The Colossus of Rhodes: The Life & Afterlife of the Ancient Wonder

Discover how a city was defined by a wonder. This is the story of the Colossus of Rhodes.

Mar 19, 2023By Kieren Johns, PhD Classics & Ancient History

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Today, mounted inside the pedestal of perhaps the world’s most famous statue (the Statue of Liberty in New York) is a bronze plaque that records a sonnet. Written by the poet Emma Lazarus in 1883, the sonnet was meant to raise money for the construction of the statue’s pedestal. The sonnet’s name, ‘The New Colossus’, and contents however, evoke Lady Liberty’s ancient antecedents: “The Brazen giant of Greek fame / with conquering limbs astride from land to land”. The Greek giant to which Lazarus referred was the Colossus of Rhodes, one of the seven wonders of the ancient world.

 

The other line of Lazarus’ poem quoted above is also significant. The idea of the Colossus bestriding different lands can, of course, be viewed from many different perspectives. It might, as discussed below, refer to the ancient giant’s posture. Or it could refer to the universal symbolism of a colossus, drawing a direct parallel between the ancient statue and the modern marvel. It also, however, highlights the nature of the canonical list of the seven wonders of the ancient world.

 

Compiled from different and often fragmented textual sources, the list of wonders reflects the expansion of the Hellenistic world after Alexander the Great’s conquests in the 4th century BCE. The wonders were understood to be theamata (θεάματα), or things worth seeing, but they were things worth seeing from the broader horizons of the Hellenistic period, encompassing not only Greece but also the Hanging Gardens of Babylon and the Great Pyramid in Egypt. Although it may have begun as a symbol of pointedly local triumph, like the other wonders on the list, the Colossus of Rhodes soon came to occupy an impotant place in a much wider world.

 

Celebrating Survival: The Colossus and the Siege of Rhodes

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Monumental bronze head of a statue identified as Demetrius I Poliocretes (left), 307-300 BCE, via Museo del Prado; and marble portrait bust of Ptolemy I Soter, 3rd century BCE, via Musee du Louvre.

 

The story of the Colossus of Rhodes begins in the fractious and febrile atmosphere that developed around the expanded Hellenistic world after Alexander the Great’s death in 323 BCE. Alexander’s successors — the diadochi — had each snatched pieces of the former king’s vast empire, and now former comrades vied with each other for supremacy. This also involved the courting of alliances, and it is against this backdrop that the story of the Colossus starts.

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In the last years of the 4th century, Demetrius Poliorcetes laid siege to Rhodes. His aim was to break the resolve of the city and compel them to abandon their close relationship with Ptolemy, who by now was the ruler of Alexander’s former conquests in Egypt, including the city of Alexandria. At the time, Rhodes was a powerful and wealthy naval force in the Aegean Sea. Demetrius was the son of Antigonus I Monophthalmos (Antigonus the One-Eyed) and a member of the Antigonid dynasty that controlled Macedonia and parts of Greece. The siege of Rhodes was another example of the tensions that arose between the diadochi in their attempts to secure pre-eminence.

 

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Bronze statue of the Victorious Youth, attributed to Lysippos, ca. 300-100 BCE, via the Getty Museum

 

The siege, which began in 305 BCE, was to prove an arduous undertaking for Demetrius and his allies (which included many pirates!). The city of Rhodes, as well as its main harbor, were heavily fortified. Although his land forces were able to breach the city walls at one point, they were repelled with heavy losses and the defenses were reconstructed. Ultimately, the siege was abandoned after a year in 304 BCE. To attempt to save face, the dejected Antigonid ruler presented the siege as a victory because the Rhodians ostensibly agreed to remain neutral (much as they had prior to the siege…).

 

In abandoning the siege, the Antigonids left behind much of their equipment. The resourceful Rhodians gathered this material together and sold it on. In a world riven by inter-kingdom war, the equipment left behind fetched a pretty penny. Now 300 talents richer, the Rhodians decided the best use of the money was a dedication to the city’s patron deity, the sun god Helios. They contracted the artist Chares, a native of the island, for the project. His pedigree was without question: not only had he been involved in monumental dedications previously, but he had studied under Lysippos himself, the great sculptor of bronze who had been patronized by Alexander the Great. The Rhodian’s victory monument would be steeped in the culture of the Hellenistic world.

 

Home of a Giant: Rhodes in the Ancient World

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Rhodes, JMW Turner, 1823-4, via Yale Centre for British Art

 

Rhodes has been a significant actor throughout history, from antiquity through to the modern era. Its importance derives in part from its scale: it is the largest of the Dodecanese islands. It also benefitted from its location; located in the southeast of the Aegean Sea, the island is somewhat of a crossroads between Europe, Africa, and the Near East. There is archaeological evidence for interaction with the Minoan culture of Crete from at least the 16th century BCE, which testifies to these connections. Likewise, the island had been under the sway of the Persian Empire in the early 5th century.

