The Parthenon Enigma: A New Understanding of the West's Most Iconic Building and the People Who Made It
Joan Breton Connelly
"A revolutionary new understanding of the most famous & influential building in the world, a thesis that calls into question our basic understanding of the ancient civilization that we most identify with. For more than two millennia, the Parthenon has been revered as the symbol of Western culture, the epitome of the ancient society from which we derive our highest ideals. It was understood to honor the city-state's patron deity Athena, & its intricately sculpted surface believed to depict a celebration of civic continuity in the birthplace of democracy.
But through a close reading of a lost play by Euripides, accidentally discovered on a papyrus wrapping an Egyptian mummy, Joan Connelly began to develop a new theory that has sparked one of the fiercest controversies ever to rock the world of classics.
Now, she recounts how our most basic sense of the Parthenon & of the culture that built it may have been crucially mistaken. Re-creating the ancient structure from its natural environment to its pediment, & using a breathtaking range of textual & visual evidence, she uncovers a monument glorifying human sacrifice set in a world of cult rituals quite unlike anything conventionally conjured by the word "Athenian."