CABROL, Elie
Élie Cabrol (1829-1905) was a French man of letters. He published the account of his stay in Italy in 1883. On 4th April 1889 he started out from Paris, crossed Italy (Pisa, Florence, Ancona and Brindisi) and arrived in Athens by way of Corfu and Patras on April 15th. He stayed in the city for fifteen days.
Cabrol was very well-informed on Athenian political and cultural life. He describes the 19th century buildings, and visits monuments and Museums (the Acropolis Museum, the National Museum and the Polytechnic), as well as Eleusis and Megara, where he witnessed the celebration of the Greek Easter that he describes in his book. Cabrol continued his journey on to Aegina, Poros, Nafplio, Epidaurus and Tiryns, and subsequently to Argos, Mycenae and Nemea. On 1st May he was in Olympia. He then sailed from Patras to Corfu and then Naples. In his descriptions, Cabrol frequently cites earlier travel accounts (by Chateaubriand, Ed. About, S. Reinach) as well as texts by Fr. Penrose, E. Beulé and Ch. Lenormant and other European archaeologists who worked in the first excavations that took place in the Greek state.
Many of the archaeological findings that are mentioned in the text or represented in the plates of this edition, had been discovered and exhibited the years that immediately preceded Cabrol’s journey. This edition was published in a limited number of copies and is embellished with twenty-one heliographs and five lithographs.
Written by Ioli Vingopoulou
CABROL, Elie - Mycenae
CABROL, Elie - Rest Images
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Areopagus. In the background the Temple of Hephaestus (Thiseion).
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Relief from Epidaurus, showing Asclepius (today at the National Archaeological Museum, Athens).
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Block from the eastern frieze of the Parthenon: Poseidon, Apollo, Artemis.
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The Temple of Hephaestus (Theseion) and the Acropolis of Athens from the northwest.
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The Stele of Ilissus (today at National Archaeological Museum, Athens).
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Relief showing a dancer from the Theater of Dionysus, Athens.
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Plan of the Propylaea and surrounding area according to Lebouteux.
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Sculpture of "Moschophoros" (today at the Acropolis Museum).
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Bronze bust of the Sicyon school (today at the Acropolis Museum).
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Statue of female figure from Epidaurus (today at the National Archaeological Museum, Athens).
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The Propylaea of the Acropolis and the Temple of Athena Nike.
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The stele of Hegeso from Kerameikos (today at National Archaeological Museum, Athens).
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View of Kerameikos cemetery, with some of the funerary monuments at the site.
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The Acrocorinth. In the foreground the ruins of Ancient Corinth.