Odyssey's End?: The Search for Ancient Ithaca
A British researcher believes he has at last pinpointed the island to which Homer's wanderer returned
- By Fergus M. Bordewich
- Photographs by Jeffrey Aaronson
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2006, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 5)
You’ll find him posted beside his swine, grubbing round
by Raven’s Rock and the spring called Arethusa,
rooting for feed that makes pigs sleek and fat,
the nuts they love, the dark pools they drink.
“So,” bittlestone says to me now, “let’s go see the pig farm.” We turn our backs on the bay and, bouncing in a jeep, follow “a rough track leading through the woods and up to the hills,” as Homer puts it. A herd of goats stares at us with yellow, inexpressive eyes, then explodes in panic, bounding away down the hillside. Soon we pass through the village of Atheras, its stucco houses painted white and yellow, its gardens lush with bougainvillea, morning glories and lemon trees. The similarity between the ancient place name Arethusa and the modern Atheras tells Bittlestone he’s on the right track. “If Arethusa spring was in the vicinity of the village of Atheras,” he says, “then Eumaeus’ pig farm and Raven’s Rock should not be far away.”
According to Homer, the swineherd’s hut was on ground “exposed to view all round,” with room for some 600 sows and 360 boars behind walls made of “quarried stones” and topped with tangles of wild pear, a technique that some Greek herdsmen still use today. In the epic, Odysseus—disguised in “squalid rags, ripped and filthy”—spends a day or two at the pig farm, then tells Eumaeus that he’s going to the palace to beg for food. Since Odysseus then asked Eumaeus to guide him there, the palace must not have been in sight of the pig farm—though it had to be near enough that Eumaeus could go there and back twice in a single day.
We turn onto a stony track and stop at an old well on a small, circular terrace. “Everywhere along here, you find springs and wells,” says Bittlestone. “Whether or not this one is the actual Bronze Age spring of Arethusa is less important than the fact that a water-bearing fault line runs just below the surface in exactly the right place for a spring with Homer’s ‘dark water’ to emerge here.”
Next we follow an old sunken path through an eerie forest of stunted wild oak trees, emerging into daylight to find an animal enclosure fenced with piled-up stones. “Clearly this area has been used for keeping animals for a long, long time,” Bittlestone says. “If you have hundreds of pigs, as Eumaeus did, you need a lot of water, and this is where you would find it.” Just past the pig farm, a crag that Bittlestone designates as Raven’s Rock looms over the trail. We catch sight, far below us, of the deep Gulf of Argostoli, and the now silted-up harbor from which Odysseus and his 12 warships could have departed for the Trojan War. From here, too, we can see where his palace might have stood, on the slopes of the conical hill of Kastelli, our destination.
Half an hour after leaving the pig farm, we park in an olive grove and begin climbing Kastelli’s steep 830-foot-high slopes, through a dense carpet of prickly underbrush. The bells of unseen goats ring in our ears. We scramble over lichen-crusted terraces that might once have supported houses, and then, near the hillcrest, clamber over traces of a defensive wall and heaps of jagged stones.
Somewhere beneath our feet, perhaps, lie ruins of the “high-walled courtyard” where Penelope’s suitors gathered and the great hall with its pillars of cypress, couches, chairs and raucous banquets. Somewhere here, perhaps, Odysseus’ despairing wife worked at her loom, spinning funeral cloth for Laertes, his aged father. (Penelope then secretly unraveled the cloth every night, having promised the suitors that she would wed one of them as soon as the cloth was completed.) Here, perhaps, with “a shield of fourfold hide” and a plumed helmet on his “heroic head,” Odysseus set to his bloody work. As Homer puts it, “Ghastly screams rose up as men’s heads were smashed in, and the whole floor ran with blood.” In the end, corpses lay heaped in the dust “like fishes the fishermen have dragged out of the grey surf in the meshes of their net onto a curving beach, to lie in masses on the sand longing for the salt water till the bright sun ends their lives.”
Bittlestone prowls the windswept summit, pointing out shards of ancient pottery—fragments of pots, wine jugs and oil jars, compacted amid generations of goat droppings and dust, the last traces of an ancient town and perhaps a palace.
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Very useful information on this post.Your post has good content and important tips.Keep up the good work.
Posted by Nicky on July 6,2011 | 02:49 PM
I learned to read on versions of the Iliad and the Odyssey. I have always been fascinated by the stories of Homer's heroes. This relocation of ancient Ithaka and the evidence so far for it seems entirely plausible to me. I once had a magical moment at the bay of Ermones on Corfu. It was onto the sands of this bay that the half-dead Odysseus was washed up and found by princess Nausicaa and her maidens who'd come to the stream that flows into the bay to wash clothes (presumably the princess was there in a supervisory role!) As I walked along the small beach, I came across a tiny fishing boat, resting keel uppermost. Bending to see its name, I read "Nausicaa"! I wept with joy. Another magical moment was alongside the stream. Frogs in Britain go "croak-croak" but Aristophanes in his comedy-play "The Frogs" has them go "Kerra-korax-korax-korax" - and that's just how the frogs in the small stream that runs into Ermones bay sounded! Tim Severin has written an excellent book which attempts to locate - with varying degrees of plausability - the landfalls of Odysseus: so, too, did an earlier writer, Ernle Bradford. Odysseus haunts us: we have his journeys compressed to a single day in Dublin in James Joyce's "Ullysses", Tennyson's poem of the same name urges us "To yearn, to seek, to strive, and not to yield" and Cavafry's "Ithaca" has a wistfullness that stays in the mind. As we plod through our ordinary lives, the adventures of this ancient Greek, both physical and (more importantly) psychological, thrill us and also inform us about ourselves and how we should conduct our lives. The red-headed, gnarled trickster of the Iliad becomes the hero who tries (ultimately in vain) to save his crew and eventually, despite the temptations of Circe and the mysterious Calypso, returns to his faithful wife and serves up a fate to her suitors that to modern eyes is horrific but quite in keeping with ancient ideals of honour and justice. That difference of perception, too, can guide us.
