The Junk Drawer

A junkie runs on junk time. When his junk is cut off, the clock runs down and stops. [William Burroughs, Junkie]

Homer’s D’Ohdyssey

Filed under: Newspaper Clippings — Matthew at 1:36 pm on Wednesday, March 22, 2006

It is perhaps a sign of how far I have fallen from my days as a serious student of Literature that when I read the headline, Scenes From Homer Found in Cyprus ‘Warrior Tomb,’ I immediately think that the article is Simpsons-related.

NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) — A 2,500-year-old sarcophagus with vivid color illustrations from Homer’s epics has been discovered in western Cyprus, archaeologists said Monday.

Construction workers found the limestone sarcophagus last week in a tomb near the village of Kouklia, in the coastal Paphos area. The tomb, which probably belonged to an ancient warrior, had been looted during antiquity.

“The style of the decoration is unique, not so much from an artistic point of view, but for the subject and the colors used,” said Pavlos Flourentzos, director of the island’s antiquities department.

Only two similar sarcophagi have ever been discovered in Cyprus before. One is housed in New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art and the other in the British Museum in London, but their colors are more faded, Flourentzos said.

Flourentzos said the coffin — painted in red, black and blue on a white background — dated to 500 B.C., when Greek cultural influence was gaining a firm hold on the eastern Mediterranean island. Pottery discovered in the tomb is expected to provide a more precise date.

Experts believe the ornate decoration features the hero Ulysses in scenes from Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey — both hugely popular throughout the Greek world.

In one large painting, Ulysses and his comrades escape from the blind Cyclops Polyphemos’ cave, hidden under a flock of sheep. Another depicts a battle between Greeks and Trojans from the Iliad.

Archeologists think the scenes hint at the status of the coffin’s occupant.

“Why else take these two pieces from Homer and why deal with Ulysses? Maybe this represents the dead person’s character — who possibly was a warrior,” Flourentzos said.

Other drawings depict a figure carrying a seriously injured or dead man and a lion fighting a wild boar under a tree. These are not believed to be linked with Homer’s poems.

Reflecting a long oral tradition loosely based on historic events, Homer’s epics were probably composed around 800 B.C. and written down in the 6th century B.C.

The tomb was found in an area containing several ancient cemeteries which belonged to the nearby town of Palaepaphos, 11 miles inland from modern Paphos.

First settled around 2800 B.C., Palaepaphos was the site of a temple of Aphrodite — the ancient goddess of beauty who, according to mythology, was born in the sea off Paphos.

4 Comments »

101

Comment by Todd

March 26, 2006 @ 10:38 pm

Oh, how the mighty have fallen! I seem to recall you being quite the fan of Homer back in the day. I still have the nice copy of the Firtzgerald trans you gave me a long while back.

105

Comment by Matt

March 26, 2006 @ 11:16 pm

Indeed one of the student papers I am most proud of is one I wrote on Homer as an undergrad. I wrote it on the gay subtext of Achilles and Patroclus’s relationship in the Iliad. I’ve only read the Iliad once, but I’ve read the Odyssey at least three times. It’s a good book to return to occasionally.

106

Comment by Todd

March 27, 2006 @ 11:06 pm

I seem to recall that essay…. I must say, I think I’ve read Homey quite a bit more than you. I’m surprised. i’m so used to following in your foosteps literarily speaking.

107

Comment by Matthew

March 28, 2006 @ 7:56 am

Nice of you to say, but you haven’t followed me anywhere in a long, long time. I am perfectly sedentary, these days, burning intellectual fat stored up from readings now fifteen years old.

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