The ultimate fate of the remains of the statue is uncertain. Rhodes has two serious earthquakes per century, owing to its location on the seismically unstable
Hellenic arc.
Pausanias mentions in the
Descriptio Graeciae, writing ca. 174, how the city was so devastated by an earthquake that the
sibyl oracle foretelling its destruction was considered fulfilled. This means the statue could not have survived for long if it had ever been repaired. By the 4th century
Rhodes was Christianized, so any further maintenance or rebuilding, if there ever was any before, on an ancient pagan statue is unlikely. The metal would probably have been used for coins and maybe also tools by the time of the
Arab wars, especially during earlier conflicts such as the
Sasanian wars. The onset of
Islamic naval incursions against the
Byzantine Empire gave rise to a dramatic account of what became of the Colossus. In 653, an Arab force under Muslim general
Mu'awiya I raided Rhodes, and according to the
Chronicle of
Theophanes the Confessor, Ultimately, Theophanes is the sole source of this account, and all other sources can be traced to him. As Theophanes' source was Syriac, it may have had vague information about a raid and attributed the statue's demise to it, not knowing much more. Or the Arab destruction and the purported sale to a Jew may have been a metaphor for
Nebuchadnezzar's dream of the destruction of a great statue. Given the likely previous neglect of the remains and various opportunities for authorities to have repurposed the metal, as well as the fact that, Islamic incursions notwithstanding, the island remained an important Byzantine strategic point well into the ninth century, an Arabic raid is unlikely to have found much, if any, remaining metal to carry away. For these reasons, as well as the negative perception of the
Arab conquests, L.I. Conrad considers Theophanes' story of the dismantling of the statue as likely propaganda, like the destruction of the
Library of Alexandria. ==Posture==