Greek Temples: Architecture, Religion, and Sacred Space
Introduction
The ancient Greek temple is one of the most influential architectural forms in human history. From the marble perfection of the Parthenon on the Athenian Acropolis to the colossal Temple of Zeus at Olympia, from the sanctuary of Apollo at Delphi to the Temple of Hephaestus overlooking the Athenian agora, Greek temples defined the visual language of sacred architecture for the Western world and continue to shape the design of government buildings, museums, banks, and churches two and a half millennia after the last great temples were built.
Understanding Greek temples means understanding them as the ancient Greeks did: not primarily as places of congregational worship (the Greeks did not gather inside their temples to pray as Christians do in churches) but as houses of the gods, dwelling places where a divine presence resided and could be approached, honored, and consulted through ritual performed largely in the open air before the temple's doors.
What Was a Greek Temple?
The Greek word for temple is naos (or hieron for the broader sacred precinct). The temple's primary function was to house a cult statue of the god, a physical image that was understood as the god's earthly dwelling. The statue was cared for like a divine resident: bathed, clothed, offered food and incense, and consulted for oracular responses at appropriate times.
Religious activity took place outside the temple, before its eastern entrance. The altar, always positioned to the east, facing the rising sun, was the site of sacrifice, prayer, and ritual libation. Worshippers gathered at the altar; the temple behind them was the god's home, not the congregation's meeting hall. The distinction is fundamental: the Greek temple was a sacred residence, not a gathering place.
Temples also served as treasuries. The wealth of a city-state, precious dedications, stored tribute, sacred objects, was kept in the temple under divine protection. The Parthenon functioned partly as Athens's treasury, and the elaborate offerings inside major temples could be of extraordinary value. This dual function, divine house and community treasury, made temples targets for theft and looting throughout antiquity.
The Three Orders: Doric, Ionic, and Corinthian
Greek temple architecture is defined by three distinct orders, stylistic systems governing the proportions, details, and character of the columnar architecture. Each order has its own column design, capital (the top of the column), and entablature (the horizontal structure above the columns).
The Doric order is the oldest and most severe. Doric columns are stocky, unfluted or with shallow fluting, with simple circular capitals. The Doric order conveys strength, austerity, and power, it was dominant in mainland Greece and the western colonies. The Parthenon is built in the Doric order, though with remarkably refined proportions. The Temple of Hephaestus in Athens (c. 450 BCE), the best-preserved Greek temple, is also Doric.
The Ionic order originated in eastern Greece and Ionia (western Asia Minor). Ionic columns are taller and more slender than Doric, with scroll-like capitals (volutes) and an elaborate base. The Ionic order conveys elegance and refinement; it was associated with the more cosmopolitan culture of the Greek east. The Erechtheion on the Athenian Acropolis (c. 421–406 BCE) is a celebrated example, famous also for its Porch of the Caryatids, a porch supported by six sculpted female figures instead of columns.
The Corinthian order is the most elaborate, characterized by capitals decorated with acanthus leaves in an ornate basket-like arrangement. Developed in the 5th century BCE, the Corinthian order became dominant in the Hellenistic and Roman periods and is the order most widely imitated in later Western architecture. The Temple of Olympian Zeus in Athens (begun 6th century BCE, completed under the Roman emperor Hadrian in 131 CE) is the largest Corinthian temple in Greece.
The Parthenon: The Most Famous Temple
The Parthenon, the temple of Athena Parthenos ("Athena the Virgin") on the Athenian Acropolis, is the most celebrated building of ancient Greece and one of the most influential structures in the history of Western architecture. Built between 447 and 432 BCE under the direction of the sculptor Phidias and the architects Iktinos and Kallikrates, during the age of Pericles, the Parthenon was an expression of Athens's imperial confidence at the height of its power.
The temple housed a colossal gold and ivory (chryselephantine) statue of Athena by Phidias, approximately 12 meters tall, clad in real gold for the goddess's robes and carved ivory for her flesh. The statue no longer exists, but ancient descriptions convey its overwhelming scale and splendor.
The Parthenon is famous for its optical refinements, subtle curves and adjustments built into the structure to counteract visual illusions and give the impression of perfect straightness. The columns lean slightly inward, the floor curves upward slightly at the center, and the columns are slightly wider at the middle (entasis). These corrections mean that virtually no line in the Parthenon is perfectly straight, yet the building appears to be.
The Parthenon's sculptural program, its metopes, frieze, and pediment sculptures, is among the greatest surviving achievements of ancient art. The Elgin Marbles (Parthenon sculptures now in the British Museum) represent a major portion of this program and remain the subject of ongoing debate about repatriation to Greece.
The Temple of Zeus at Olympia
The Temple of Zeus at Olympia (c. 470–457 BCE) was, in the ancient world, considered one of the most magnificent buildings ever constructed, and its interior housed one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World: the colossal chryselephantine statue of Zeus by Phidias, approximately 12–13 meters tall, depicting the enthroned king of the gods in gold and ivory.
The ancient traveler and geographer Strabo reported that the statue was so large that if Zeus were to stand up, he would go through the roof. The Roman general Aemilius Paullus, who visited in 167 BCE, was reportedly moved to tears by the statue's majesty. The statue was eventually removed to Constantinople in the 5th century CE, where it was destroyed by fire.
