Answer :
The conflict between the gods and the giants at Pergamon may possibly be a reference to the Pergamese triumph over the Gauls invading their country in the late third century.
On the east metopes of the Parthenon is another well-known illustration of Gigantomachy. Zeus and the gods defeating the titans is the theme of the painting (secret allegory). In the back, Gaia and Nike, the goddess of triumph with wings, are visible. It is a marble frieze that came from Pergamon's Great Altar of Zeus. It was embellished with a 113-meter-long frieze that was meant, no doubt, by the Pergamene king Eumenes II, who erected it, to honor his victories in Asia Minor and the eastern Aegean, to show the wars of Gods and Giants, which were his favorite theme. How special and significant is the frieze on the Temple of Athena Nike? The triumph over the Persians, which was achieved at Marathon and turned the tide against them, is referred to in the frieze. The colossal building known as the Altar of Zeus, also known as "Pergamonaltar," was erected in honor of the Pergamon Kingdom's triumph over the Galatians. The Pergamon Altar, also known as the Throne of Satan in a brief account in the Book of St. John's Revelation, is a particularly striking building.
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