 

The city of Rhodes itself was established in the late 5th century BCE. In 408 BCE, three smaller cities (Ialyssos, Kamiros, and Lindos) merged into a single entity (i.e., Rhodes). Prior to this, it had passed between the spheres of influence of the two dominant Greek states. First, Rhodes was part of the Athenian hegemony (the Delian League). It revolted against Athenian domination in around 412 BCE before siding with Sparta in the final throes of the Peloponnesian War.

 

In the fourth century, the island would establish a link with another wonder of the ancient world. Rhodes would be garrisoned by the Carian satrap, Mausolus, the patron of the monumental Mausoleum in Halicarnassus that would perpetuate his legacy. The island was also occupied by the Macedonians under Alexander the Great’s authority, and the island retained a degree of significance as a port and ally in the wars of the successors that followed. Rhodian autonomy would endure until the arrival of the Romans in the Hellenistic world. In 164 BCE, Rhodes became a territory in the Roman Empire.

 

Helios: Representing the Ancient God

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Illustration of Helios, Hendrick Goltzius, 1588-90, via RISD Museum

 

Helios was one of the diverse cast of deities that made up the ancient Greek pantheon. In religion and mythology, Helios was the god and personification of the Sun. The sun deity is readily recognizable across a range of media, including pottery and relief sculpture. Typically, the god is shown with a radiant crown (symbolizing rays of light) and/or drawing a chariot of horses across the sky; it was this that caused the rising of the sun each day. The god features prominently in several of the most well-known myths from ancient Greece. It is his mortal and impetuous son — Phaethon — who was struck from his father’s chariot by one of Zeus’ thunderbolts, the corpse left to rot in the Eridanus River. He is also responsible for persuading Zeus to strike down the crew of Odysseus, who had so impiously eaten the sacred cattle of Helios at Thinacia.

 

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Red-figured calyx-krater from Attica depicting Helios driving his chariot out of the ocean bringing the dawn’s first light, ca. 430 BCE, via the British Museum

 

While his son — Phaethon — became one of the enduring motifs of ancient (and modern) art, the importance of Helios’ mythological genealogy was felt elsewhere in the ancient Mediterranean. The sun god, who was naturally the brother of the moon goddess Selene, was like other Greek deities in siring a plethora of offspring. Notable among these were the seven sons he had with the nymph Rhodos. The sons of some of these children became the prominent heroes of the three most important cities on Rhodes (Ialyssos, Kamiros, and Lindos), which helped cement the relationship between the island and the worship of the sun god as their patron deity.

 

In fact, even before the Rhodians decided to erect the Colossus, the island held the Halieia. This festival, deriving its name from the Doric form of Helios (Halios), included chariot and horse racing, as well as gymnastics and music contests. According to the late second century CE Roman grammarian Festus, the Rhodians also sacrificed a chariot of four horses into the sea during this festival in honor of the sun god’s daily journey across the sky.

 

Birth of a Behemoth: Building an Ancient Wonder

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The Colossus of Rhodes, Edward Francis Burney, 1790-1800, via the Metropolitan Museum of Art

 

Wonders, as you might expect, are not built in a day. It took the Rhodians twelve years to complete the Colossus. The construction process began in 292 BCE, more than a decade after Demetrius’ decision to lift the siege. The accounts of the construction provided by various sources differ in a number of details, but several consistent details can be teased out of these. There is a broad consensus, for instance, that the Colossus stood around 70 cubits in height, which equates to roughly 32 meters.

 

Pliny the Elder, who admittedly could only have seen fallen statue, provides an evocative impression of its sheer size: “few men can clasp the thumb in their arms, and its fingers are larger than most statues.” The Roman writer also gives us some insight into the engineering expertise that went into the construction of the Colossus. In peering into the cavernous spaces of the statue’s interior, Pliny describes large masses of rock. These were added to the sculpture to provide stability during its erection.

 

A dedicatory text to accompany the Colossus is believed to have been preserved in anthologies of Greek poetry. The inscription makes clear the votive nature of the statue (i.e., given in thanks following Demetrius’ attempted siege) and the identity of the statue (Helios).

 

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The Colossus of Rhodes, Philip Galle, after Maerten van Heemskerck, 1572, via British Museum

 

Less clear is the posture and location of the statue; many imaginings of the wonder in its completed state have the sun god bestriding the entrance to the harbor at Rhodes, with one foot on either side and ships passing through. This seems highly unlikely for the simple fact that this would have required the Rhodians to close their harbor for almost the entire period of construction. For a society so dependent on its maritime and mercantile links, this seems unthinkable!

