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Healing, Space, and Musical Performance in Late Classical Greece: The Thymele at Epidauros – A lecture by Bronwen L. Wickkiser

September 25, 2016 @ 3:00 pm - 5:00 pm

Free

Description: In the fourth century BCE, the citizens of Epidauros, a small polis in the Peloponnese, launched a massive building program at the nearby, much visited healing sanctuary of the god Asklepios, son of Apollo. In terms of labor, design, and expense, the most impressive and sophisticated structure belonging to this program was a mysterious round building located at the very center of the sanctuary, a building known from ancient sources as the thymele.

Since its excavation in the nineteenth century, archaeologists have proposed a wide range of interpretations for this building, such as that it was Asklepios’s tomb, or a council house, a dining hall, an astronomical tool, or a library. A curious hole at the center of the thymele’s floor opened into unique, labyrinthine foundations. This substructure has been interpreted as a well, an offering pit, a maze through which worshippers wandered like initiates in a mystery cult, or a residence for Asklepios’s sacred snakes.

In this talk, we will explore another potential solution to the mystery of the thymele’s form and function. I will suggest that this building served as a space for musical performance, and that this sacred music fulfilled a therapeutic role at the heart of Asklepios’s most famous healing sanctuary.

Dr. Bronwen L. Wickkiser is the Theodore Bedrick Associate Professor of Classics at Wabash College in Indiana. Much of her research focuses on religion and medicine in Greek and Roman antiquity, especially as evident in the cult of the healing god Asklepios. Wickkiser’s first book, Asklepios, Medicine, and the Politics of Healing in Fifth-Century Greece (Johns Hopkins 2008) argues that medical and political factors together fueled the cult’s rapid rise in popularity as worshippers sought a capable healer for the body politic as well as the physical body. A new project explores references to the classical past in the Confederate Memorial at Arlington National Cemetery and the complex relationships between religious and civil liberty in our nation’s not too distant, classically leaning past. Wickkiser is the recipient of numerous fellowships from institutions such as the National Endowment for the Humanities and the American School of Classical Studies at Athens.

Bronwen L. Wickkiser

General Information:
All lectures are held on Sunday afternoons at 3:00 p.m. in Sabin Hall Room G90 on the UWM Campus (3413 North Downer, corner of Newport and Downer Avenues). On Sundays, parking is available in the Klotsche Center surface lot directly north of Sabin or on nearby streets.

All lectures are free and open to the public and followed by refreshments. They are co-sponsored by the Departments of Anthropology, Foreign Languages and Literature-Classics, and Art History at UW-Milwaukee.

Details

Date:
September 25, 2016
Time:
3:00 pm - 5:00 pm
Cost:
Free
Website:
http://uwm.edu/archlab/AIA/

Venue

Sabin Hall, Room G90
3413 N. Downer Ave
Milwaukee,
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