Examples of damnatio memoriae in ancient Greece?

by soumeupropriolar

Recently learned about the concept of damnatio memoriae and found it fascinating. From some reading on the subject, I'm learning that while it was a cultural practice at the time of ancient Rome, the term itself wasn't created until the 1600s. My curiosity is about ancient Greece, maybe around 500BC or thereabouts. Was there a similar cultural practice there of destroying or modifying statues and artwork to erase people from cultural memory? Any examples you know of? Would historians refer to this by the same Latin term, or did the Greeks have a term for the practice that they used contemporaneously? Thanks in advance!

gynnis-scholasticus

There is one case from Ancient Greece, Herostratus in Ephesus, which u/XenophonTheAthenian (who does call it damnatio) has discussed here. I have sometimes seen the term used for Ancient Egyptian practices as well, as u/jpallan does when writing about Pharaoh Akhenaten in this thread