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Where is the Hekatompedon?

Where is the Hekatompedon?

Athens, Greece
Hekatompedon temple

Hekatompedon
Type Temple for the worship of Athena
Architectural style Ancient Greek Archaic
Location Athens, Greece
Coordinates 37.9715°N 23.7267°E

Who built the Hekatompedon?

Peisistratus first systematically organized the worship of Athena, constructing or extending the Hekatompedos temple (or Dorpfeld’s temple, named after the German archeologist who discovered it’s foundations), a Doric building with 2 columns on each facade, length 32.80 meters (100 feet, as it’s name says), from porous …

Who lived in the Erechtheion?

Erechtheion

Erechtheum
Type Ancient Temple (Ancient Greek and Roman Period) Church (Byzantine Period) Palace (Frankish Period) Residence of the Turkish commander’s harem (Ottoman Period)
Architectural style Ionic
Location Athens, Greece
Current tenants Museum

How was the Erechtheion destroyed?

Like many classical buildings, the Erechtheion has suffered a chequered history. Damaged by fire only ten years or so after its completion, it was repaired in 395 BCE.

What was inside the Erechtheion?

In the western section, there may have been the Tomb of Erechtheus, the xoanon of Athena Polias and perhaps immediately before that a table. Additionally, this room housed the Lamp of Kallimachos, a Hermes, the saltwater well and a collection of spoils from the Persian War.

What happened to the bronze statue of Athena?

Niketas Choniates documented a riot taking place in the Forum of Constantine in Constantinople in 1203 CE where a large, bronze, statue of Athena was destroyed by a “drunken crowd” which is now thought to have been the Athena Promachos.

Who owns the Parthenon Marbles?

For nearly two centuries the sculptures have been housed in the British Museum as the centerpiece of its Greek galleries. The museum maintains that their acquisition was a legal act of preservation.

What does the Peplos Kore symbolize?

A kore (plural: korai) is a statue of a young woman used to mark graves or, more often, as a votive offering to the gods in the sixth and fifth centuries BCE.

Where Are The original Caryatids?

the Acropolis Museum
The originals are housed in the Acropolis Museum in Athens. The Caryatids at the Acropolis Museum.