The pieces were damaged, hacked burned even, but can one account for the time and the reasons for this effacement? This “city on a hill” was distinct in its presence and expensive in its “right” to be constructed. However its use over time has worn or even destructed all of its original purpose: the roof, the cult statue of Athena-Parthenon, among a great deal of other things. Can the Acropolis be seen as only a memorial to a war? Greece/Athens fought a great deal of wars, but perhaps the zeal and the nationalism, perhaps even hubris that the ancient Athenians felt forced them to reconstruct their most holy site in what we see today. Athens certainly celebrated their past, but also worshipped their Gods/Goddesses with fervor, can we view their relationship with the Divine in the same way we interpret the Divine
The pieces were damaged, hacked burned even, but can one account for the time and the reasons for this effacement? This “city on a hill” was distinct in its presence and expensive in its “right” to be constructed. However its use over time has worn or even destructed all of its original purpose: the roof, the cult statue of Athena-Parthenon, among a great deal of other things. Can the Acropolis be seen as only a memorial to a war? Greece/Athens fought a great deal of wars, but perhaps the zeal and the nationalism, perhaps even hubris that the ancient Athenians felt forced them to reconstruct their most holy site in what we see today. Athens certainly celebrated their past, but also worshipped their Gods/Goddesses with fervor, can we view their relationship with the Divine in the same way we interpret the Divine