(ANSAmed) - SELINUNTE, SEPT 30 - Three of the
16-meter-high columns of the G temple, the pride and joy of
ancient Selinus, will be rebuild at the Selinunte Archaeological
Park, ANSA has learned.
Some 2,600 years ago the holy building, which was as big as a
soccer field, represented the monumental proof, in stone, of the
power and wealth of the glorious Greek colony founded by the men
of Megara Hyblea.
The project to rebuild the columns of temple G using the
original stones at the site was strongly advocated by the late
archaeologist Sebastiano Tusa.
University of Urbino archeologist Oscar Mei told ANSA that the
reconstruction will be the final part of a complex
research-and-restoration plan, featuring the creation of a
museum, funded with five million euros from the outgoing
Sicilian regional government, thanks to the passionate efforts
of Culture Councillor Alberto Samonà.
The project will go on for at least a year and a team of
leading experts is already at work: along with Mei, who has been
working on the excavation campaign at the Sicilian park since
2010, are archaeologist Valerio Massimo Manfredi, who was the
first to suggest a reconstruction project many years ago, and
Claudio Parisi Presicce, who has vast experience in the study of
Greek archaic temples.
This project worksite "will be open to the public at all
times", said the director of the archaeological park, Felice
Crescente. The contribution of other universities will also be
required, given that the building - which is 109 meters long and
50 meters wide and is believed, according to the most recent
hypotheses, to have been dedicated to Zeus - is considered the
largest "peripteral" temple, a temple surrounded by a portico
with columns, of the ancient Mediterranean. It is an ancient
wonder which, after suffering the Carthaginian conquest,
earthquakes and centuries of wear and tear, today looks like an
immense heap of rubble. The reconstruction of a few columns
would give the site a very strong visual impact.
"We are not seeking spectacularity," warned Mei. "This is not
about rebuilding the temple, but a major scientific
research-and-preservation operation". At the moment it has
nothing to do with the reconstruction project backed in 2018 by
top Italian art expert Vittorio Sgarbi, who at the time was
serving as an executive councilor in Sicily and suggested
sponsors contribute 15 million euros to reconstruct the entire
temple.
Mei noted, however, that in recent years the need for a
maintenance intervention had become clear because "the
architectural elements, made to be upright, are crumbing away".
So erecting some columns on the southern side, chosen from
those in best condition and with capitals, is primarily
justified for conservation purposes, the professor said.
Naturally, however, "it would be a way to make the monument
easier to understand for visitors," he added.
The project starts with a study phase, researching the
archives, bibliography and iconography of the temple. At the
same time, photogrammetry surveys will be carried out along with
those done with a 3d laser scanner to map out the materials the
columns were built with.
Then geophysical work will be done around the temple to see
whether there were other buildings, first of all the altar, and
then surveys on the ground beside its perimeter will be done.
The area will also be cleaned of vegetation.
Councilor Samonà, who is leaving his role, said he is proud. "It
will be a large construction site of knowledge", he said,
explaining that it will be set up to allow visitors to follow
the work closely, with a multimedia corner featuring a virtual
reconstruction of the temple.
Mei revealed that many steps forward have been made in recent
years to clear up the mysteries of these ruins.
It has been discovered, for example, that what looked like an
unfinished temple was actually a "not well refined" building.
"The column grooves, which are usually done last, were missing,
the decorative elements had not been finished and the steps of
the base had not been chiselled," he explained.
So today archaeologists are certain that the great temple was
fully in use when the Carthaginians took control of the city in
409 BC.
"It's probable that economic problems arose when it came to
doing the decorations," he said.
"For some time it had been clear that the construction of the
enormous temple has been ongoing for decades".
Having arrived via sea, Hannibal's soldiers ravaged the rich
colony.
But they did not reduce the temple to rubble.
Earthquakes, probably in the Middle Ages, did that.
Then there was the effects of the passage of time - some of the
columns were still upright in the 18th century.
A powerful temple stands not far away.
It was rebuilt in the 1950s with generous use of reinforced
concrete.
Smiling, Mei said that no one considers that reconstruction an
example to follow nowadays.
"That was how things were done then," he said. "One learns from
mistakes".
(ANSAmed).
Columns of Selinunte's largest temple to be rebuilt
Experts already at work; regional govt allocates 5mn euros