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Underwood and Underwood

Tholos in the sanctuary of Aesculapius, god of healing,

Maker

  • Keystone View Company
  • Underwood and Underwood

Title

Tholos in the sanctuary of Aesculapius, god of healing

Materials/Techniques

Materials

  • two gelatin silver prints adhered to card stock

Techniques

  • two gelatin silver prints adhered to card stock

Dimensions

8.9 x 17.8 cm (3 1/2 x 7 inches)

Signature / Inscription / Marks

Printed on recto of mount, left margin: Keystone View Company/ Copyright Underwood & Underwood/ Manufacturers Made in U.S.A. Publishers. Printed on recto on mount, right margin: Meadville, Pa. New York, N.Y., Portland, Oregon, London,Eng., Sydney, Aus. Printed on recto on mount, lower right: (53)-9319- Tholos in the sanctuary of Aesculapius, god of healing-- theatre/ at S.E., Epidauros, Greece. Printed on recto, on mount, upper center: 53. Printed on verso, on mount: 9319. "This sanctuary of the healing god Aescula-/pius,-- which is always spoken of as the Hieron,-- is us/ually visited by the carriage from Nauplia. The setting of/ the jewel, and the mountains that surround this upland val-/ley, make it a spot to be long remembered./ We look southeast towards the theatre, backed up into the range of hills called Kynortion. Close by the/ theatre is a white building which is a museum and a house for the officials who have conducted excavations./ Marble tablets found all over the Hieron record mar-/velous cures. * * * Patients from all parts of Greece/ came and slept in a long dormitory (behind us) and the mild god appeared to them in dreams. The presence/ of the sick one was not absolutely necessary. One/ tablet records that the mother of a girl in Sparta, suf-/fering from dropsy, came and slept in the dormitory and/ she saw the god approach her daughter, cut off her head,/ pour out the water from her neck,and replace the head./ The mother returned to Sparta and found her daughter/ cured! These veracious histories appear to have been/ very numerous. The names of the healed were always/ given. What shall we say of all this? * * * That/ people were cured of some troubles by staying in this/ upland valley, sunny and protected from the north winds/ * * * may partly be believed. It seems quite certain/ that there were no practitioners of medicine at Epi-/dauros, but that the cures were wrought by faith alone./ The building that has been most discussed is a round structure called the Tholos (Rotunda). Enough of the/ circular foundations at the center are left to give us a/ puzzle. Dörpfield thinks that here may have been the/ abode of the sacred serpents of Aesculapius."/ From Greece through the Stereoscope, by Rufus B. Richardson, Ph. D.,/ copyright by Underwood & Underwood./ In the sanctuary of Aesculapius, god of healing, Epi-/Dauros, Greece. [final line is also printed in French, German, Spanish, Swedish, and Russian.]

Type

  • Photographs

Credit

Gift of Mary Bergstein

Object Number

2012.83.8

Tholos in the sanctuary of Aesculapius, god of healing

Printed on recto of mount, left margin: Keystone View Company/ Copyright Underwood & Underwood/ Manufacturers Made in U.S.A. Publishers. Printed on recto on mount, right margin: Meadville, Pa. New York, N.Y., Portland, Oregon, London,Eng., Sydney, Aus. Printed on recto on mount, lower right: (53)-9319- Tholos in the sanctuary of Aesculapius, god of healing-- theatre/ at S.E., Epidauros, Greece. Printed on recto, on mount, upper center: 53. Printed on verso, on mount: 9319. "This sanctuary of the healing god Aescula-/pius,-- which is always spoken of as the Hieron,-- is us/ually visited by the carriage from Nauplia. The setting of/ the jewel, and the mountains that surround this upland val-/ley, make it a spot to be long remembered./ We look southeast towards the theatre, backed up into the range of hills called Kynortion. Close by the/ theatre is a white building which is a museum and a house for the officials who have conducted excavations./ Marble tablets found all over the Hieron record mar-/velous cures. * * * Patients from all parts of Greece/ came and slept in a long dormitory (behind us) and the mild god appeared to them in dreams. The presence/ of the sick one was not absolutely necessary. One/ tablet records that the mother of a girl in Sparta, suf-/fering from dropsy, came and slept in the dormitory and/ she saw the god approach her daughter, cut off her head,/ pour out the water from her neck,and replace the head./ The mother returned to Sparta and found her daughter/ cured! These veracious histories appear to have been/ very numerous. The names of the healed were always/ given. What shall we say of all this? * * * That/ people were cured of some troubles by staying in this/ upland valley, sunny and protected from the north winds/ * * * may partly be believed. It seems quite certain/ that there were no practitioners of medicine at Epi-/dauros, but that the cures were wrought by faith alone./ The building that has been most discussed is a round structure called the Tholos (Rotunda). Enough of the/ circular foundations at the center are left to give us a/ puzzle. Dörpfield thinks that here may have been the/ abode of the sacred serpents of Aesculapius."/ From Greece through the Stereoscope, by Rufus B. Richardson, Ph. D.,/ copyright by Underwood & Underwood./ In the sanctuary of Aesculapius, god of healing, Epi-/Dauros, Greece. [final line is also printed in French, German, Spanish, Swedish, and Russian.]

The images on this website can enable discovery and collaboration and support new scholarship, and we encourage their use. This object is in Copyright. This object is Tholos in the sanctuary of Aesculapius, god of healing with the accession number of 2012.83.8. To request new photography, please send an email to imagerequest@risd.edu and include your name and the object's accession number.
We view our online collection as a living documents, and our records are frequently revised and enhanced. If you have additional information or have spotted an error, please send feedback to curatorial@risd.edu.

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