<GetPassage xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns="http://chs.harvard.edu/xmlns/cts">
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                <requestUrn>urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1:S.smilis_1</requestUrn>
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                <urn>urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1:S.smilis_1</urn>
                <passage>
                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:base="urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1"><body xml:lang="eng" n="urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1"><div type="textpart" subtype="alphabetic_letter" n="S"><div type="textpart" subtype="entry" xml:id="smilis-bio-1" n="smilis_1"><head><persName xml:lang="la"><surname full="yes">Smilis</surname></persName></head><p>(<persName xml:lang="grc"><surname full="yes">Σμῖλις</surname></persName>), the son of Eucleides,
      of Aegina, a sculptor of the legendary period, whose name appears to be derived from <foreign xml:lang="grc">σμίλη</foreign>, <hi rend="ital">a knife, for carving wood,</hi> and
      afterwards <hi rend="ital">a sculptor's chisel.</hi> In the accounts respecting this artist,
      there is a great confusion between the mythical and historical elements; but the only safe
      conclusion to be drawn from those accounts is that the name is purely mythical, and that
      Smilis is the legendary head of the Aeginetan school of sculpture, just as Daedalus is the
      legendary head of the Attic and Cretan schools. Pausanias (<bibl n="Paus. 7.4.4">7.4.4</bibl>)
      makes Smilis a contemporary of Daedalus, but inferior to him in fame, and states (§ 5. s.
      7) that the Eleians and the Samians were the only people to whom he travelled, and that he
      made for the latter the statue of Hera in her great temple in the island. From this tradition,
      coupled with another preserved by Clemens Alexandrinus (<hi rend="ital">Protropt.</hi> 4, p.
      40), which referred the statue of Hera to the time of Procles, an attempt has been made to fix
      the date of Smilis to the period of the Ionian migration, which took place, according to the
      chronologers, about 100 years after the Trojan War, or about <date when-custom="-1044">B. C.
       1044</date>, er. Eratosth., or 988, er. Callim. (Clinton, <hi rend="ital">F. H.</hi> vol. i.
      pp. 119, 140), and in which migration it is assumed that Smilis accompanied the colonists from
      Epidaurus, under Procles, who settled at Samos (Müller, <hi rend="ital">Aegin.</hi> p.
      98; Thiersch, <hi rend="ital">Epochen,</hi> pp. 45, 46, 194). Few examples could be better, of
      the absurdities which result from the attempt to make up chronological history by piecing
      together different legends. In the first place the statement of Pausanias, that Smilis was
      contemporary with Daedalus, has to be modified to suit a conclusion for which Pausanias
      himself is made the chief <pb n="846"/> authority; and then, when this has been done, another
      piece of chronological evidence has to be dealt with, totally inconsistent with either of the
      other accounts; for Pliny tells us that the architects of the labyrinth of Lemnos were Smilis,
      Rhoecus, and Theodorus (<bibl n="Plin. Nat. 36.13.19">Plin. Nat. 36.13. s. 19</bibl> ;
      adopting the certainly correct emendation of Heyne, <hi rend="ital">Smilis, Rhoecus,</hi> for
       <hi rend="ital">Zmilus, Rholus</hi>). Now, although there is much difficulty about the
      precise date of Rhoecus and Theodorus, yet it is tolerably clear that they were historical
      personages, and that they lived after the commencement of the Olympiads. How Pliny (or the
      Greek writer from whom he derived the statement) came to associate Smilis with these artists,
      whether it was because he found Rhoecus and Theodorus mentioned as the architects of the
      Heraeum, and Smilis as the maker of the statue in it, or whether their names were already thus
      associated in some native legend respecting the labyrinth at Lemnos,--it is now hopeless to
      determine; but, at all events, the historical existence of Smilis cannot be admitted on the
      authority of this passage; nor can we accept, without some positive evidence, the conjecture
      of Müller, followed by Thiersch, that the Smilis meant by Pliny was a real person
      belonging to a family which, like the Daedalids at Athens, pretended to derive its descent
      from the mythical artist Smilis; much less can we even admit into discussion the miserably