Posted by David Rhys Henry on May 6,2011 | 06:42 AM
I live in present day Ithaca, i love it here, it is the most beautiful and inspiring place in the world for me. Being from here i cant help but laugh at the idea of ithaca being kefalonia! Its quite absurd. The islanders have always known that oddysseus was from Ithaca and in August 2010 we were proven right.Archeologists from the univerity of ioanina who have been escavating parts of the island for about 10 years(ithink)finally had found the evidence they had been looking for and they made a statement to the press stating that without a doubt, they have found odysseus palace. I would like to politely suggest that this article be scraped and re written. How can you all take the word of a business man/Amature historian, who went on holiday to kefalonia, over that of a professional archeologist who has spent half his life searching for Homers Ithaca????
Posted by spiridoula Molfesi on April 11,2011 | 01:19 PM
A simlar book was written in 2003 by Nikos Livadiotis a local guy that climbed the hills for ten years and found the footings of ulysis palace. Next year this book was translated in English. I personally climbet at 2004 the hill of the small town named Livadia and witnessed the entrance to the palace, the footings of the palace and the flat piece of land where the killings took place. as a suvenir I picked two pices of tile from the ground. I also stoped in Argostoli museum and bought a book with artifacts. A month later when I returnd to the States I discocered that the two pices of tile were the same shape with the cups used 1200BC edges pointing out.
I believe Bittlestone is right too.I read his book too.
I recomend to any one the climb of the hill (trikelos)
With no dout This is the place
Nikos Lillios
Posted by Nikos Lillios on August 10,2010 | 03:44 PM
Nice research but unfortunately poetry is usually lost in translation, and we have to keep in our minds that Homer wrote a story in lyrics! Even if Paliki was an island in the past this does not prove her as Homer's Ithaca. I am expecting some real archaeological data on this topic, so please keep on working.
Posted by H. Voreadi on April 30,2009 | 12:36 PM
My profuse thanks to Kathleen and the team at Smithsonian Magazine for commissioning and now updating this article, to Fergus and Jeffrey for their inspired text and photographs, and to your readers for their very kind words. Those who would like to stay in touch with the project's progress are welcome to view the latest news and film coverage at http://www.odysseus-unbound.org
Posted by Robert Bittlestone on December 13,2008 | 05:03 PM
It was great we are reading the odyssey in school i espesially liked the pic
Posted by Troy Jordan on December 9,2008 | 01:23 PM
As a teacher of the Odyssey this is truly fascinating. Love it !!!!!
Posted by S L on November 16,2008 | 10:49 PM
I enjoyed reading this article and wonder why we pay so little attention to history in our schools. We really need a WHAT IS THIS? internet site. That we could take a picture of a leaf, flower, or rock and send it to the site and instantly the site would respond. The same goes for any place send the GPS coordinates to the site and the site would respond with its history. Find a way to make learning response to the moment.
Posted by Mike A. on September 26,2008 | 02:17 PM
This is very exciting! I had read about Mr. Bittlestone theory when he first promulgated it. My grandparents and my husband were born in villages overlooking that valley, on what Mr. Bittlestone would call the ancient Kefalonian side. I truely believe that Homer's works, if written in our times, would be advertised as - "based on a true story". The details may differ, but the basics of the story are true. We just need patience. The imagination soars with these discoveries! You need not dig deep in Greece to find an artifact - More will appear to back Bittlestone, since his is the most plausible explanation of all.
Posted by Jeanne on September 23,2008 | 11:52 AM
As the myth goes from locals in Atheras Village: Back in (WWI)locals found a statue of A young man thought to be Telemahos. It was sold to the English for next to nothing. And there is a cave there next to the beach that Scientist have large intrest...Maybe its The port of Atheras.
Posted by Dean on September 22,2008 | 09:30 AM
“Myth” was - and still is - the mnemonic tool used to orally transmit information over long distances and over generations. It is time Academia modified its knee-jerk skepticism to make room for observation, perception and original research. [“Jason and the Golden Fleece” probably referenced the first imports of sheep to Greece, obtained via Cholchis - an actual archaeological site - from the Medes.] Bravo, Mr. Bittlestone! The amateurs did it again! (N.B. Interesting the hill suggested for a palace site should be named “Kasteli” - as in castle?)
Posted by Shir-El on September 13,2008 | 08:24 AM
Wow.. I was born and raised in Ithaca. It's a very small beautiful island. I have heard that some time ago Ithaca and Cephalonia were one island and over the years (thousands) they got separated. In Ithaca we do have a location called Arethousa Spring and a cave that as they say it was Odyssey's palace. I'm interested to hear more about this..
Posted by Sophia Gavrilis on September 10,2008 | 09:07 PM
Great article! I have learned about Homer and his works, but I have never taken time to read the Odyssey. This makes me really want to read it!
Posted by Austin Martin on September 9,2008 | 10:01 PM
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