(Photo: yeowatzup/Flickr)
For the last five years, the Balkan
nation F.Y.R.O.M has been involved in one of the more
improbable public works projects around, filling the streets of its
capital, Skopje, with gaudy, faux-antique statues and buildings. The
aim: to turn this earthquake-prone city, where the main influence was
previously 1960s concrete Stalinist architecture, into a bombastic
neoclassical theme park.
To make the project even stranger, many think that it was all done to spite Macedonia's southern neighbor.
The tiny country has long traded barbs with
Greece in its quest to reclaim the third-century B.C. conqueror
Alexander the Great as a native son—the capital’s airport was renamed
Skopje Alexander the Great Airport not long ago—and even to officially
call itself Macedonia (which is also a region in northern Greece). Now,
thanks to embattled Prime
Minister Nikola Gruevski’s massive building project, Skopje is home to a
72-foot-tall marble statue of the ancient king on his trusty war-steed,
Bucephalus. (It's also worth noting that the controversial antiquation
program is not the only scandal, as the country is currently being
rocked by a huge surveillance controversy, which has resulted in dead protestors and police.)
Alexander the Great, whom many believe was poisoned by his
fellow Macedonian aristocrats, is hardly alone on Skopje’s skyline. He
could have a dangerous dinner party with at least half a dozen other
figures from the region's history, some with swords, capes, and
centurion helmets, and others with tailcoats, bow ties, and smoking
pipes.
The mix-and-match period statues face a series of columned
buildings bedecked with nymphs and fronted by fountains designed to
evoke the ancient world, but constructed starting in 2010. Enhanced by
light shows, the buildings are more reminiscent of that other monument
to modern classicism, Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, than they are to the Athenian Agora. The price for all this historical kitsch? Estimates of the construction costs range from 200 million euros to 500 million euros.
For their part, Macedonians are angry
because the Greeks have been blocking Macedonia from joining the
European Union since 2005, and also scuttled the country’s bid to join
NATO. Ever since Macedonia became independent in 1991, the government in
Athens has refused to recognize its northern neighbor’s official name.
On the other side, Greeks claim that the
Macedonians are trying to usurp their cultural heritage, and argue that
the historic kingdom of Macedon (which Alexander the Great ruled over)
was mostly in modern-day Greece. Inconveniently for the country
of Macedonia, the largest region in Greece is also called “Macedonia”
and is home to 2.4 million people. Alexander the Great’s birthplace was
actually in Greek Macedonia, but only here in Skopje is he given pride
of place atop a green-and-purple lighted pedestal in the central plaza.
Justinian I monument (Photo: Dalco26/WikiCommons CC BY-SA 3.0)
Source:
Rachel B.Doyle
atlasobscura.com
Rachel B. Doyle
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια :
Δημοσίευση σχολίου