      uncritical expedient proposed by Sillig. (<hi rend="ital">Cat. Art. s. v.</hi>), namely, to
      assume that the Lemnian labyrinth was commenced by Smilis, and finished about 200 years later
      by Rhoecus and Theodorus !</p><p>The true state of the case seems to be something of the following kind. Long before the
      historical period and even before the state of society contemplated in some of the later
      legends, the necessities of an idolatrous worship had given rise to the art of carving rude
      statues of divinities out of wood. This art, according to a general analogy, soon became
      established at particular spots, among which Athens and Aegina were conspicuous; at such
      places schools of art grew up, and the art itself made rapid progress; so that the skill of
      the artists of these schools established their schools more and more firmly at those spots,
      which soon became centres from which the art was diffused. Now it was in most perfect keeping
      with the common Greek mode of embodying legends, that a personal representative should be
      imagined for each school, whose native place is its native home, and whose travels represent
      the diffusion of the art from that centre. Thus, like Daedalus at Athens, Smilis represents at
      Aegina the early establishment of a school of sculpture (wood-carving), and his visits to
      Samos and the Eleians <note anchored="true" place="margin">* When Pausanias says that these were the only
       places which the artist visited, he can mean nothing else than that they were the only places
       where works ascribed to him existed.</note> represent the early employment of the Aeginetan
      sculptors at two of the chief centres of Grecian worship. But more than this : as the Greeks
      had the most perfect faith in the reality of their legendary personages, it became the custom
      to ascribe actually existing works to these mythical artists; and among the works ascribed to
      them were of course those extremely ancient wooden images (<foreign xml:lang="grc">ξόανα</foreign>), which the care of a succession of priests had preserved from a period
      beyond any historical record, which were regarded with more reverence, as the original symbol
      of the god, than even the gold and ivory statues of a Pheidias, and the real origin of which
      was so entirely forgotten that some images of the same character, like that of Artemis at
      Ephesus, were even believed to have fallen straight from heaven [comp. <hi rend="smallcaps">DAEDALUS</hi>]. To this class of works belonged the statue of Hera in her temple at Samos.
      Pausanias, indeed, (<hi rend="ital">l.c.</hi>) appears to fall into the error of assuming the
      contemporaneousness of the temple and the statue; but, in the very same words, he gives us the
      means of correcting his mistake, for he infers the high antiquity of the temple from the high
      antiquity of the image; and he goes on to explain what precise degree of antiquity he means,
      by stating that Smilis was contemporary with Daedalus. A still more decided testimony to the
      extreme antiquity of the image is furnished by the tradition, referred to by Pausanias just
      before, that the Argives brought it with them, when they first established at Samos the
      worship of their own great goddess Hera. The statue is also expressly called a wooden one by
      Clemens Alexandrinus (<hi rend="ital">Protrept.</hi> p. 13), and by Callimachus (Fr. 105,
      Bentley), as quoted by Eusebius (<hi rend="ital">Praep. Evang.</hi> 3.8); and from the words
      used in these passages to describe the image (<foreign xml:lang="grc">ἕδος</foreign> and
       <foreign xml:lang="grc">ξύλινον ἕδος</foreign>), it may be inferred that it was a wooden
      statue in a sitting posture, one of the most ancient types of the statues of divinities. Of
      the same class were, no doubt, the statues of the Hours sitting upon thrones in the Heraeum at
      Elis, which were also ascribed to Smilis (<bibl n="Paus. 5.17.1">Paus. 5.17.1</bibl>, where
      the common reading <foreign xml:lang="grc">Ἔμιλος</foreign> is undoubtedly wrong, and the
      alteration of it into <foreign xml:lang="grc">Σμῖλις</foreign> is supported, besides other
      arguments, by the statement of Pausanias in the other passage referred to, that Smilis visited
      the Eleians). </p><byline>[<ref target="author.P.S">P.S</ref>]</byline></div></div></body></text></TEI>
                </passage>
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