Layout The temple measures at the level of the temple platform, the
stylobate. It was longer and narrower than the common architecture of the previous era, though the elongated proportions are a common feature of early
Doric architecture. It has a
peripteros — a
colonnaded perimeter — of 6 by 16 columns which were originally wooden, but site archaeology does not support this theory The travel writer
Pausanias described it in his
Description of Greece: :It remains after this for me to describe the temple of Hera [at Olympia] and the noteworthy objects contained in it. The Elean account says that it was the people of Skillos, one of the cities in Triphylia, who built the temple about eight years after Oxylos came to the throne of Elis. The style of the temple is Doric, and pillars stand all round it. In the rear chamber one of the two pillars is of oak. The length of the temple is one hundred and sixty-nine feet, the breadth sixty-three feet, the height not short of fifty feet. Who the architect was they do not relate.
Columns The original wooden columns of the temple were gradually replaced with ones made of stone gradually between the mid 6th century BC and the Christian era. In 173 AD, one of the two columns in the
opisthodomos was still oak. As the replacements took place at widely differing periods between the
Archaic and
Roman periods, and were carved under the influence of their respective contemporary styles, they differ considerably in proportions and detail. This becomes apparent in the columns'
capitals, as each one is slightly different from the next. Additionally, column shafts differ by nearly in diameter, and one even has a different number of flutes than the rest. Another theory holds that the columns are so different, not because wooden columns were being replaced, but because various workshops erected different stone columns at the same time. Perhaps each style represented the major city-states or private donors for whom these builders were working, as Olympia was a pan-Doric sanctuary. No remains of the
entablature above the columns were found, but are believed to have been wooden.
Walls and roof The walls had a bottom course of stone with a
mudbrick superstructure, another feature typical of early Greek architecture. Other parts of the temple were made from limestone, unbaked bricks, and terracotta tiles. Holes in the protrusions at the ends of the walls—
antae—indicate that a wooden cladding protected them from the elements. The temple had a Laconian-style roof; its pediments were decorated with disk
acroteria of diameter, each made in one single piece (one is on display at the
Archaeological Museum of Olympia).
Contents The opisthodomos was also used to store numerous other objects, including many further statues of deities and
votive offerings of Zeus and Hera. Among the few of these objects to survive was a statue of
Hermes holding baby
Dionysos, which is generally identified as the Hermes of
Praxiteles, one of the most important preserved examples of
Greek sculpture. Pausanias also witnessed a small ivory-clad couch (purportedly once belonging to
Hippodameia), the bronze disc of
Iphitus of Elis (commemorating the truce that according to legend founded the Olympic games), and the table on which the
olive wreaths for the victors were displayed during the
Olympic Games. Pausanias recounts a number of objects beside the cult statues: :In the temple of Hera [at Olympia] is an image of Zeus, and the image of Hera is sitting on a throne with Zeus standing by her, bearded and with a helmet on his head. They are crude works of art. The figures of Horai (Seasons) next to them, seated upon thrones, were made by the Aeginetan Smilis. Beside them stands an image of Themis, as being mother of the Horai. It is the work of Dorykleidas [...] The Hesperides, five in number, were made by Theokles [...] The Athena wearing a helmet and carrying a spear and shield is, it is said, a work of Medon [...] Then Kore (the Maid) and Demeter sit opposite each other, while Apollon and Artemis stand opposite each other. Here too have been dedicated Leto, Tykhe (Fortune), Dionysos and a winged Nike (Victory). I cannot say who the artists were, but these figures too are in my opinion very ancient. The figures I have enumerated are of ivory and gold, but at a later date other images were dedicated in the Heraion, including a marble Hermes carrying the baby Dionysos, a work of Praxiteles, and a bronze Aphrodite made by Kleon of Sikyon [...] A nude gilded child is seated before Aphrodite, a work fashioned by Boithos of Kalkhedon. There were also brought hither from what is called the Philippeon other images of gold and ivory, Eurydike the wife of Aridaios and Olympias the wife of Philip. There is also a chest made of cedar [the chest of Kypselos], with figures on it, some of ivory, some of gold, others carved out of the cedar-wood itself [...] There are here other offerings also : a couch of no great size and for the most part adorned with ivory; the quoit of Iphitos; a table on which are set out the crowns for the victors. The couch is said to have been a toy of Hippodameia. The quoit of Iphitos has inscribed upon it the truce which the Eleans proclaim at the Olympic festivals; the inscription is not written in a straight line, but the letters run in a circle round the quoit. The table is made of ivory and gold, and is the work of Kolotes [...] There are figures of Hera, Zeus, the Mother of the gods, Hermes, and Apollon with Artemis. Behind is the disposition of the games. On one side are Asklepios and Hygeia (Health), one of his daughters; Ares too and Agon (Contest) by his side; on the other are Plouton, Dionysos, Persephone and Nymphai, one of them carrying a ball.
The table of Colotes The table was made with ivory and gold, and was sculpted by
Colotes. It displayed the figures of
Hera,
Zeus,
Rhea,
Hermes,
Apollo, and
Artemis in front of the Games. On one side was
Asclepius and his daughter
Aceso, and
Ares and the Olympian spirit of contest
Agon. On the other were
Pluto,
Dionysos,
Persephone and
nymphs. The table bore the
olive wreaths awarded to victors at the
ancient Olympic Games The statue Hermes and the Infant Dionysos The Chest of Cypselus The temple contained a
cedar chest () in which
Cypselus, the
tyrant of
Corinth was reportedly hidden by his mother. The chest was reportedly dedicated at Olympia in gratitude to the gods, According to
Dio Chrysostom in the 1st century AD, the chest was found in the
opisthodomos. The chest had various mythological figures inscribed on it in ivory, gold, or in the wood of the chest itself. Accompanying many of the figures were inscriptions in
Corinthian (
Doric) indicating their identity, some of the text being written
boustrophedon in alternating directions. ==Legacy==