CHARIOT IN ANCIENT GREECE IN THE 7th–4th CENT. BC: SOME OBSERVATIONS
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Санкт-Петербургский государственный университет
Abstract
The article deals with the possibility of using a chariot in Archaic and
Classical Greece beside races, that is, as a means of transport and for cult
13 occasions. A chariot ( / , , , opposed to ,
,, , , ) was a light two-wheeled
vehicle harnessed by horses, which could be driven by no more than two
standing men and did not allow carrying freight. It was a prestigious vehicle
associated with gods and heroes. Its use by mortals for a two-day journey
described in the Odyssey can be regarded as a poetic exaggeration of the
heroes’ capacities.
The heroic halo around a chariot could probably lead to its misrepresentation
in some cases, but since the chariots were not completely out of
use, one should only suppose with great caution that an absolutely impossible
usage was ascribed to them. The sounds of a chariot were familiar to
the public: they are referred to in poetry, and in the fifth-century drama the
word is applied to a wheel of a chariot or to some part of it, probably
a nave (the explanation of A. W. Vernall, which appeals to the similarity of
form and not of the sounds produced, is not sound).
Using a chariot as a means of transport in everyday life is not attested;
allegations of the opposite in scientifi c literature are due to careless terminology.
But its ceremonial use is likely to date back to the Mycenaean times.
Expensive aristocratic vehicles were most appropriate for a cult procession
with its ostentation and display. Using chariots at funerals (of course not as
a hearse) and weddings (mainly for bringing a bride to her husband’s house)
is depicted in art, and though it can be considered just as a means of heroization,
we cannot rule out that aristocratic families actually followed the heroic
pattern for the sake of prestige, notwithstanding its inconvenience (esp.
for a bride). There is evidence for chariots taking part in processions at the
Panathenaia in Athens and at the Artemisia on Euboea.
A musician accompanying a procession could hardly use a jolting chariot
as a stage for his performance. Transporting voluminous cult objects cannot
be confi rmed. Carrying a statue of the Mother of Gods on a chariot is not
attested in Greek cult. Absurd assertion that Amphiaraos carried on
his chariot in Eur. Phoen. 1110 is due to misunderstanding of Phoen. 174 by
an interpolator. Whatever the ritual at the sanctuary of Poseidon in Onchestos
described in Hymn. Hom. 3, 229–238 could be, its interpretation as
a mere accident by A. Schachter cannot be sustained.
Description
Статья из выпуска 9 сборника "Philologia classica: Исследования по классической филологии и истории
антиковедения"