
The Acropolis
of Athens
|
|
The Parthenon. It is the most important and characteristic monument of the ancient Greek civilization and still remains its international symbol. It was dedicated to Athena Parthenos, the patron goddess of Athens. It was built between 447 and 438 B.C. and its sculptural decoration was completed in 432 B.C. The construction of the monument was initiated by Perikles, the supervisor of the whole work was Pheidias, the famous Athenian sculptor, while Iktinos and Kallikrates were the architects of the building. The temple is built in the Doric order and almost exclusively of Pentelic marble. It is peripteral, with eight columns on each of the narrow sides and seventeen columns on each of the long ones. The central part of the temple, called the cella, sheltered the famous chryselephantine cult statue of Athena, made by Pheidias.
The sculptural decoration of the Parthenon is a unique combination of the Doric metopes and triglyphs on the entablature, and the Ionic frieze on the walls of the cella. The metopes depict the Gigantomachy on the east side, the Amazonomachy on the west, the Centauromachy on the south, and scenes from the Trojan War on the north.
The relief frieze depicts the Procession of the Panathenaea, the most formal religious festival of ancient Athens. The scene runs along all the four sides of the building and includes the figures of gods, beasts and of some 360 humans.
The two pediments of the temple are decorated with mythological scenes: the east, above the building's main entrance, shows the birth of Athena, and the west, the fight between Athena and Poseidon for the name of the city of Athens. The Parthenon retained its religious character in the following centuries and was converted into a Byzantine church, a Latin church and a Muslim mosque.
The Turks used the Parthenon as a powder magazine
when the Venetians, under Admiral Morosini,
sieged the Acropolis in 1687. One of the Venetian
bombs fell on the Parthenon and caused a tremendous explosion that destroyed
a great part of the monument which had been preserved in a good condition
until then.
The disaster was completed in the beginning of the 19th century, when
the British ambassador in Constantinople, Lord Elgin, stole the greatest
part of the sculptural decoration of the monument (frieze, metopes,
pediments), transferred them to England and sold them to the British
Museum, where they are still exhibited, being one of the most significant
collections of the museum.
The Erechtheion was built in ca. 420 B.C. in the Ionic order.
It has a prostasis on the east side, a monumental
propylon on the north, and the famous porch
of the Caryatids on the south. The main temple was divided into two
sections, dedicated to the worship of the two principal gods of Attica,
Athena and Poseidon-Erechtheus. A relief frieze,
bearing a representation possibly of the birth of Erechtheus,
decorated the exterior of the building.
The Temple of Athena Nike was constructed in ca. 420 B.C. by the architect Kallikrates. It is built in the Ionic order, and it is amphiprostyle with a row of four columns in front of each of its narrow sides. The relief frieze on the upper section of the walls depicts the conference of gods on the east side, and scenes from battles on the other three. A marble parapet decorated with the relief representation of Nikae (Victories), protected the edge of the Bastion on which the temple was erected.
The Propylaea. The monumental gateway of the Acropolis was
designed by the architect Mnesikles and constructed
in 437-432 B.C. It comprises a central building and two lateral wings.
The colonnades along the west and east sides had a row of Doric columns
while two rows of Ionic columns divided the central corridor into three
parts. The walls of the north wing were decorated with painted panels
or wall paintings and that is why it was called the "Pinakotheke".
The ceiling of the Propylaea had coffers with
painted decoration and a perforated sima around
the roof.

e.mail |
Home
| Sailing
Boat on the Nile : The Royal Cleopatra
Nile Cruises | Turkey
| Private Mediterranean Cruise |
Greece | Crete
Honeymoon Hotels | Diving
Suggested
Readings |
Istanbul Hotels | General Info
| Terms | Egyptian
Hotels
| Israel Palestine
Egypt and India Tours | How
to Book | Morocco and North
Africa Tours
e.mail |
Mediterranean Tour | Movenpick
Nile Cruises | Morocco
in one week from Malaga Spain
Desert Sahara Images