Online Encyclopedia

COLOSSUS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V06, Page 728 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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COLOSSUS  , in antiquity a

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term applied generally to statues of
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great
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size (hence the adjective "
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colossal "), and in particular to the
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bronze statue of the sun-
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god Helios in Rhodes, one of the wonders of the
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world, made from the spoils
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left by
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Demetrius Poliorcetes when he raised the siege of the city . The sculptor was
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Chares, a native of Lindus, and of the school of
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Lysippus, under whose influence the
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art of sculpture was led to the production of colossal figures by preference . The
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work occupied him twelve years, it is said, and the finished statue stood 70 cubits high . It stood near the harbour (
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earl X vt), but at what point is not certain . When, and from what grounds, the belief arose that it had stood across the entrance to the harbour, with a beacon
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light in its hand and
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ships passing between its legs, is not known, but the belief was current as early as the 16th century . The statue was thrown down by an
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earthquake about the
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year 224 B.C.; then, after lying broken for nearly r000 years, the pieces were bought by a Jew from the
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Saracens, and probably reconverted into
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instruments of war . Other Greek colossi were the Apollo of
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Calamis; the
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Zeus and Heracles of Lysippus; the Zeus at
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Olympia, the Athena in the Parthenon, and the Athena Promachos on the Acropolis—all the work of
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Pheidias . The best-known
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Roman colossi are: a statue of
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Jupiter on the Capitol; a bronze statue of Apollo in the Palatine library; and the colossus of
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Nero in the vestibule of his
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Golden House, afterwards removed by Hadrian to the north of the Colosseum, where the
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basement upon which it stood is still visible (Pliny, Nat . Hist. xxxiv . 18) .

End of Article: COLOSSUS
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