The New Acropolis Museum of
With its perfect round shape and size (30 cm in diameter), I found the ball intriguing and wondered about the meaning of the black drawings, which were hard to discern. The label said we should look for the Titan sun god Helios among the magical symbols. Apollo was the Olympian sun god.
A closer study of the sphere reveals that it is more or less divided into four scenes. The contours of a man with a halo refer to the sun god. He is seated on a throne beneath an arch flanked by two dogs, which are supposed to symbolize the Dog Stars: Sirius and Prokyon.
The second scene shows a circle containing five intersecting circles, and the third scene displays a circle around a triangle, both with inscriptions. The fourth and last scene shows a lion.
Otherwise, the sphere depicts a snake or a dragon, astral and geometrical symbols, numbers, and more inscriptions. The only comprehensible word is ΑΙΘΑΕΡ, ether – the first of nature’s elements: ether, earth, water, fire, and air.
After the Romans took
In the early 20th century, a theory circulated that the sphere was buried near the Theater as a talisman for good luck.
The story remains unclear, though, because the sphere has been dated to the 2nd-3rd century AD, i.e., Roman times. This makes sense in the context of the gladiator contests, which were a Roman art of combat. I would then question the name of the god Dionysus, who became known as Bacchus.
The very latest study leans towards turning the sphere
into a spirit house. The spirit held inside the sphere could be called upon for
assistance – I suppose not only in combat?
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