- Herostratus
Herostratus ( _gr. "‘Ηρόστρατος") was a young man who set fire to the
Temple of Artemis atEphesus (in what is now westernTurkey ) in his quest for fame on aboutJuly 20 ,356 BC . [The birth ofAlexander the Great is claimed to have occurred on the same day, although ancient historians may have manipulated it to coincide with the temple's destruction and thereby bolster his claims to divinity.] The temple was constructed ofmarble and considered the most beautiful of some thirty shrines built by theGreeks to honour theirgoddess of the hunt, the wild and childbirth. The temple was also one of theSeven Wonders of the Ancient World , 425 feet long and supported by columns sixty feet high.Far from attempting to evade responsibility for his act of
arson , Herostratus proudly claimed credit in order to immortalise his name in history. In order to dissuade similar-minded fame-seekers, the Ephesean authorities not only executed him but also condemned him to a legacy of obscurity by forbidding mention of his name under the penalty of death. This did not stop Herostratus from achieving his goal, however, as the ancient historianTheopompus recorded the event and its perpetrator in his history.References in literature and popular culture
Herostratus's name lived on in classical literature and has passed into modern languages.
* In German, for example, "Herostrat" is an individual in constant pursuit of fame.
* The English term "Herostratic fame", likewise, relates to Herostratus, and means, roughly, "fame at any cost". Such men asMark David Chapman , who murderedJohn Lennon , ["The result," said Chapman, "would be that I would be famous; the result would be that my life would change and I would receive a tremendous amount of attention." (See the Motivation and mental health section of Chapman's "Wikipedia " page.)] may be considered modern examples of the Herostratically famous.
*Jean-Paul Sartre wrote ashort story entitled "Erostratus" as part of his 1939 "Le mur" (The Wall). In the story, a man plans to commit a crime of random violence as a means of achieving fame.
* The Japanese version of the Momus CD "Oskar Tennis Champion" contains a track titled "Erostratus" in which he gloats about his posthumous fame. It references the Sartre story in describing Erostratus's name as enduring "like a black diamond".
* "Herostratus" is a 1967 British film byAustralia n film-makerDon Levy .
* "Herostratus" is also a 2001 film co-written (with Armen Vatyan) and directed by Rouben Kochar. It follows closely the facts of its eponym's life.
* An episode of "Dinosaur Comics " dealt with the paradox of trying to edit Herostratus out of history. [ [http://www.qwantz.com/archive/001266.html qwantz.com - dinosaur comics - July 21 2008] ]ee Also
* The
Streisand Effect , whereby attempts to ban aphotograph , literary work,video or other material end up causing it to be even more heavily exposed.
*Temple of Artemis References
* Borowitz, Albert. "Terrorism for Self-glorification: The Herostratos Syndrome".
Ohio :Kent State University Press, 2005.
* [http://www.ancientlibrary.com/smith-bio/1547.html Smith, William, ed. (1870) "Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities", V. 2, p. 439.] Scanned image, not text-searchable.Notes
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