Acropolis of Athens
Aegean Sea
Aegeus
Agora of Athens
Alonissos Marine Park
Ancient Greek religion
Animal sacrifice
Archaic Period
Artemisium
Athens
Athens National Archaeological Museum
Attica
Battle of Salamis
Byron
Cape Malea
Crete
Cult image
Demi-gods
Doric Order
Encyclopedia Britannica
Euboea
George Gordon Byron
Grand Tour
Greco-Persian War
Greece
Greek temple
Headlands and bays
Herodotus
Hexastyle
Homer
Ionian sea
Ithaca
Kouros
Lake Prespa
Laurium
Lord Byron
Main Page
Menelaus
Metamorphoses
Minos
Minotaur
Mount Ainos
Mount Oeta
Mount Olympus
Mount Parnassus
National parks of Greece
Odysseus
Odyssey
Old Supreme Court Chamber
Ovid
Parallel Lives
Parnitha
Parthenon
Peloponnesian War
Peninsula
Pericles
Perseus Digital Library
Pindus National Park
Plutarch
Portico
Poseidon
Promontory
Romantic poetry
Samariá Gorge
Shahanshah
Sounion
Sparta
Sunset
Temple of Hephaestus
Temple of Isthmia
Theseus
Thomas Phillips
Thucydides
Tribute
Trident
Trireme
Trophy
Troy
Tufa
United States
Vikos–Aoös National Park
Xerxes I
Zakynthos Marine Park
Zeus
Aegean Sea
Aegeus
Agora of Athens
Alonissos Marine Park
Ancient Greek religion
Animal sacrifice
Archaic Period
Artemisium
Athens
Athens National Archaeological Museum
Attica
Battle of Salamis
Byron
Cape Malea
Crete
Cult image
Demi-gods
Doric Order
Encyclopedia Britannica
Euboea
George Gordon Byron
Grand Tour
Greco-Persian War
Greece
Greek temple
Headlands and bays
Herodotus
Hexastyle
Homer
Ionian sea
Ithaca
Kouros
Lake Prespa
Laurium
Lord Byron
Main Page
Menelaus
Metamorphoses
Minos
Minotaur
Mount Ainos
Mount Oeta
Mount Olympus
Mount Parnassus
National parks of Greece
Odysseus
Odyssey
Old Supreme Court Chamber
Ovid
Parallel Lives
Parnitha
Parthenon
Peloponnesian War
Peninsula
Pericles
Perseus Digital Library
Pindus National Park
Plutarch
Portico
Poseidon
Promontory
Romantic poetry
Samariá Gorge
Shahanshah
Sounion
Sparta
Sunset
Temple of Hephaestus
Temple of Isthmia
Theseus
Thomas Phillips
Thucydides
Tribute
Trident
Trireme
Trophy
Troy
Tufa
United States
Vikos–Aoös National Park
Xerxes I
Zakynthos Marine Park
Zeus
Cape Sounion, looking out to the nearby islet of Patroklou
Sunset at Cape Sounion.
Cape Sounion (Modern Greek: Aκρωτήριο Σούνιο - Akrotírio Soúnio; Ancient Greek: Άκρον Σούνιον - Άkron Soúnion; Latin: Sunium promonturium; Venetian: Capo Colonne - "Cape of Columns") is a promontory located 69 km (43 mi, by road) SSE of Athens, at the southernmost tip of the Attica peninsula in Greece.
Cape Sounion is noted as the site of ruins of an ancient Greek temple of Poseidon, the god of the sea in classical mythology. The remains are perched on the headland, surrounded on three sides by the sea. The ruins bear the deeply engraved name of English Romantic poet Lord Byron (1788–1824).
The site is a popular day-excursion for tourists from Athens, with sunset over the Aegean Sea, as viewed from the ruins, a sought-after spectacle.
Contents
1 Legend
2 History
3 Temple of Poseidon
4 Byron inscription
5 Heidegger's Visit
6 Sounion Today
7 Notes
8 See also
9 References
10 External links
//
Legend
Theseus slays the Minotaur. Detail from Attic red-figure pelike. ca. 470 BC. From Cerveteri, Italy. Museo Gregoriano Etrusco
Bronze statue of deity, either Poseidon or Zeus, about to hurl (missing) bolt. Height: 2.1 m. ca. 460 BC. Found in shipwreck off Cape Artemisium. Athens National Archaeological Museum
American Poetry
She was impressed with some of my poetry and asked if she could print one of my poems, "Missing the Sunset at Sounion," in the journal issued with the festival each year. She also invited me to attend the festival and read some more of my poetry.
http://www.american-reporter.com/4,136/355.html
She was impressed with some of my poetry and asked if she could print one of my poems, "Missing the Sunset at Sounion," in the journal issued with the festival each year. She also invited me to attend the festival and read some more of my poetry.
http://www.american-reporter.com/4,136/355.html
Villa Sounion | A Luxury Caribbean Villa Rental
Caribbean luxury villa rental; A luxury villa overlooking Grace bay on the Turks and ... Villa Sounion is a luxury waterfront 6000 sq foot private villa with superb artwork and ...
