1. The Colossus of Rhodes
Built in c.290 BC, overlooking the harbour on the Greek island of Rhodes, this enormous statue was more than 30m tall but stood for just 56 years before it was toppled in an earthquake.
2. The Great
Pyramid at Giza
3. The
Mausoleum at Halicarnassus
The final resting place of Mausolos
of Caria, a 4th-century BC satrap (regional
governor) of the Persian Empire, and his
sister/wife Artemisia. It is said to have been some 45m tall, its walls
decorated with sculpted reliefs, and its pyramidal roof crowned with a huge quadriga –
a statue of four horses pulling a chariot .
4. The Lighthouse of Alexandria
Built in c.290 BC, overlooking the harbour on the Greek island of Rhodes, this enormous statue was more than 30m tall but stood for just 56 years before it was toppled in an earthquake.
Did you know?
Although the
ancient statue depicted the titan Helios, male personification of the sun, it
has a rather more feminine descendant: the Statue of Liberty in New York, which
is based on 19th-century ideas of what the Colossus looked like.
Built in c.2560
BC by the Old Kingdom pharaoh Khufu, this is the oldest and largest of the
pyramids that make up the ancient Egyptian necropolis at Giza, just outside Cairo – now a
UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Did you know?
The Great
Pyramid was the tallest man-made construction in the world for almost 4,000
years, until Lincoln cathedral – with its 160m spire – was built in
AD 1311.
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Did you know?
We know very little
about Mausolus’ life but his fame has endured through the centuries. His burial
place was so magnificent that we now use his name to describe any grand tomb: a
‘mausoleum4. The Lighthouse of Alexandria
Built on the island of Pharos between
280 and 247 BC, it stood between 120m and 140m tall and was
commissioned by Ptolemy I, one of the Macedonian successors of Alexander the Great, to
help guide sailors into Alexandria’s harbour.
Did you know?
This wonder was so celebrated in the ancient world that pharos became
the Greek word for lighthouse – as well as in many other languages including
French (phare),
Italian and Spanish (faro), Portuguese (farol)
and even Swedish (fyr) and Bulgarian (far).
5. The Temple of
Artemis at Ephesus
The original temple was destroyed in
a flood in the 7th century BC and its reconstruction burned down by the
fame-hungry Herostratus (from whom we get ‘herostratic fame’ – seeking
notoriety for its own sake) in c.356 BC. The third and
largest phase, begun in 323 BC, created a temple 450ft long by 225ft wide
and 60 ft high, with more than 127 columns. It met its final end amidst Gothic
raids in AD 268.
Did you know?
This was
Antipater of Sidon’s favourite ancient wonder. He wrote: ‘When I saw the
house of Artemis that mounted to the clouds, [the] other marvels lost their
brilliancy, and I said: “Lo, apart from Olympus, the Sun never looked on
anything so grand”.’
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