Timothy McSweeney's Header Image

- - - -

Now available for preorder:
The San Francisco Panorama
.

- - - -

 

M O S T   C E N S O R E D
P R E S S   R E L E A S E S
O F   1 9 9 9   ( T H U S   F A R ) .


- - - -

UC Berkeley archaeologist rebuilds a Greek temple in Ancient Nemea and puts a new face on Zeus

EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE UNTIL WEDNESDAY (DEC. 8) AT 8 P.M., TIME OF NEMEA LECTURE AT UC BERKELEY

- - - -

Berkeley - In Ancient Nemea, near where Greek athletes competed in the original Olympics, called the Panhellenic Games, a University of California, Berkeley, archaeologist is rebuilding a 2400-year-old temple that puts a new face on the old Greek god, Zeus.

Usually shown with thunderbolt in hand, Zeus is the epitome of patriarchal power. But at Nemea, if Stephen Miller, UC Berkeley professor of classics, is right, this Zeus could have been holding a lamb.

The so-called "Nemean Zeus" is a god of grazing, not thunder, said Miller in an evening lecture at UC Berkeley (Wednesday, Dec. 8) where he outlined progress being made to partially reconstruct the ancient temple where Greek runners would have conducted their religious rites.

Miller's team has nearly rebuilt two of the 34 columns in the 9,240-square-foot temple. They hope to have the two 42-foot columns completed by June, 2000, in time for the second revival of the games at Nemea. Another six columns are scheduled for completion by the time of the Olympic Games in Athens in 2004.

Miller was responsible in 1996 for inspiring the first revival of the games at Nemea, which brought more than 500 people from around the world to emulate Greek athletes of 25 centuries ago.

Nemea's modern-day runners wore tunics and ran barefoot on the track uncovered by Miller in 20 years of archaeological research there. They also used the original locker room and jogged through a 130-foot entrance tunnel covered in ancient graffiti, before sticking their toes in the same grooved stone blocks used by Greek runners. A reconstruction of an ancient mechanism, based on the catapult, started the race. Reconstruction of the temple is being done to conserve the stones now deteriorating on the ground, and hopefully, to shed new light on this Greek god, said Miller.

The Panhellenic Games began at Nemea in 573 B.C., one of four such contests in Ancient Greece, and ended at Nemea some 300 years later. At that point, the temple was abandoned, said Miller. Its Zeus statue probably was moved to the Greek city of Argos, which had a temple dedicated to Nemean Zeus, and then its bronze was melted down and reused.

Miller believes that the temple's cult figure would have had pastoral traits because the word "Nemea" means "grazing" in English. Moreover, he discovered in excavations last summer that the entire valley flooded every winter in antiquity and could only have been used for pasture - and games - in the summer.

"No one could have lived at Nemea or planted crops," said Miller.

"This is not the Olympian Zeus, the king of the gods who philanders and hurls thunderbolts," he said.

"This is Nemean Zeus, a shepherd. What did he look like? What were his attributes? Does he have a lamb in his arms? I would love to know."

Miller said there are two other known Greek sites with temples dedicated to the Nemean Zeus, but no one ever focused on his character because they didn't know that the valley in which Ancient Nemea was located was restricted to pasture land. Even so, he said, Nemean Zeus was a minor cult for this mythological god, which has many other representations, most associated with power.

Unfortunately, the temple's interior cannot be reconstructed because materials were carted away in the early Christian era, to be used in a church at Nemea. Christians also took the foundation stones for the columns and left them lying on the ground for the next 1,500 years, until Miller arrived to put them up again.

The reconstruction of the first two columns was funded by Theodore Papalexopoulos of Greece. Money for the next two columns has been contributed by the Stavros Niarchos Foundation and Mr. and Mrs. John Moscahlaides of New York and Athens.

###

For further information or to attend the lecture in the Krutch Auditorium on UC Berkeley's Clark Kerr Campus, call Stephen Miller at (510) 642-5924.

Patricia McBroom
Senior Public Information Representative
University of California, Berkeley
Telephone: 510-643-7944

- - - -

MAIN PAGE | ARCHIVES



Memories of Amanda Davis




Red dot denotes content that is new today.

Black dot denotes newish content.