According to legend, Cape Sounion is the spot where Aegeus, king of Athens, leapt to his death off the cliff, thus giving his name to the Aegean Sea. The story goes that Aegeus, anxiously looking out from Sounion, despaired when he saw a black sail on his son Theseus 's ship, returning from Crete. This led him to believe that his son had been killed in his contest with the dreaded Minotaur, a monster that was half man and half bull. The Minotaur was confined by its owner, King Minos of Crete, in a specially designed labyrinth. Every year, the Athenians were forced to send 7 boys and 7 girls to Minos as tribute. These youths were placed in the labyrinth to be devoured by the Minotaur. Theseus had volunteered to go with the third tribute and attempt to slay the beast. He had agreed with his father that if he survived the contest, he would hoist a white sail. In fact, Theseus had overcome and slain the Minotaur, but tragically had simply forgotten about the white sail.1
The earliest literary reference to Sounion is in Homer's poem the Odyssey, probably composed in the 8th century BC. This recounts the mythical tribulations suffered by Greek hero Odysseus in a gruelling 10-year sea-voyage to return to his native island, Ithaca in the Ionian sea, from the sack of Troy. This ordeal was supposedly inflicted upon him by Poseidon, to whom the temple at Sounion was dedicated.
Cape Sounion - Visiting Cape Sounion and the Temple of Poseidon
A local favorite as well as a tourist essential, the sunset as seen through the Temple of Poseidon at Cape Sounion will light your dreams long after you've left ...
We are told that, as the various Greek commanders sailed back from Troy, the helmsman of King Menelaus of Sparta 's ship died at his post while rounding "holy Sounion, cape of Athens". Menelaus landed at Sounion to give his companion full funeral honours (i.e. cremation on a funeral pyre on the beach).2 The Greek ships were then caught by a storm off Cape Malea and scattered in all directions.
History
Archaeological finds on the site date from as early as 700 BC. Herodotus tells us that in the sixth century BC, the Athenians celebrated a quadrennial festival at Sounion, which involved Athens' leaders sailing to the cape in a sacred boat.3
The original, Archaic Period temple of Poseidon on the site, which was built of tufa, was probably destroyed in 480 BC by Persian troops during shahanshah Xerxes I 's invasion of Greece (the second Greco-Persian War). Although there is no direct evidence for Sounion, Xerxes certainly had the temple of Athena, and everything else, on the Acropolis of Athens razed as punishment for the Athenians' defiance.4 After they defeated Xerxes in the naval Battle of Salamis, the Athenians placed an entire enemy trireme (warship with three banks of oars) at Sounion as a trophy dedicated to Poseidon.5
Athens Daytrips: Temple of Poseidon at Sounion
The Temple of Poseidon at Sounion is the best half day trip you can do out of Athens, greece, athens, sounion, excursions, temples, archaeology
The later temple at Sounion, whose columns still stand today, was probably built in ca. 440 BC. This was during the ascendancy of Athenian statesman Pericles, who also rebuilt the Parthenon in Athens.
In 413 BC, during the Peloponnesian War against the Spartans, the Athenians fortified the site with a wall and towers, to prevent it from falling into Spartan hands. This would have threatened Athens' seaborne grain supply route from Euboea. Athens' supply situation had become critical, since the city's land supply - lines had been cut by the Spartan fortification of Deceleia, in north Attica.6 However, not long after, the Sounion fortress was seized from the Athenians by a force of rebel slaves from the nearby silver mines of Laurium.7
Temple of Poseidon
Temple of Poseidon at Cape Sounion, built circa 440 BC.
Greek hexastyle temple with Doric columns. The Temple of Hephaestus in the Agora of Athens (ca. 450 BC). Built in the same period and to similar plan (and probably by the same architect), this structure closely illustrates the appearance of the Temple of Poseidon at Sounion when it was intact. Note the surviving naos (internal hall of worship)
Ancient Greek religion was essentially propitiatory in nature: i.e., based on the notion that to avoid misfortune, one must constantly seek the favour of the relevant gods by prayers, gifts and sacrifices. To the ancient Greek, every natural feature, e.g. hill, lake, stream or wood, was controlled by a god. Thus a person about to swim in a river, for example, would say a prayer to the river-god, or make an offering to that god's shrine, to avoid the chance of drowning. The gods were considered immortal, could change shape, become invisible and travel anywhere instantaneously. But in many other respects they were considered similar to humans. They shared the whole range of human emotions, both positive and negative. Thus, in their attitudes towards humans, they could be both benevolent and malicious. As humans also, they had family and clan hierarchies. They could even mate with humans, and produce demi-gods.8
Category:Sounion - Wikimedia Commons
Media in category "Sounion" The following 13 files are in this category, out of 13 total. ... Retrieved from "http://commons.wikimedia
In a maritime country like Greece, the god of the sea was bound to occupy a high position in the divine hierarchy. In power, Poseidon was considered second only to Zeus (Jupiter), the supreme god himself. His implacable wrath, manifested in the form of storms, was greatly feared by all mariners. In an age without mechanical power, storms very frequently resulted in shipwrecks and drownings.
