Historic Sites to See in Athens |
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Historic
Sites to See in Athens Athens has been a popular destination for travellers
for centuries. It is the longest inhabited city in Europe, and
possibly the world, with populations remaining there for the past 3,000
years. With some of the most spectacular monuments of the ancient world,
the city is rich with cultural heritage. Largely due to the city’s
hosting of the 2004 Olympic Games, Athens has enjoyed a radical
improvement in its infrastructure over past decade, making it all the
more accessible for tourists. Bearing in mind that Athens is one of the
world’s top destinations for history lovers, here’s four of the best
historical sites within the city: The Parthenon. This huge temple is
one of the world’s top ancient sites, dominating the skyline of Athens
on its position on the Acropolis. Built in the 5th century
BC, it was used as a treasury and a temple to the goddess Athena. At 228
feet in length and 64 feet in height it is regarded as the finest
surviving building of classical Greece. Much of the building was wrecked
by during a Venetian attack on the city in 1687, when the Ottoman Empire
used the building as a gunpowder magazine. The magazine was hit by a
Venetian mortar, and the building was partly destroyed and subsequently
looted. Today major restoration work at the site is ongoing. The Temple of Olympian Zeus.
Lying around 500m to the south east of the Acropolis, this huge temple
took over half a millennia to complete. While the original structure was
the largest in ancient Greece, only around 1/6th of the
original building survives to this day. No one knows exactly what
happened to the rest of the structure, although it is assumed that it
fell down in an earthquake in the medieval period, and the ruins used
for building. Even today, however, the epic columns remain quite
breathtaking as a feat of engineering. Kerameikos. Covering both sides of
the Dipylon Gate and the banks of the Eridanos River, this area is
famous for being the former ‘potter’s quarter’ of the city and an
extensive burial ground. Tombs dating from sub Mycenaean times to late
antiquity can be found here, and it also features the ‘demosion sema’,
a public burial monument where Pericles honoured those that had died
during the Peloponnesian War (431-404 BC). It is an area untouched by
mass tourism, and is consequently full of the quiet atmosphere expected
at such a solemn site. The Agora. The old marketplace
and civic centre, this was one of the most important parts of ancient
Athens, and the focus for commercial and political activity. The area is
also known to have been used as a residential area and burial area as
early as c. 3000 BC. The site includes a range of ancient buildings,
from temples and monuments to ruins of the ancient market. It also has
the Agii Apostoli Church, which is one of the oldest surviving Christian
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