles of anthropology and structuralism and orientalism, we are left with a wide array of masks of various manufacture that point to a broad, sophisticated range of dramatic practices. Most of the masks are inexpressive, merely types – such as gorgons and bearded men – but some show the nascent interest in accurate facial expression, and the comic potential of showing a character's nature as well as his ἦθος.
It is difficult to agree with Nielsen (Reference Nielsen2002, 88) that the origin of drama in Greece is to be located at the sanctuary of Orthia at Sparta, but the masks seem to stand at the beginning of the shift from a purely ritual drama to a drama in which a broad range of masks was marshalled. The drama was rapidly evolving, as the end of series of gorgon and satyr masks indicates. The masks are not unique, though no other place has produced the same breadth and volume as Sparta; Samos,Footnote 44 Cyprus (as Fig. 5), Thera and TirynsFootnote 45 have all yielded isolated examples, and may well have had dramatic cultures as did the Orthia sanctuary at Sparta, but only the votive practices there have given evidence of the breadth of masks needed to posit a rich and vibrant drama. Wiles has posited a direct path from the sanctuary of Orthia to the theatres of Athens;Footnote 46 this is obviously seductive, but we must remember that the survival of the masks at Orthia is due to the collocation of a dramatic practice as well as a votive practice. Still, the richness of the masks cannot have been rivalled in many other places.
The masks of Orthia have a magnetic pull, one whose effect can be seen on those who first excavated them and on those who have sought to explain them since. Scholars’ passing over of the warriors and the satyrs is evidence of the appeal of the contorted, expressive, furrowed, toothless old faces. The British excavators were disgusted by them even as they were fascinated by them. So too, perhaps, were the worshippers at the sanctuary of Orthia. The masks are mirrors of human imperfection; what better origin of theatre could there be?
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I wish to thank the department of Greek and Roman antiquities at the British Museum, and particularly Dr Fitton, its Keeper, for granting access to the objects in their collection.