The temple at Sounion, therefore, was a venue where mariners, and also entire cities or states, could propitiate Poseidon, by making animal sacrifice, or leaving gifts.
The temple of Poseidon was constructed in approx. 440 BC, over the ruins of a temple dating from the Archaic Period. It is perched above the sea at a height of almost 60 m. The design of the temple is a typical hexastyle i.e. it had a front portico with 6 columns.9 Only some columns of the Sounion temple stand today, but intact it would have closely resembled the contemporary and well-preserved Temple of Hephaestus beneath the Acropolis, which may have been designed by the same architect.
As with all Greek temples, the Poseidon building was rectangular, with a colonnade on all four sides. The total number of original columns was 42: 18 columns still stand today. The columns are of the Doric Order. They were made of locally-quarried white marble. They were 6.10 m (20 ft) high, with a diameter of 1 m (3.1 ft) at the base and 79 cm (31 inches) at the top.10
Cape Sounion And the Temple of Poseidon | Tours - Cruises ...
Cape Sounion is one of the most famous and picturesque places in Attica"
At the centre of the temple colonnade would have been the hall of worship (naos), a windowless rectangular room, similar to the partly intact hall at the Temple of Hephaestus. It would have contained, at one end facing the entrance, the cult image, a colossal, ceiling - height (6m) bronze statue of Poseidon.11 Probably gold-leafed, it may have resembled a contemporary representation of the god, appropriately found in a shipwreck, shown in the figure above. Poseidon was usually portrayed carrying a trident, the weapon he supposedly used to stir up storms.
Archaeological excavation of the site in 1906 uncovered numerous artefacts and inscriptions, most notably a marble kouros statue12 and an impressive votive relief,13 both now in the Athens National Archaeological Museum.14
Byron inscription
Byron's name carved into temple of Poseidon
Lord Byron wearing Albanian costume. Portrait by Thomas Phillips ca. 1813
The inscribed name of the famous Romantic poet George Lord Byron, carved into the base of one of the columns of the Temple of Poseidon, possibly dates from his first visit to Greece, on his Grand Tour of Europe, before he acquired fame. Byron spent several months in 1810-11 in Athens, including two documented visits to Sounion. There is, however, no direct evidence that the inscription was made by Byron himself. Byron mentions Sounion in his poem Don Juan:
Place me on Sunium's marbled steep,
Where nothing, save the waves and I,
May hear our mutual murmurs sweep...
Cape Sounion
Cape Sounion is one of the most famous and picturesque places in Attica. ... Click on the thumbnails below in order to see pictures of Cape Sounion. ...
15
Heidegger's Visit
The philosopher Martin Heidegger visited Sounion during his journey to Greece in 1962, as described in his book Sojourns.16 He refers to the "gleaming-white ruins of the temple". In the strong sea breeze "these few standing columns were the strings of an invisible lyre, the song of which the far-seeing Delian god let resonate over the Cycladic world of islands". He marvels at "the way that this single gesture of the land suggests the invisible nearness of the divine and dedicates to it every growth and every human work" (ibid.). He goes on to reflect "the people of this country knew how to inhabit and demarcate the world against the barbarous in honour of the seat of the gods. ...they knew how to praise what is great and by acknowledging it, to bring themselves in front of the sublime, founding, in this way, a world" (ibid.).
Sounion Today
Apart from a world-renowned archaeological site, Sounion is an upscale summer home location for Athenians. Construction flourished between the 1960s and 1970s, with massive yet minimal villas and condos erected. Sounion is one of the most expensive areas in Greece, with the value of some homes exceeding twenty million euros.
Notes
^ Plutarch, Theseus
^ Homer, Odyssey III. 278
^ Herodotus, Histories VI.87.
^ Herodotus, Histories VIII.53.
^ Herodotus, Histories, VIII.121.
^ Thucydides, Peloponnesian War VII.28 and VIII.4.
^ 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica, article: 'Sunium'
^ Ovid, Metamorphoses.
^ Perseus Digital Library @ www.perseus.tufts.edu (search term: 'Sounion').
