Historians consider the Athenian 5th and 6th centuries BC as the Golden Age of sculpture and architecture. In this period the ornamental elements and the technique employed did not vary from the previous period. What characterizes this period is the quantity of works and the refinement and perfection of the works. Most were religious in nature, mainly sanctuaries and temples. Some examples from this period are: • The reconstruction of the
Temple of Olympian Zeus. • The reconstruction of the Temple of Apollo in
Delphi, which was destroyed by an
earthquake. • The reconstruction of the
Acropolis of Athens, the marble city for the glory of the gods. The site had suffered from a fire started by the
Persians and lay in ruins for more than 30 years. Pericles initiated its reconstruction with white marble brought from the nearby quarry of Pentelicon. The best architects, sculptors and workers were gathered to complete the Acropolis. The construction lasted 20 years. Financing came from the Delian League.
Sculpture Phidias is considered the greatest sculptor of this era. He created colossal
gold-plated ivory
statues ("chryselephantine statues"), generally face and hands, which were highly celebrated and admired in his own time: Athena, situated in the interior of the Parthenon, whose splendor reached the faithful through the open doors, and
Zeus in the
Sanctuary of Olympia, considered in its age and in later ages to be one of the marvels of the world. According to
Pliny the Elder's
Natural History, in order to conserve the marble of these sculptures, oil receptacles were placed in the temples so that the ivory would not crack. The other great sculptors of this century were
Myron and
Polycletus.
Pottery During this age, the production of ceramic pieces was abundant.
Amphorae were produced in mass quantity due to the heavy trading with other cities all around the Mediterranean. Large evidence of amphorae from this era can be found around every major ancient port as well as in the Aegean sea. During this period is also seen an abundance of white background ceramics which are much more delicate than the previously popular yellow and black background ceramics. These ceramics were often used to keep perfume or for mortuary rites, including decorations on graves. It is also known that there were many great painters, but their works are lost, both
frescos and free-standing paintings.
Theatre The
theatre reached its greatest height in the 5th century BC. Pericles promoted and favored the theatre with a series of practical and economic measures. The wealthiest families were obligated to care for and to sustain the
choruses and actors. By this means, Pericles maintained the tradition according to which theatrical performances served the moral and intellectual education of the people. Plays were made by men and usually for men, and this platform was often used to reinforce the patriarchy. Athens became the great city of
Greek theatre. Theatrical performances lasted eight consecutive hours and were performed as part of a competition in which a jury proclaimed a winner. While the decor of the provisional theatres was very simple, the permanent theatrical venues of ancient Athens eventually became more sumptuous and elaborate. No matter the performance venue, plays were performed by, at most, three actors, who wore masks to identify them with the characters they portrayed; they were accompanied by a chorus who sang and danced. The dramatic poets from this era whose plays have survived are: •
Aeschylus •
Sophocles •
Euripides •
Aristophanes Philosophy The Golden Age featured some of the most renowned Western philosophers of all time. Chief among these were
Socrates, whose ideas exist primarily in a series of dialogues by his student Plato, who mixed them with his own;
Plato; and Plato's student,
Aristotle. Other notable philosophers of the Golden Age included
Anaxagoras;
Democritus (who first inquired as to what substance lies within all matter, the earliest known proposal of what is now called the
atom or its sub-units);
Empedocles;
Hippias;
Isocrates;
Parmenides;
Heraclitus; and
Protagoras. In the second half of the 5th century BC the name of sophist (from the Greek
sophistês, expert, teacher, man of wisdom) was given to the teachers that gave instruction on diverse branches of science and knowledge in exchange for a fee. In this age, Athens was the "school of Greece." Pericles and his mistress
Aspasia had the opportunity to associate with not only the great Athenians thinkers of their day but also other Greek and foreign scholars. Among them were the philosopher
Anaxagoras, the architect
Hippodamus of Miletus, who reconstructed
Peiraeus, as well as the historians Herodotus (484–425), Thucydides (460–400), and
Xenophon (430–354). Athens was also the capital of
eloquence. Since the late 5th century BC, eloquence had been elevated to an art form. There were the
logographers () who wrote courses and created a new literary form characterized by the clarity and purity of the language. It became a lucrative profession. It is known that the logographer
Lysias (460–380 BC) made a great fortune thanks to his profession. Later, in the 4th century BC, the orators Isocrates and
Demosthenes also became famous. ==End of the Age of Pericles==