Tristan Hughes
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
For the people of Pestum, a new age in their story had begun.
An age where Lucanian overlords ran the show.
For haughty Greeks elsewhere, seeing Pestum fall into the hands of these so-called barbarians led them to deride the city.
They saw this as the beginning of a dark age in Pestum's story, where Greek culture was suppressed and barbarity reigned supreme.
One person who held to this view was a philosopher called Aristoxenus.
who hailed from Tarentum, which remained free of Italian control.
Remarking on Pestum's Lucanian takeover, he bemoaned the tragedy of the Greeks that lived there.
The Greeks that lived alongside Lucanians at Pestum had forgotten everything that made them Greek, that made them civilised and rational human beings.
It's a damning portrayal, but it's also fictional.
Because, contrary to what Aristoxenus would have us believe, the Greeks did not forget their beliefs.
Greek culture at Pestum was not suppressed.
In fact, the archaeology is revealing quite the opposite.
Inscriptions and dedications show how the Greek language endured alongside Oskan, the language that the Lucanians spoke.
Pestum's prestigious Greek sanctuaries, including those three great temples we mentioned earlier, continued in use.
As did the Greek cemeteries, as did their public buildings in the Agora.
Lucanian elites may now have ruled Pestum, but they made no attempts to suppress Greek culture.
Let's take pottery as an example.
Under Lucanian overlordship, Peston produced some of the most beautiful vases from the ancient Mediterranean.