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Forum Note Issue 111.4

The Location of the Opisthodomos: Evidence from the Temple of Athena Parthenos Inventories

Tullia Linders

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The Archaios Neos and the Temple of Athena Parthenos
The Treasury of Athena on the Acropolis in Athens was originally located in a room known as the Opisthodomos in the Old Temple of Athena Polias (the Archaios Neos). After 406/5 B.C.E., it was moved to the western room of the Temple of Athena Parthenos. The evidence for this interpretation comes from the inventories of the Temple of Athena Parthenos. These inventories, dated from 434/3 to ca. 408/7 B.C.E., record offerings housed in three places in the new temple: the Proneos (the eastern porch), the Hekatompedon (the cella), and the Parthenon. This “Parthenon” must refer to the chamber behind the cella, which is entered from the west and which housed a collection of miscellaneous sacred objects. In 406/5, there was a fire in the Old Temple, and in 403/2, inventories recording dedications “from the Opisthodomos” and “from the Parthenon” first appear. They show that both the Opisthodomos and the room called the Parthenon were emptied, most likely as a consequence of the fire. This article argues that after the western room in the Temple of Athena Parthenos, which had been called the Parthenon in the earlier inventories, was cleared, it was used as the treasury and renamed the Opisthodomos.

Author bios

Volume 111 No. 4   
October 2007   
Table of Contents

Articles

The Square Temple at Tell Asmar and the Construction of Early Dynastic Mesopotamia, ca. 2900-2350 B.C.E.
Jean M. Evans

Family Ideology and Family History: The Function of Funerary Markers in Classical Attic Peribolos Tombs
Wendy E. Closterman

Late Hellenistic and Early Roman Invention and Innovation: The Case of Lead-Glazed Pottery
Kevin Greene

Mythological Group Portraits in Antonine Rome: The Performance of Myth
Rachel Kousser

The Emperor's New Clothes? The Utility of Identity in Roman Archaeology
Martin Pitts

Forum Article

Stylistic Diversity and Diacritical Feasting at Protopalatial Petras: A Preliminary Analysis of the Lakkos Deposit
Donald C. Haggis

Necrology

Boris Il'ich Marshak, 1933-2006
Judith A. Lerner

Museum Reviews

Classical Art in Copenhagen
Elizabeth Bartman and Helen Nagy

Iran and Its Neighbors in Late Antiquity: Art of the Sasanian Empire (224-642 C.E.)
Joel Walker

Book Reviews

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Books Received

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AJA Index

Contents of Volume 111 (2007)