Acropolis
Athens
The
Acropolis (edge of the city / citadel) has been mainly
utilized as a religious and residential district as
well as the stronghold of the city of ancient Athens.
During
the second part of the Persian Wars on 480 B.C., the
King Xerxes of Persia invades Athens and in return of
his father Darius’ defeat from the Athenians at
Marathon on 490 B.C., razes the city to the ground and
burns all the temples on the Acropolis.
The Athenians, having fled to the nearby island of Salamis
could do nothing but sit and watch their city being
destroyed.
After
the utter defeat of the Persians at Platae on 479 B.C.
by the united city-states of Greece, the Athenians rebuilt
their city and gradually evolved to become an empire
and the cultural centre of Greece and the ancient world
(Pericles’ Golden Age).
It
was during that period that the Parthenon was built
(447 – 432 B.C.) and the Acropolis started taking
the form it retains to this day.
Envisioned by Athens’ ruler Pericles and assigned
to architects Iktinos, Kallikrates, and the sculptor
Pheidias, the Parthenon and the Acropolis would become
an eternal symbol of civilization, Greek religion and
of the city itself.
Through the ages, it has also become an unsurpassed
exhibit of architecture and sculpting.
The
Parthenon (house of virgins) is dedicated to Athens’
patron goddess Athena, a virgin goddess (Parthenos),
whose priestesses were virgin maidens of Athens’
aristocracy.
Other
important temples and monuments atop the Acropolis are
The Erectheion (in memory of the mythical king Erectheon),
the Temple of Athena Nike (Athena victory) and the Propylaea
(the gateway of the Acropolis).
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