^ Perseus Digital Library, for search term 'Sounion
^ W. Burkert, Greek Religion (1987).
^ David Gill, webpage: [1].
^ David Gill, webpage: [2].
^ Athens National Archaeological Museum, items NM 2720 and NM 3344.
^ Byron, Don Juan, Canto the Third "The Isles of Greece"
^ Sojourns: The Journey to Greece, translated by J.P. Manoussakis, State University of New York, 2005, p.43 ff.
See also
Old Supreme Court Chamber (1810) of the United States incorporated architectural elements of the Temple of Posidon
References
Sounion | Define Sounion at Dictionary.com
Sounion definition, a cape in E central Greece, SE of Athens, at the tip of the Attica peninsula, in W Aegean Sea. See more.
The following are reference sources, in alpha order (cited in Notes):
Athens National Archaeological Museum, items NM 2720 and NM 3344.
Lord Byron, Don Juan, 1818-1819.
W. Burkert, Greek Religion (1987).
Herodotus, Histories, Volumes VI & VIII, "The History of Herodotus" (translated), 440 BC, webpage: Fordham-HH.
Homer, Odyssey, Volume III & IX.
Ovid, Metamorphoses, 2-8 CE.
1911 Encyclopedia Britannica, article "Sunium", 1911.
Perseus Digital Library @ www.perseus.tufts.edu (search term: 'Sounion')
Plutarch, "Theseus" in Parallel Lives, 75 CE.
Romantic Circles, The Byron Chronology, webpage: RC-UMD.
Thucydides, Peloponnesian War, Volume VII and VIII, 431 BC (translated by Richard Crawley), webpage: MIT-Thuc.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Sounion
360 Panorama from Temple of Posiedon
v · d · eNational parks of Greece
Mainland
Olympus • Parnassus • Parnitha • Samaria • Vikos–Aoös • Ainos • Sounio • Oeta • Pindus • Prespes
Marine Parks
Alonissos • Zakynthos
Sounion
The Temple of Poseidon at Sounion is a peripteral temple with 6 columns on the front and 13 columns along the side, measuring 31.12m ... atheism.about.com ...
The following are reference sources, in alpha order (cited in Notes):
Athens National Archaeological Museum, items NM 2720 and NM 3344.
Lord Byron, Don Juan, 1818-1819.
W. Burkert, Greek Religion (1987).
Herodotus, Histories, Volumes VI & VIII, "The History of Herodotus" (translated), 440 BC, webpage: Fordham-HH.
Homer, Odyssey, Volume III & IX.
Ovid, Metamorphoses, 2-8 CE.
1911 Encyclopedia Britannica, article "Sunium", 1911.
Perseus Digital Library @ www.perseus.tufts.edu (search term: 'Sounion')
Plutarch, "Theseus" in Parallel Lives, 75 CE.
Romantic Circles, The Byron Chronology, webpage: RC-UMD.
Thucydides, Peloponnesian War, Volume VII and VIII, 431 BC (translated by Richard Crawley), webpage: MIT-Thuc.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Sounion
360 Panorama from Temple of Posiedon
v · d · eNational parks of Greece
Mainland
Olympus • Parnassus • Parnitha • Samaria • Vikos–Aoös • Ainos • Sounio • Oeta • Pindus • Prespes
Marine Parks
Alonissos • Zakynthos
Sounion Gifts, T-Shirts, Stickers, & More - CafePress
Shop our large selection of sounion gifts, t-shirts, posters and stickers starting at $5 . Unique sounion designs. Fast shipping.
The following are reference sources, in alpha order (cited in Notes):
Athens National Archaeological Museum, items NM 2720 and NM 3344.
Lord Byron, Don Juan, 1818-1819.
W. Burkert, Greek Religion (1987).
Herodotus, Histories, Volumes VI & VIII, "The History of Herodotus" (translated), 440 BC, webpage: Fordham-HH.
Homer, Odyssey, Volume III & IX.
Ovid, Metamorphoses, 2-8 CE.
1911 Encyclopedia Britannica, article "Sunium", 1911.
Perseus Digital Library @ www.perseus.tufts.edu (search term: 'Sounion')
Plutarch, "Theseus" in Parallel Lives, 75 CE.
Romantic Circles, The Byron Chronology, webpage: RC-UMD.
Thucydides, Peloponnesian War, Volume VII and VIII, 431 BC (translated by Richard Crawley), webpage: MIT-Thuc.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Sounion
360 Panorama from Temple of Posiedon
v · d · eNational parks of Greece
Mainland
Olympus • Parnassus • Parnitha • Samaria • Vikos–Aoös • Ainos • Sounio • Oeta • Pindus • Prespes
Marine Parks
Alonissos • Zakynthos














