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The colossal statue of Zeus, carved by the famed sculpture Phidias around 432 B.C., is one of the seven wonders of the ancient world. The statue showed Zeus seated, and measured 40 feet tall. The sculpture was made of ivory, accented with gold. His magnificent throne was made of cedar wood, inlaid with gold, ebony, ivory, and other precious stones. In Zeus’s right-hand was a statue of the goddess of victory, Nike. In his left, he held a scepter, upon which perched an eagle. What happened to the statue is a mystery. Some believe that it was destroyed in the fifth century A.D. when the Temple was destroyed. Others believe the statue was rescued and taken to Constantinople, where it was destroyed in a later fire. In the 1950s, archaeologists discovered the workshop at Olympia where Phidias worked to create the statue. Molds, tools, and even a cup inscribed, “I belong to Pheidias” were found in the area. Using these tools, archaeologists have been able to re-create the techniques that Phidias used to carve his great statue.
The post The Statue of Zeus at Olympia appeared first on Richard Cassaro.
Richard Cassaro is a journalist, speaker and author of “Written In Stone: Decoding The Secret Masonic Religion Hidden In Gothic Cathedrals And World Architecture.” The book uncovers a lost Wisdom Tradition that was practiced globally in antiquity, found memorialized in pyramids, Triptychs, and identical images worldwide. The central tenets of this tradition have been perpetuated in Western Secret Societies. The most visible of these is the so-called “Masonic Fraternity,” an age-old chivalric Order whose ranks have included Europe’s Gothic cathedral builders and America’s Founding Fathers. Richard has two websites: www.DeeperTruth.com and www.RichardCassaro.com