The Acropolis of Athens
1. ODEON OF PERICLES 2. THEATRE OF
DIONYSOS 3. MONUMENTS OF THRASYLLOS 4. MONUMENTS OF NIKIAS 5.
ASCLEPIEION 6. WALLS OF KIMON 7. PERIPATOS 8. PORTICO OF
EUMENES 9. ODEION OF HERODES ATTICUS 10. BEULE GATE 11. TEMPLE OF
ATHENA NIKE 12. PEDESTAL OF AGRIPPA 13. PROPYLAEA 14.
BRAVRONION 15. SANCTUARY OF ATHENA ERGANE 16. CHALCOTHEKE 17.
PARTHENON 18. TEMPLE OF ROME AND OF AUGUSTUS 19. HEROON OF
PANDION 20. MUSEUM 21. BELDEDERE 22. ALTAR OF ZEUS POLIEUS 23.
ALTAR OF ATHENA 24. ERECHTHEION - CECROPION - PANDROSEION 25.
HECATOMPEDON 26. STATUE OF ATHENA PROMACHOS 27. SACRED WAY 28.
STAIRWAY TO THE ECRIRCLING PATH (PERIPATOS) 29. CLEPSYDRA 30. CAVES
OF PAN 31. CAVES OF AGLAURION 32. WALL OF THEMISTOCLES 33.
SANCTUARY OF APHRODITE IN THE GARDENS AND OF EROS 34. PELASGIAN
WALL 35. THE WAY OF THE PANATHENEA
The Acropolis, whose summit is 156 m. above sea level (92 m. above the
low city), constitutes with its about 3 hectares of surface (1
hectare=10,000 m), a real natural fortress. It is accessible only through
the sloping ground to the west. All the other sides are overhanging or
precipitous steep descends.
Thanks to the strategic importance of the Acropolis, it became the
first residence of the Attica sovereigns and of its tutelary divinities
(statues and sacred stones).
Surrounded by high walls, this space was considered to be inviolable.
No dwellings were erected there. On the site of a first doric temple (1100
- 750 B.C.) the great Temple of Athena Polias was erected during the
period of Solon, Pessestratus and Clisthenes. Another one was occupying
the very site of the present Parthenon. Besides this Proparthenon, a
Propylon was erected. All these edifices , as well as Athens, were almost
entirely destroyed by the Persians in 479 B.C. But the Athenians, after
their victory at Salamis and Plataea, returned to their city and they
started almost right from the beggining to reconstruct the Acropolis. With
the materials of the destroyed temples, Themistocles erected the North
Wall. After his banishment, the works were conducted by Cimon, to whom we
owe the East and South walls, the embellishment of the Propylon and
undoubtedly the construction of the Chalkotheke and of the Vravronion.
But it is thanks to the illustrious Athenian general and statesman
Pericles that we have the most important monuments of the Acropolis, which
are still admired today. Pericles is surrounded by the best architects and
sculptors of his time. On the foundations of the half completed great
marble temple, which was destroyed by the Persians in 479, he undertakes
the construction of the Parthenon in 447. He entrusts this task to the
architects Callicrates and Ictinos and the sculptor Pheidias and his
workshop, as well as to a great number of craftsmen. The temple is
completed in 438. The construction of the admirable Propylaea begins
immediately afterwards on the designs of the architect Mnesicles.
The Peloponnesian war (431) prevents its completion; and that is why no
decorative sculpures are to be seen. Only after Pericles' death the
Erectheum is erected and it is destined to shelter the most ancient places
of worship.
We must mention here the construction of the most important building of
the ÉVth century, the Theater of Dionysus below the level of the Acropolis
and to its south-east extremity.The construction is due to the orator and
polititian Lycourgos.
In the ÉÉnd century, the Eumenes Portico was erected on the south
slope.
Sulla seized Athens in 86 B.C. and during the siege of the Acropolis,
he damaged numerous buildings at the southern slope. In 40 A.D. the
emperor Caligula built a big staircase leading to the Propylea.
