Tyrants ruled the city of Ephesus for …

Years: 561BCE - 550BCE

Tyrants ruled the city of Ephesus for part of the early sixth century.

Though allied by marriage to the kings of Lydia, its people cannot hold back Croesus, who asserts a general suzerainty over the city.

He does, however, present many columns and some golden cows for a new and splendid rebuilding of the Artemisium (Temple of Artemis).

The first sanctuary (temenos) of Artemis in Ephesus, dating to the Bronze Age, antedated the Ionic immigration by many years.

Callimachus, in his Hymn to Artemis, attributed it to the Amazons.

A flood had destroyed the old temple in the seventh century.

Its reconstruction began around 560 BCE, under the Cretan architect Chersiphron and his son Metagenes, at the expense of Croesus; the project takes ten years to complete.

The monumental Artemision, or Temple of Artemis, apparently inspired by the recently constructed temple of Hera at Samos, is reportedly the finest example of early Ionic architecture.

Supposedly the first Greek temple built of marble, its base measures three hundred and seventy-seven by one hundred and eighty feet (one hundred and fifteen by fifty-five meters), and the roofless, colonnaded interior houses a primitive statue of Artemis.

The columns of the porch feature reliefs of mythical characters and inscriptions recording donations by Croesus.

As the world’s largest and most complex temple, it becomes known as one of the seven wonders of the world.

The Ephesians begin to live in the plain at this time, according to Strabo; and to this period, too, should be allotted the redrafting of the laws, said to have been the work of an Athenian, Aristarchus.

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