 

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Silver tetradrachm minted at Rhodes with portrait of radiate Helios (obverse) and profile of a rose (reverse), via British Museum

 

What is much easier to imagine is how the god himself looked. The regular depictions of Helios across so much material culture in the ancient world — including later in the Roman Empire too — ensure that we can be confident in suggesting the god would have been adorned with his usual curled locks and radiate crown, as shown on contemporary Rhodian coinage.

 

Rise, Fall, Ruin: The Life and Legacy of the Colossus of Rhodes

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Colossus of Rhodes, Antonio Tempesta, 1608, via the Philadelphia Museum of Art

 

Of all of the seven wonders of the ancient world, only the Great Pyramid remains standing to this day. Of the rest, the Colossus of Rhodes enjoyed one of the briefest lives. The enormous statue, famed throughout the Mediterranean world, was toppled after standing for just 54 years. An earthquake in 226 BCE brought the statue crashing down (as well as causing considerable damage to the city and its harbor). The fate of the statue offers further weight to the argument that it could not have been positioned bestriding the harbor: if it had fallen from this position, it would have blocked the harbor at Rhodes, which would have devastated the city even further.

 

The enormous remains of the Colossus remained on the ground at Rhodes for a further eight centuries. Visitors still flocked to the island to see the remnants of the wonder, despite the sun god’s now recumbent position. Pliny documented the remains of the Colossus, as did the geographer Strabo. Notably, he records that there was a possibility of re-erecting the statue — which had broken at the knees — but that the Rhodians dismissed the ideas after the warning of an oracle.

 

Ultimately, it seems the Colossus of Rhodes had a fittingly cyclical fate. Where it had first been made from the trophies of war, so too did the fallen giant eventually become the spoils of conquest. In 653 CE, general Muawiyah, commander of an Arab army, captured Rhodes. According to a Byzantine chronicler (Theophanes the Confessor), the great Colossus was melted down, and the metal was sold. The veracity of this story is ultimately questionable (the likelihood of such vast quantities of metal remaining unused throughout the long centuries is extremely unlikely — especially in an environment so strategically significant as Rhodes). Yet, this possibly apocryphal account offers a compelling bookend to the life of the Colossus.

 

Art and Ambition: The Afterlives of the Colossus of Rhodes

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The Colossus of Rhodes, Salvador Dalí, 1954, via Wikimedia Commons

 

Although the Colossus of Rhodes may have towered over the people of the island for a brief half century in the 3rd century BCE, it has enjoyed a much more enduring cultural legacy. The statue has captured the imagination of historians, artists, and politicians for an even longer period than the great form of the sun god lay fallen.

 

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Copper alloy medallion of emperor Gordian III, with reverse depiction of the Colosseum at Rome with the Colossus of Sol adjacent, minted 238-244 CE, via British Museum

 

Normally, imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, but what about if you’re imitating a god? In the mid-1st century CE, the emperor Nero formally seized public land in the center of Rome and turned it into an opulent private villa (the domus aurea, or Golden House). In the center of the emperor’s vast property was a lake, next to which he erected an enormous statue of himself, rivaling in size the Colossus of Rhodes. Of course, when Nero fell and his memory was condemned, the statue had to be repurposed. So, his successor, Vespasian, simply looked to the enormous archetypal statue for inspiration: the Neronian colossus was repurposed as a statue of the Roman sun god Sol.

 

In time, the lake next to the statue would be drained, and on the land stolen from the people by Nero, a great public arena would be built. From the Colossal statue adjacent, the Flavian Amphitheatre would take its enduring moniker: the Colosseum.

 

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The Rhodes Colossus: Caricature of Cecil John Rhodes, by Edward Linley Sambourne 1892, via Punch

 

Much as with Nero, delusions of grandeur are never far from the history of the Colossus. The popular imagining of the Colossus bestriding the harbor at Rhodes was mimicked in the so-called Rhodes Colossus. Named for the late 19th century British imperialist Cecil John Rhodes, it tapped into the public’s awareness of the ancient world to illustrate the British Empire’s desire to join their African dominions from Cairo to Cape Town by rail and telegraph line. It was perhaps such attempts to hijack the Rhodian’s devotion to their patron god that prompted Emma Lazarus to implore, “Keep, ancient lands, your storied pomp!”. For the American poet, the new Colossus represented something different. Despite this, there is no escaping the enduring impact of the Colossus of Rhodes on history.



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By Kieren JohnsPhD Classics & Ancient HistoryKieren is a UK-based independent researcher with a PhD in Classics and Ancient History. His thesis explore the representation of imperial status during the reigns of the Severan emperors. He is passionate about sharing his interest in the ancient world. He is currently writing his first book.