In the ÉÉnd century A.D. the emperor Hadrian proceeded to repair the
temples of the Acropolis, while Herodes Atticus built the Odeion, which
hears his name until today. In the ÉÉnd or ÉÉÉrd century A.D. the Gate
“Beule” was erected, with its portal and towers. Since then, the Acropolis
became a fortress, and, because of that, it was greatly and continuously
damaged till the Turkish surrender in 1833. In 429 A.D. the pagan
religious workships on the Acropolis were abolished through an edict
issued by Theodossius ÉÉ and its temples were “christianized”. In 525,
Pheidias’ Athena Promachos was transported to Constantinople, the capital
of the Roman Empire and about the middle of the VÉÉth century, the
Erectheum is converted into a church of the blessed Virgin. The Acropolis
is chosen as the seat of the Archbishop of Athens. When the Crusaders
captured the city in the ×ÉÉÉth century, the Parthenon and the orthodox
churches were converted into Catholic churches. A Latin archbishopry is
establishes on the Acropolis. In 1387, the Propylea became the residence
of the duke of Athens Nerio Acciaioli.
The Turks seized the Acropolis in 1394, were driven away by the
Venetians but they occupied it again following the Treaty of 1458. Two
years later, flanked by minarets, the Parthenon was converted into a
mosque, while the Erectheum became the harem (the part of a Mohammedan
house where the women live) of the Turkish Commander.
In 1640, the explosion of a storeroom of gun powder within the Propylea
caused the destruction of the major part of the building. In 1686 the
Turks destroyed the temple of Athena Nike in order to build a rampart of
their defence against the Venetians who desieged the Acropolis. During
this siege, a Venetian cannon-ball blew up the Parthenon which was
converted into a powder magazine.
In 1803, Lord Elgin carried away the sculptures of the Parthenon
pediments as well as one of the Erechtheum Korai and numerous other
antipuities; they are now in the British museum.
At the beginning of the Greek Revolution, in 1821, Odysseus Androutsos,
after one year’s siege, captured the Acropolis. But in 1827 it fell back
into the hands of the Turks, who held it till 1833. Since that day the
Acropolis “this high site of Greek Art”, is at lasta entrusted to the care
of a once more free Greece.
Excavations and restorations now begin. In 1835 the Temple of Athena
Nike is restored. In 1853 , Beule, a French archaeologist, rediscovers the
Gate, to which his name was given. The restoration of the Parthenon is
taken up under wise and careful instructions, its northern collonnade is
raised little by little and the Acropolis Museum, reconstructed on a new
plan, between 1949 and 1953, shelters now its priceless treasures.
At the place where the path reaches the foot of the subfoundation of
the Temple of Athena Nike, we are found at the very site of the ancient
entrance to the Acropolis, before and perhaps after the construction of
the “Beule Gate”. This Gate, with its two pylons, whose aspect is more
monumental than purely military, guards a pyramidal gate of the Byzantine
period, and is found within the very axis of the Propylea. About three
meters from the “Beule Gate” eastwards, one faces the roman remains of a
monumental marble staircase dating fron the ÉÉnd or ÉÉÉrd century A.D. A
typically Roman construction; the Greeks preferred the flight of stairs
which were more in harmony with the architectural lines.Mounting to the
left, one disstinguishes on a platform the pedestal in Hymettus marble of
the statue on a guadriga (two-wheeled chariot drawn by four horses
harnessed abreast) of Agrippa, benefactor of Athens, son- in-law of
Augustus.The statue, of course, no longer exists; we know that it was
consecrated in 27 B.C.
We reach the Propylea through a flight of stairs running zigzag. It
follows the hypothetical tract of the Sacred Way, followed by the
Panathenian procession on its way to the Parthenon before the construction
fo the staircase in the Roman period.
