| The
Statue of Zeus
Built: About 435 B.C. Location: Ancient Greek city of Olympia History: In
about 435 B.C., the city of Olympia -- where the first Olympic Games were
held in 776 B.C. -- built a temple to honor the god Zeus. Many considered
the Doric-style temple too simple, so a lavish 40-foot statue of Zeus
was commissioned for inside. Athenian sculptor Phidias created an ivory
Zeus seated on a throne, draped in a gold robe. Zeus had a wreath around
his head and held a figure of his messenger Nike in his right hand, and
a scepter in his left. Eventually, wealthy Greeks decided to move the
statue to a palace in Constantinople (present-day Istanbul, Turkey). Their
effort prolonged its life, as fire later devastated the Olympia temple.
However, the new location couldn't keep Zeus eternally safe: a severe
fire destroyed the statue in 462 A.D. |