July 2012 (116.3)

Article

Phalaris: Literary Myth or Historical Reality? Reassessing Archaic Akragas

By Gianfranco Adornato

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This article offers as a case study a comprehensive scrutiny of literary sources and archaeological data for the first tyranny of Phalaris at Akragas (571/0–555/4 B.C.E.). Literary sources report that during Phalaris’ tyranny, there was a period of prosperity characterized by a building program (temples, fortifications), territorial expansion up to the northern coast of Sicily, and dominion over the Sikans, just a decade after the foundation of Akragas. Scholars have adopted a generally positivist approach in reading these sources, in reconstructing the historical figure of Phalaris, and in outlining the artistic and cultural frame of Akragas during the second quarter of the sixth century B.C.E. From a methodological point of view, this case study sheds light on the unbalanced relationship between literary/historiographical sources and archaeological evidence in the reconstruction of archaic Akragas. I present an updated view of the artistic, architectural, and cultural context of archaic Akragas and draw a new picture of the geopolitical boundaries of the polis that is supported by archaeological evidence.

Terracotta fragment of a mythological group with Chrysaor (male body) and Medusa (left hand). Copenhagen, Nationalmuseet, inv. no. 11372 (© Nationalmuseet, Copenhagen, Department of Classical and Near Eastern Antiquities).

Terracotta fragment of a mythological group with Chrysaor (male body) and Medusa (left hand). Copenhagen, Nationalmuseet, inv. no. 11372 (© Nationalmuseet, Copenhagen, Department of Classical and Near Eastern Antiquities).

More articles like this:

IconographyArchitectureLiterary StudiesTerracottasItaly > Sicily
Terracotta fragment of a mythological group with Chrysaor (male body) and Medusa (left hand). Copenhagen, Nationalmuseet, inv. no. 11372 (© Nationalmuseet, Copenhagen, Department of Classical and Near Eastern Antiquities).

Terracotta fragment of a mythological group with Chrysaor (male body) and Medusa (left hand). Copenhagen, Nationalmuseet, inv. no. 11372 (© Nationalmuseet, Copenhagen, Department of Classical and Near Eastern Antiquities).