The temple was built in the severe Doric style from limestone rather than marble (later stuccoed white), with marble used for the roof tiles and sculptural program. Its pediment sculptures, depicting the preparation for the chariot race of Pelops and Oenomaus, and the battle of the Lapiths and Centaurs, are masterpieces of the Early Classical style and survive in significant fragments at the Olympia Museum.
Today the temple is a ruin, destroyed by earthquakes in the 6th century CE, but its 16 column drums lying where they fell give a dramatic sense of its original scale. The massive fallen columns of Olympia are among the most evocative sights in all of Greece.
The Temple of Apollo at Delphi
The sanctuary of Apollo at Delphi, on the slopes of Mount Parnassus, was not only a temple but the most important oracular site in the ancient world. The Delphic oracle, the Pythia, a priestess who delivered Apollo's prophetic responses in an ecstatic state, was consulted by individuals, city-states, and rulers from across the Mediterranean world before any important decision: going to war, founding a colony, making a treaty, or understanding a personal crisis.
The temple that stood in the Classical period was the third on the site (the first two were destroyed, one by fire in 548 BCE, one by earthquake in 373 BCE). The Classical temple (rebuilt 370–329 BCE) bore the famous inscriptions on its pronaos (porch): "Know thyself" (gnothi seauton) and "Nothing in excess" (meden agan), maxims attributed to the Seven Sages of Greece that epitomized the Apolline ideal of self-knowledge and moderation.
The sanctuary also contained the omphalos, a stone said to mark the navel of the world, the center of the earth as determined by Zeus sending two eagles from opposite ends of the world and marking where they met. The sanctuary complex included a theater, stadium, treasury buildings from various city-states, and the famous Sacred Way lined with votive offerings.
Temple Construction and Sacred Landscape
Greek temples were not built in isolation but were embedded in sacred landscapes, sanctuaries (temene) that might include altars, treasuries, stoas (covered walkways), fountains, theatrical spaces, and athletic facilities, all organized around the temple as their focal point.
Temple siting was carefully chosen. Major temples were frequently positioned on elevated ground, hilltops, promontories, cliffs, that made them visible from great distances and conveyed divine power through height. The Parthenon on the Acropolis, the Temple of Poseidon at Cape Sounion (visible from ships far out at sea), and the Temple of Hera at Paestum (dramatically placed on a coastal plain) all demonstrate the Greeks' sensitivity to the relationship between sacred architecture and natural setting.
Temple construction was a massive civic undertaking. Building the Parthenon took fifteen years and involved the quarrying and transport of tens of thousands of tons of Pentelic marble from quarries on Mount Pentelicus, more than fifteen kilometers away. The project employed stonecutters, sculptors, painters, carpenters, and administrators, and its expense was a significant proportion of Athens's treasury, generating controversy even in antiquity.
The temples were originally painted in vivid colors, a fact that consistently surprises modern visitors who assume the ancient Greeks preferred the white marble we see today. Traces of original paint analysis show that the Parthenon's sculptures were colored in reds, blues, greens, and yellows, with detailed painted patterns on the architectural elements. The austere white marble aesthetic is a modern projection onto an ancient reality that was far more colorful.
Surviving Temples and Their Modern Legacy
Greek temples survive in varying states of preservation across the Mediterranean world. The best-preserved examples are often found outside Greece proper: the temples at Paestum in southern Italy (formerly Poseidonia, a Greek colony), particularly the Temple of Hera (c. 550 BCE) and the Temple of Neptune (c. 450 BCE), are among the most complete Doric temples in existence. The Concordia Temple at Agrigento in Sicily, also dating from the 5th century BCE, survives largely intact because it was converted to a Christian church in the 6th century CE.
In Athens, the Temple of Hephaestus (the Hephaisteon, c. 450–415 BCE) overlooking the agora is the best-preserved temple on the Greek mainland, its roof, columns, and much of its entablature remain. It too survived through conversion to a Christian church.
The legacy of Greek temple architecture in the modern world is pervasive. The neoclassical movement of the 18th and 19th centuries drew directly on Greek (and Roman) temple forms for public buildings: the U.S. Supreme Court building, the British Museum, the Panthéon in Paris, the Altes Museum in Berlin, and countless others are all descendants of the Greek temple tradition. When a modern democracy builds its court of law in the form of a Greek temple, it is making a statement, consciously or not, about the values it wishes to associate with: reason, order, beauty, and the authority of something older and greater than any individual political moment.
Frequently Asked Questions
What was the purpose of a Greek temple?
What are the three orders of Greek architecture?
What was inside the Parthenon?
Why were Greek temples white?
What is the best-preserved Greek temple?
Related Pages
Goddess of wisdom, patron of Athens and the Parthenon
ZeusThe king of the gods whose temple at Olympia was a Wonder of the World
ApolloGod of prophecy, worshipped at the famous temple at Delphi
Ancient Greek ReligionThe religious world that gave rise to the temple tradition
Ancient Olympic GamesThe religious festival centered on the Temple of Zeus at Olympia
Eleusinian MysteriesThe secret rites held in the sanctuary at Eleusis
HomerThe poet whose epics describe divine sanctuaries and worship
Greek TragedyDrama performed at the sanctuary of Dionysus in Athens