Before speaking about the Propylea of the Acropolis standing before us,
we should note that Greeks used this term in the singular(one propylon) in
order to designate the entrance vestibule of an agora, of a place or of a
sancruary, while the term in the plural (propylea) referred to a more
monumental entrance. The ones we have before us –a central body with two
porticoes to the east and to the west and two corresponding wings, were
constructed by the architect Mnesicles in 437 B.C. after the completion of
the Parthenon, whose bulky materials required a free passage through the
western slope. Erected in Pentelic marble, adorned with Eleusis blue
marble, this structure was seriously damaged by the explosion of a Turkish
gunpowder magazine, which it was sheltering. Later on, the Propylea
columns were used for the manufacture of lime. Even in their present
condition, one can still understand why the Propylea had amazed the
ancient people. Strongly impressed by the various difficulties which had
to be overcome, (nature of the soil; reduction imposed on the South wing
by the priests of the neighboring Athena Nike and Bravronion) the people
admired the harmonious linking of alla parts of the edifice; they
considered it equal to the Parthenon, they even preferred it, although it
was incomplete. From the two corresponding wings, the Northern one is
better preserved; it sheltered a Pinakotheke or painting gallery. The
Southern one, although reduced for religious motives, as we have seen,
nevertheless presents a remarkable symmetry with the Northern one, thanks
to the ingenuity of Mnesicles. In the ×ÉVthe century, the duke of Athens,
Nerio Acciaioi had the unfortunate idea to erect on the Propylea which had
become his residence, a high square tower (improperly called “Frankish
tower”) which was pulled down in 1875, at the expense of the archaeologist
Henry Schliemann.
From the South wing of the Propylea one reaches the small Temple of Athen
Nike (and not of “Apteron Nike” i.e. wingless victory, as it is also
called). The statue worshipped in it was an “Athen, goddess of Victory”,
reproducing an old wooden and wingless statue, differing from the usual
so-called “Victories”.
This Ionian Temple in Pentelic marble, so much admired today, was
erected above a primitive temple of the Vith century B.C., through the
good offices of the architect Callicrates. When the Propylea were being
erected, there arose difficulties, as we have seen, between Mnesicles, the
archtitect of the Propylea, and Callicrates, who was supported by the
clergy of Athena Nike. Finally, there was an agreement that the platform
of the Temple should be lowered to the level of the Propylea. Destroyed by
the Turks in the XVIIth century, set up again in 1835, the Temple of
Athena Nike was alla taken down and then reset again in 1936-1940 , as it
was necessary to carry out consolidation works to the “pyrgos” which
serves as its sub-foundation. Inside the temple the cella or chamber
sheltering the statue Athena can be seen through a glance at the pavement
of this cella, from where one can distinguish the remains of the afore
mentioned archaic temple, as well as those of the Mycenian bastion on
which it was erected. At the exit of the temple, one observes on the
coping above the four columnsof the eastern facade, as well as on the
three other sides, a continuous frieze, whose reliefs have almost been
fully discovered. But only those Southern and Eastern sides are to be
seen, because Lord Elgin has taken the rest away to London. That is why
the Northern and Western sides do not offer us but mouldings. On the
Eastern facade one can distinguish Athena standing, holding her buckle,
berween Zeus to the right and Poseidon to the left. On the Western side a
scene of brother-slaying can be seen: the Greeks fight the Boeatians who
allied to the Pesians in the battle of Platanea (479 B.C.)
The Northern and Southern sides represent scenes of battle between
Greeks and Persians.
We must finally note that, according to the legend, Aegeus watched for
the return of Theseus from this very terrace. He saw a blach sail, instead
of the white sail, which was to signal his son’s victory over the Cretan
Minotaur and jumped headlond on the rocks.
Let us however examine mainly the exceptional position of this
admirable temple, perched high on its pedestal, from where it looks as
though it is ready to fly in the sky, facing the panorama of Attica, of
the sea and of the distant mountains.
