On the ground, in front of this building,
the result of excavations that brought to light building remains, dates ranging from the Late Classical to the Late Roman period: the remains of an ancient road, four water ducts, five rooms, interior parts of mosaic floors and among the rooms, seven wells.
The church of Agion Theodoron
The Society of People's Friend and The People's University - I did not know these existed
On Euripidou Street corner, we were near the main market which we will visit on another occasion
This time we turned into Agiou Markou street
where there's lots of shops and stalls
including a lot that sold religious/church merchandise
so many icons
We moved on
we could see the Acropolis in the distance
and we arrived at Monastiraki square
where a celebration, part of the Carnival, was going on with music and dancing
This little princess was awestruck by it all
presiding over it all was the Acropolis
The old mosque, now a museum, is the building in the background
After a while, we moved on
It was a Saturday so all the bars and cafeterias were packed
Kapnikarea, a Byzantine church
gorgeous building
with two interesting sculptures at the entrance
the ancient Roman Agora
Aerides, the Tower of the Winds, one of my favourite ancient monuments, probably because it still stands virtually intact. It's an octagonal tower inside the Roman Agora, made of Pentelic marble, and named after the eight large reliefs of wind gods around its top. Its date is uncertain, but was completed by about 50 BC.
You can see the Acropolis behind Aerides.
One of the reasons why it still stands virtually intact is because it has been continuously occupied for a series of different functions. Formerly topped by a wind vane, it is the only surviving horologium or clock tower from classical antiquity. It also housed a large waterclock and incorporated sundials placed prominently on its exterior faces - a perfect marriage of architecture, sculpture and the new science.
According to A.W. Lawrencem, 'the originality of this building is exceptional and of a character out of keeping with Hellenistic architecture as we know it... the design is obviously Greek, both in the severity of the decorative treatment and in the antiquated method of roofing'.
We moved on as it was time for lunch,
I wish I had one of those for my balcony
sits the Arch of Hadrian, Pyli tou Adrianou, as it's known in Greek. A monumental gateway, resembling in some respects a Roman triumphal arch, it spanned an ancient road from the center of Athens, to the complex structures on the eastern side of the city that included the Temple of Olympian Zeus, a colossal temple in the centre of Athens, renowned as the largest temple in Greece, now in ruins.