EΝΤΟΣ AΜΩΜΗΤΟΝ: AN ARGIVE-TYPE SHIELD FROM THE SANCTUARY OF OISYME
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Published:2018-11
Issue:
Volume:113
Page:199-219
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ISSN:0068-2454
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Container-title:The Annual of the British School at Athens
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Annu. Br. Sch. Athens
Author:
Chalazonitis Ioannis,Koukouli-Chrysanthaki Chaido,Malamidou Dimitria
Abstract
In 1987 an Archaic Argive-type shield and shield-band were discovered in the sanctuary on the acropolis of Oisyme. Such shields are found in the cemeteries of the northern Aegean, including those at Sindos and Archontiko. However, the Oisyme shield is as yet the only one to come from a sanctuary – a fact due, at least in part, to the limited exploration of early sanctuaries on the coast of Aegean Thrace. It is also the earliest known example of its type in the north-eastern Aegean. Considered alongside earlier literary evidence, such as Archilochus 5W, it helps to trace the introduction and development of the hoplite panoply in Thasos and itsperaea.The shield and shield-band can be dated toc.575–550bceon the basis of their repoussé decoration. The dies employed may have been imported from Peloponnesian (Argive or Corinthian) workshops or produced locally. They show stylistic influence from the contemporary Peloponnese, yet they have no known exact parallels. Metalworkers from the polis of Thasos and itsperaeaare likely to have imitated the products of southern workshops in much the same way that Thasian potters based their own early production on Cycladic, Chian and other wares. The deity worshipped in the Oisyme sanctuary was anerganeand/or a kourotrophic goddess, such as Artemis and Athena at nearby Thasos or the ‘Parthenos’ at neighbouring Neapolis. It is unlikely that rites of passage for hoplites were a central feature of the cult, since we lack the extensive corpus of weaponry (miniature and/or functional) typical in such cases. The limited number of weapons recovered from the sanctuary fits the established model for female poliad deities in smaller poleis. The shield was probably a personal gift, dedicated either by a retiring hoplite or as a thank offering after a military victory.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Archeology,Visual Arts and Performing Arts,History,Archeology,Classics
Reference80 articles.
1. Stamatopoulou V. 2004. “Ὅπλον: η αργολική ασπίδα και η τεχνολογία της” (unpublished PhD thesis, University of Thessaloniki; available online at accessed October 2018).
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