After having crossed the Propylea, one sees higher up to the right the
Parthenon colonnade in all its fullness and the Erectheum to the left. The
middle space was occupiedin the past by innumernuments. Here were also a
guadriga, and a colossal statue, whose foundations can be still seen to
the East of the Propylea, carved in the rock. To the left, the bronze
quadriga which was either carried off or destroyed by the Persians in 480,
had been replaced by a copy and raised on that spot, when the Propylea
were constructed.
To the right, the famous bronze statue of Athena Promachos (Champion),
a work by Pheidias, was 9 meters high with its basis of 1m. 52. This
statue, which war erected, according go Demosthenes, thanks to the tithe
from the spoils of the Persian wars, has disappeared. We can see it
represented on ancient coins in the form of a goddess standing upright,
armed and wearing a helmet, dressed in a tunic with placid folds, holding
a spear in the right hand and a shield in the left. Pausanias records that
the golden point of the spear and the crest of the helmet of this vigilant
guardian of the city could be seen by the sailors sailing past the Cape
Sounion. The statue was taken to Constantinople, undoubtedly during the
time of Justinian, but was smashed there at the beginning of the XIIIth
century by the superstitious mob.
To the right, a little bachwards, one can still distinguish a wall
carved into the rock, which is higher than one meter at certain points. It
walled, to the North, the boundary of the Vravronion, a sacred enclosure
of Artemis Vravronia, the “Beargoddess”. Dating from Cimon’s time, it was
modified in the middle of the Fifth century.
Between this sanctuary and the Western facade of the Parthenon, there
were two structures, now entirely destroyed. Running along the Sacred Way,
was the sanctuary of Athena Ergane (“The worker”): Laborers and women used
to place their offerings there, drawing in advance part of their earnings
from their work. Along the South wall of the Acropolis, was the
Chalkotheke, where the products of the manufacturing industry, protected
by Athena Ergane, were stored.
The diappearence of these two structures had an unexpected result. It
has offered us an undoubtedly more enrapturing view of the Parthenon on
coming out of the Propylea, than any that could be obtained otherwise.
Beyond the Sanctuary of Athena Ergane, one follows the Sacred Way
traced in the very rock and alongside the Northern side of the Parthenon,
whose sub-foundation in its lower part was hidden in the past by a sunk
terrace. After the seventh column, five cisterns can be seen dug out in
the rock, which collected the rainwaters.
Finally, after having gone all around the North-eastern angle of the
building, one arrives in front of the very entrance of the Parthenon.
The first sanctuary erected on the present site of the Parthenon was
called the “Hecatompedon”, that is the “hundred feet building”. Important
remnants of its plastic decoration have been found. It was destroyed about
488 to give place to the construction of the Old Parthenon. But this
marble building was not completed when the Persians invaded Attica in 480
B.C. The soldiers of Xerxes lit a pyre (heap of wood upon which a corpse
is burnt) there.
Later on, Pericles suggested that a Temple in Pentelic marble should be
erected. We have cited in the historical background his collaborators. In
the opinion of its constructors, this new temple should be an enlargement
of the Hecatompedon. Dedicated to Athena Polias, it would shelter the
statue of the Goddess and its ever increasing treasures.
We should note, however, that the Erectheum has never been substituted
by the new sanctuary in the veneration of the workshippers. Its role
during the Panathenea is not precisely known, and it is still to be
questioned whether it was destined to ceremonies of workship. In the
inscriptions it is called the “Great Temple” or more simply “the temple”.
It took the name of Parthenon only in the IVth century (Parthenon: “Hall
of the Virgin” was not designating at the beginning but one of the parts
of the sanctuary). It was always honored with new gifts till the decline
of the Roman Empire, when it began being profane, since the courtesans of
the King of Macedonia Demetrious Poliorketes were lodged there.
The historical account mentions this temple’s great adventures. Let us
specify that upon becoming an orthodox sanctuary and the Athens
Metropolitan church, the Parthenon was equipped with vault-roofed
galleries reserved for women; its walls were covered with frescoes; its
pronaos (fore-vestibule) was converted into an apse where the Altar was
placed.
