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27 Oct 2007
After taking the trolley down the yellow line below, somehow I overshot the Temple of Olympian Zeus and had to walk back to the main entrance.
To view the previous related post click here.
27 Oct 2007
After taking the trolley down the yellow line below, somehow I overshot the Temple of Olympian Zeus and had to walk back to the main entrance.
Some walls outside
Hadrian's Gate. It marked the division between the ancient (Greek) and old (Roman) part of the city. This view is from the Roman side (i.e. the Greek side is beyond the gate).
Greek-style columns adorn the top of the Roman-style arch.
The Temple of Olympian Zeus (Olympieion) is the largest Greek Temple ever built and it took more than 500 years to complete!
It started in 600 BC and was completed by Emperor Hadrian in 200 AD.
It was huge! Compare within the pictures, the size of the remain columns and the people next to it.
There were 104 columns of which only 16 remain onsite -- 15 standing and 1 collapsed in 1852.
The Temple of Olympian Zeus!
Most elaborate section still standing. 3 rows of columns adorned the lengths of this rectangular structure.
Details at the top of the columns
This is basically a corner of the temple.
A lone column
Compare these with the humans to get an idea of their size!
The column that fell in 1852, some say earthquake some say gale.
View Larger Map
After walking out of the Temple compound, I walked (purple line above) to the Zappeion that was a very beautiful convention center.
The shape of the building is hollow in the center (as seen in the map above).
The Zappeion in its marble glory
The center part
Ceiling decorations
Unfortunately, I did not walk on to one of the impressive attractions of Athens - the Panathinaiko Stadium (red marker in the map).
It was an ancient stadium that was rebuilt for the 1896 Olympic games, completely of marble.
A panorama view of the stadium from Wikimedia is shown below.
Click here for the full sized version.
After checking out the national gardens, which is really nothing out of the ordinary, I walked back to my hotel for some rest and went for dinner in Plaka at Damigoes. A nice old cafe below the street that has a history of more than a 100 years of fried cod-fish. It took me awhile to locate the place. After all it was just a small stair leading to the basement. What is worse is that the signboard was in Greek! But, thanks to mathematics I found the right place.
After checking out the national gardens, which is really nothing out of the ordinary, I walked back to my hotel for some rest and went for dinner in Plaka at Damigoes. A nice old cafe below the street that has a history of more than a 100 years of fried cod-fish. It took me awhile to locate the place. After all it was just a small stair leading to the basement. What is worse is that the signboard was in Greek! But, thanks to mathematics I found the right place.
Yummy dinner time. Wine, bread, and olives
Most unappetizing appetizer. Well it said fried peppers, I was expecting the fat green/yellow/red peppers but no! It is giant green chilli!
Ah deep fried Codfish.
Codfish is the standard deep-fried fish over here. Great dinner except for the appetizers. Dinner cost about 16 euros -- actually cheaper than most of the other eating places at ground level, e.g. 500ml of wine is 3 euros compared to about 4-4.5 euros in some al fresco cafes.
The streets of Plaka at night. I decided to take some night pictures after dinner. The nice thing about Athens is that its ancient ruins are lighted up at night.
Walls of the Acropolis
The Parthenon, unfortunately with the crane.
Odeon of Herodes Atticus by night
Parthenon in the background.
Hadrian's Gate from the Greek Side. It sort of looks cool with the cars and the moon.
I was walking along the Temple of Zeus' parameter to find a good spot to take a picture.
Before I knew it, I saw someone doing something beyond the hedge next to the fence.
It was another night photographer! Hence I queued up behind him for the perfect spot to take a picture.
The temple by night
The columns look even more majestic at night.
Back to Plaka for a beer.
Mythos beer. Now I know why Tiger is world famous...
2 comments:
This is soo cool. Athens is a beatiful ancient city and those photos are very nice!!
You have no idea how many great ideas you gave me to include in my art appreciation assignment. Thank you!
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