McSWEENEY'S STORE

SUBSCRIBE TO:
McSWEENEY'S
THE BELIEVER
WHOLPHIN

FUTURE McSWEENEY'S BOOKS

THE AMANDA DAVIS HIGHWIRE FICTION AWARD

INVITE A McSWEENEY'S AUTHOR TO SPEAK IN YOUR TOWN OR COLLEGE

THE BEST AMERICAN NONREQUIRED READING

McSWEENEY'S MONTHLY MAILING LIST

BOOKSTORES WITH A McSWEENEY'S DISPLAY

McSWEENEY'S-RELATED EVENTS AND VARIOUS TOUR DATES

ORDER INQUIRIES AND ADDRESS CHANGES

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES:
FOR BOOKS
FOR THE QUARTERLY
FOR THE WEBSITE
FOR WHOLPHIN

McSWEENEY'S INTERNSHIPS

CONTACT US

- - - -

LETTERS TO McSWEENEY'S

LISTS

McSWEENEY'S RECOMMENDS

REVIEWS OF NEW FOOD

NEW WHOLPHIN FILM

DAN LIEBERT, VERBAL CARTOONIST

TEDDY WAYNE'S UNPOPULAR PROVERBS

NON-ESSENTIAL MNEMONICS

BITCHSLAP: A COLUMN ABOUT WOMEN AND FIGHTING

DISPATCHES FROM A GUY TRYING UNSUCCESSFULLY
TO SELL A SONG IN NASHVILLE


GLOBAL WAR ON BEDBUGS: LETTERS FROM BEDBUG CITY

THE CONFLICTED EXISTENCE OF A FEMALE PORN WRITER

OH MY GAWD: A COLUMN ABOUT A TEENAGER NAVIGATING RELIGION

DISPATCHES FROM MANILA

DISPATCHES FROM AN INDIAN CASINO

THE CONVERGENCES CONTEST

CHRIS WHITE ANSWERS PROFOUND
QUESTIONS ABOUT THE PRESIDENTS


REPORTS FROM THE PINBALL SCENE

LETTERS FROM THE HELLBOX

NOTES FROM AN AMATEUR SPECTATOR
AT AMATEUR MIXED MARTIAL ARTS FIGHTS


B.R. COHEN'S DAYS AT THE MUSEUM

CONVERSATIONS AT A WARTIME CAFÉ

AND HERE'S THE KICKER:
MIKE SACKS'S CONVERSATIONS WITH HUMOR WRITERS


GRANT MUNROE'S CORPORATE FOLKTALES

SARAH WALKER SHOWS YOU HOW

DISPATCHES FROM AN ENVIRONMENTAL LAWYER
WHO IS TRYING TO GROW A MUSTACHE


DISPATCHES FROM A HANGDOG BANKRUPT

DISPATCHES FROM THE CAPITAL

DISPATCHES FROM INDIA

THE WINNER'S CIRCLE WITH ERIC FEEZELL

SEAN MICHAELS LISTENS TO MUSIC IN MONTREAL

SHORT IMAGINED MONOLOGUES

KIDS' LETTERS TO PRESIDENT OBAMA

STAINED TEETH: A COLUMN ABOUT WINE

YOUR MONEY, YOUR JOB ... YOUR LIFE, WITH ALISON ROSEN

KEVIN DOLGIN TELLS YOU ABOUT PLACES YOU SHOULD GO IN EUROPE

ABOUT THE WILD THINGS

ABOUT THE CONVALESCENT

ABOUT FEVER CHART

ABOUT GOD SAYS NO

ABOUT ZEITOUN

LETTERS FROM AN EARTH BALL
TO, OR CONCERNING, SEAN HANNITY


E-MAILS SENT TO THE UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA ENGLISH DEPARTMENT
FLAG-FOOTBALL TEAM


TRAVELING EUROPE IN STYLE WITH AUCKLAND DINGIROO,
DARK-AGE TOURIST AND CRITIC OF FOOD AND DRINK


JOHN MOE'S POP-SONG CORRESPONDENCES

INTERVIEWS WITH PEOPLE WHO HAVE INTERESTING OR UNUSUAL JOBS

FLIP: A COLUMN ABOUT SKATEBOARDING

OPEN LETTERS TO PEOPLE OR ENTITIES WHO ARE UNLIKELY TO RESPOND

DISPATCHES FROM A PUBLIC LIBRARIAN

MICHAEL IAN BLACK IS A VERY FAMOUS CELEBRITY

DAN KENNEDY SOLVES YOUR PROBLEMS WITH PAPER

STEPHEN ELLIOTT'S POKER REPORT

- - - -

ADDITIONAL MATERIAL