The Venetian bomb which during Morosini’s siege, in 1687, blew up the
Parthenon, does not close the list of its adversities. In 1802-1803 Lord
Elgin, who oblained fron the Turks a permission to carry off “some blocks
of stone with inscriptions and figures”sacked the Parthenon, by pulling
off with a gang of workmen fifty-six slabs of the frieze, and fifteen
metopes. He also took about a dozen statues.
Later on, during King Otto’s reign, the Parthenon, or rather the entire
Acropolis, risked another kind of danger: According to a design, at the
request of Prince Frederick William of Prussia, the king’s uncle, the
construction of a palace on the Acropolis contemplated. The palace would
be in the middle of a park, where the Parthenon would stay as a decorative
element. This project was fortunately rejected.
The Parthenon, built entirely of Pentelic marble, is a Doric Temple,
whose outer gallery counts 46 columns 10 m. 43 high (8 columns in each
facade to the East and West and 17 in each of its lond sites, if we count
twice the angle columns). On the architraves of these columns to the East
and West, one can still distinguish the round emprints left by the shields
offered by Alexander the Great and stolen afterwards.
Let us stop for awhile to examine the doric frieze of these outer
columns and its sculptured metopes, made by various artists.
A great number of them mutilated; very few have remained on the spot.
The Eastern metopes represent a battle af gods and giants, in which
Athena figures; the Northern ones, which one should examine from the right
to the left, in the direction followed by the pilgrims of the Panathenean
procession, represent adventures from the Trojan War. Those on the West
represent the Greeks fighting against the Amazons. And lastly, those on
the South represent a battle of the Centaurs against the Lapithae, backed
up by the Athenians.
The pediments of the two facades were decorated with marble statues,
which must have been the skilful work of Pheidias. The Eastern Pediment,
the most important, represented Athena’s birth, the Goddess being fully
armed, near Zeus. Almost nothing is left (some heads at the two
extremities; some horses of fragments of horses). Almost all the preserved
pieces are in the British Museum.
The West Pediment represented the dispute between Athena and Poseidon
(that is, between Athens and Eleusis) for the possession of Attica. Thery
were proudly standing in the center ans were separated by the olive-tree
which gave the victory to the goddess.
Let us particularly notice two figures (Cecrops and gis daughter
Aglauros) of a remarkable art,on the Northern extremity.
On the South extremity you may see the figure of a resting woman,
perhaps the spring Calliroi.
The roof of the Parthenon was covered with tiles of marble from Paros.
Inside the outer colonnade, the Temple presents a rectangular plan.It
is bounded on its four sides by walls with two porticoes to the East and
West (pronaos to the East; opisthodomos to the West) with 6 doric columns.
Let us examine the famous Ionic frieze entirely planned by Pheidias. It
surrounded the whole Temple, below the roof of the galleries. It
represented the procession of the Great Panathenea, which took place every
four years. Citizens and foreigners, magistrates, musicians, maidens
bearing offerings, escorts of youths on horseback made their way to the
Erechtheum to bring Athena a golden wreath, and a new sacred peplos (an
outer draped garment).
The procession propably stopped before the Parthenon, where the winners
at the Panathenea games were crowned with laurel. One should logically
begin examining the frieze from the South- west corner, from where two
files of persons walk in procession on the four sides of the Temple before
converging to the East above the entrance.
On the Western frieze we see the preparations for the departure. One
person looks as though he is binding his sandal, while his servant is
bridling his refractory horse. Another horseman, his chlamys (cloak)
clapping against the wind, is ready to mount his horse, which rears.
Everything is perfection itself, everything is natural, alive and vividly
pictured.
Before penetrating into the cella or the temple properly speaking, it
is good to note certain famous details in the construction of the
Parthenon.
The steps present a slightly convex curve conveyed to the entablature
by the columns which are somewhat raised to this effect. This curve can be
immediately seen. It is thanks to this contrivance in the construction
that the outflow of the waters was secured. On the other hand, the
impression of congealed stiffness given by too many straight lines was
avoided. At the same time, the impression of sagging in the horizontal
lines of the colonnades disappeared. Moreover, the Parthenon colonnades
with their slightl inward slope give a pyramidal form to the structure.
Finally, good care has been taken to have an harmonious symmetry between
the colonnade and the single isolated columns of each corner: the angle
columns are built somehow larger, and thus secure the solidity of the
building.
The cella comprised two partitions, which were seperated by a full
wall: to the east, the “Hecatompedon” (name of the archaic temple erected
on the same site); to West, the Parthenon.
The Hecatompedon was devided into three naves by two rows of doric
columns, which a transversal colonnade linked to the west. The statue of
Athena-Parthenos stood in the centra nave. Some blocks from its pedestal
have been replaced. This statue, a work of Pheidias, made of gold and
ivory, was with its pedestal about 15m. high. A commonplace replica of the
II century A.D. in the National Museum gives us an idea of that statue.
The Parthenon, or hall of the Virgins, was undoubledly serving to preserve
the sacred treasures. In the North-Eastern corner, traces of Byzantine
paintings can still be distinguished. To the West there was a doorway
similar to that of the Eastern entrance.
Every visitor should visit the Acropolis Museum, even if he is in a
hurry.
On going out of the museum, one should go to the Belvedere and the
Erechtheum, one can see traces of the foundations of the altar of Zeus
Polieus erected on a site which was inhabited in very early, primitive
ages.
The Northern surrounding wall of the Acropolis, called “Themistocles’
wall” is better preserved than the Southern one, which suffered many
invasions and bombardments. In a ditch of this Northern wall, at the
height of the altar of Zeus Polieus, 5 column capitals and drums can be
seen in a pit, which come from the archaic temple of Athena Polias that
was erected in the space between the Erechtheum and the Parthenon. In
another ditch, very near the Erechtheum, one can see, besides the remains
of the rampart of the Mycenian period,the foundations of Themistocles’
wall and, built in the wall, drums of unfinished columns, which had
beloged to the Old Parthenon destroyed by the Persians.
The Erechtheum,whose Ionic grace brings a contrast to the virile beauty
of the Parthenon, is found on the very spot, where, according to
tradition, Athena and Poseidon had asserted their claims to the possesion
of Attica. The Goddess had offered an olive tree, while the God through a
stroke of his trident gushed forth a lake of salt water. The tradition
symbolizes the historical rivalry between Athens and Eleusis over the
supremacy of Attica.
In the Erechtheum they also worshipped the more or less historical
heroes: King Erachtheus, his son Cecrops, etc. who had created this city
and had worked for its power. Cecrop’s tomb, the signs of the stroke of
Poseidon’s trident (or of Zeus’thunderbolt), Athena’s olive tree, the
“sea” of Erechtheus (after his defeat Poseidon was deprived of it),
everything has been preserved in the edifice which can be still seen
today. From the very origin, Poseidon-Erechtheus and Athena were
worshipped in two contiguous sanctuaries of the same temle. This first
Erechtheum, which had totally vanished, was reconstructed in marble. The
works began in 421 and were completed in 406. Having been converted into a
Byzantine church in the VIIthe century, into a Turkish harem in the XVIth
,it had to suffer Lord Elgin’s depredations as well.
The plan of the edifice is complicated and irregular. The cella (or
sanctuary) to the East, was dedicated to Athena Polias. The porch of its
pronaos was ornamented with six Ionic columns; the northern one was taken
away by Lord Elgin. The cella was utterly transformed in the VIIth
century, when Erechtheum was converted into a Byzantine church.
Previously, there was in it an old wooden statue, made of olive tree, of
the Goddess standing upright and wearing a helmet. It is said that the
Athenians had safely secured it in the island of Salamis in 480 during the
Persian invasion. Each year, but more ceremoniously every four years,
during the Big Panathenaic games, it was offered a new peplos.
Through a modern staircase one reaches the North Porch. With its
elegant Ionic colonnade (four columns on the facade and a corresponding
one on each side), its architrave, its roof with caissons, its frize in
Eleusis blue marble, with its richly ornamented doorway, this porch was a
real masterpiece. But it was only decorative. It was properly speaking,
the entrance doorway to the Erechtheum. Besides, there was the rock on
which Poseidon had left the mark of his trident, a mark later attributed
to Zeus’ thunderbolt, which could be seen through a hole in the pavement.
An opening could be also seen in one of the roof caissons (the original
was taken to London by Lord Elgin).
There are two doorways at the bottom of the porch. The bigger one led
to the cella of Erechtheus, whose level was lower then that of Athena. It
was bordered to the West by a facade with colonnade and most propably
sheltered the altars of Hephaestus and of the hero Boutes.
In a first separate room, a sort of well was found; the “sea” of
Erechtheus, that had gushed forth under Poseidon’s trident.
To the West of the facade with the colonnade, a yard was found, the
Pandroseion (after Pandrose, daughter of Cecrops), sheltering Athena’s
olive tree. An olive tree recalls it, even today.
Let us lastly approach on the South side of the Erechtheum the famous
porch of the Korai (maidens), often wrongly called porch of Cecrops or of
Erechtheus. On a pedesta, six statues of young girls, well built and
strong, proudly standing, their chest thrown out, attired in long Ionic
tunics, their arms alongside their body, supported the architrave. We
remark that the outer lines are vertical, while the inner ones ar bent.
This is what gives to the structure stability and life. The head of the
Kore at the East is only a restoration. The second Kore to the West, taken
away by Lord Elgin, has been replaced by a cement cast. The porch of the
Korai was perhaps serving as an official tribune an the occasion of the
Panathenaean games. At the same time it hid a staircase leading to the
Acropolis terrace.
At a little distance from the Erechtheum, near the surrounding wall of
the Acropolis, one can still distinguish the ruins of the Arrephorion or
dwelling of the Arrephores. These were little girls of noble rank, aged
from seven to eleven and they worked with Athena’s priestess for the
making of the peplos, which was brought each year to the Goddess in her
sanctuary.
Let us now redescend from the Acropolis and cross the Areopagus hill
(115m.) by a staircase carved in the rock, which begins in the vicinity of
the paved road where the buses and cars park.
This hill originally served as a refuge to murderers. Later on, it
became the seat of the Supreme Council of Senate of the Areopagus. It was
a diplomatic body, also a criminal court, before which, according to
tradition, the heroes and even Gods -like Orestes and Ares- appeared. One
of Aeschyles’ tragedies, whose hero is Orestes, “The Eumenides” takes
place there.
Later, the only task of the Senate was to control the Constitution and
the morals. It had to examine crimes of treachery and of corruption
(Demosthenes’ condemnation, the judgment of Phryne, who was Praxiteles’
model, etc.). It is said that in 50 A.D. Saint Paul had pronounced there
his speech concerning the Unknown God. But we are told that it was
pronounced “in the middle of the Areopagus”, which may mean in one of the
public buildings, perhaps in the Agora.
A flight of sixteen steps allows us to reach a rectangular platform
worked on the rock and bordered with steps. Above, a terrace is connected
with an isolated cube, Eastwards, which is perhaps an altar dedicated to
Athena Areia, unless it was the seat of the one of the other party
present, i.e. of plaintiff or of defendant.
They undoubtedly judged there certain murders of particular importance.
As regards the visible marks on the crest, these belong to rectangular
structures. The ones were the sanctuaries of the Amazons and of Boreas,
the others barracks of Scythian archers in charge of the police.
 Acropolis
in ancient times.
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