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Acropolis of Athens
🌍 UNESCO

Acropolis of Athens

Ακρόπολη Αθηνών

📅~1600 BCE (earliest fortification), 447-432 BCE (Parthenon)
Mycenaean through Classical (1600 BCE - 5th century BCE peak)
📖7 故事
🌍UNESCO
遗失与重现 (4)王冠与征服 (2)神灵与怪兽 (1)

About

Rising 156 meters above the city of Athens, the Acropolis ("High City") is the most important ancient monument in the Western world — the symbol of classical civilization, democracy, and the philosophical foundations of Western thought. Crowned by the Parthenon, one of the most perfect buildings ever constructed, the Acropolis embodies the achievement of Periclean Athens at its Golden Age. The rocky outcrop was sacred from the beginning. In Mycenaean times, a royal palace stood here, protected by massive Cyclopean walls. By the 8th century BCE, it had become the religious center of Athens, dedicated primarily to Athena, the city's patron goddess. The archaic temples were destroyed when the Persians sacked Athens in 480 BCE, but this destruction became the catalyst for the greatest building program in ancient history. Under the leadership of Pericles, with Phidias as artistic director, the Athenians spent fifty years (447-399 BCE) transforming the Acropolis into an architectural masterpiece. The Parthenon — temple of Athena Parthenos (the Virgin) — was built first, its perfect proportions and optical refinements creating the illusion of mathematical perfection. The Propylaea, a monumental gateway, controlled access to the sacred precinct. The Erechtheion, with its famous Porch of the Caryatids, housed the most ancient and sacred relics of Athens. The Temple of Athena Nike celebrated victory over the Persians. Every aspect of the Acropolis was designed to proclaim Athens' greatness. The sculptures depicted the triumph of civilization over barbarism, of order over chaos, of the Greek over the Persian. The buildings used precise mathematical ratios to achieve their perfection. Even the approach — climbing the steep processional way, passing through the Propylaea, emerging to see the Parthenon gleaming in marble and gold — was choreographed to inspire awe. For over two millennia, the Acropolis has endured: converted to a Byzantine church, then an Ottoman mosque, then an ammunition dump that exploded in 1687, then a subject of archaeological excavation and restoration. Through it all, the Parthenon has stood — damaged, altered, but undefeated — the most enduring symbol of human aspiration toward beauty and truth.

Historical Significance

The Acropolis represents the apex of ancient Greek civilization and has become the universal symbol of classical culture. Its influence on Western architecture, art, and thought is immeasurable. Every government building with columns, every museum with a triangular pediment, every concept of architectural proportion derives ultimately from the buildings on this rock. The Parthenon, in particular, achieved a perfection that has never been equaled. Its architects incorporated subtle optical refinements — curved lines where straight lines would appear bent, columns that swell slightly at the middle, corner columns that are thicker than the others — to create the illusion of mathematical perfection. These refinements were so subtle that they were not rediscovered until the 19th century, yet they explain why the Parthenon seems more perfect than buildings that are mathematically exact. The sculptures of the Acropolis, many now in the Acropolis Museum and the British Museum (the controversial "Elgin Marbles"), represent the highest achievement of classical Greek art. The Parthenon frieze, depicting the Panathenaic procession, shows ordinary Athenians participating in their civic religion — a democratic statement carved in stone. The pediments depicted the birth of Athena and the contest between Athena and Poseidon for patronage of Athens. The Acropolis was also a political statement. The Parthenon was funded partly by tribute from Athens' allies in the Delian League — money that was supposed to be used for defense against Persia. Pericles justified this "creative accounting" by arguing that Athens had fulfilled its obligation to protect its allies and could use the surplus to glorify the city. The Acropolis thus embodies both the glory and the contradictions of Athenian democracy. Today, the Acropolis remains the most visited archaeological site in Europe, drawing millions who climb the same rock that Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle climbed to visit Athena's shrine.

故事

7
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🫒

一棵树赢了一片海

Mythological Era

两个神都看上了同一座城。雅典娜要它,波塞冬也要它。谁也不让谁。于是宙斯说:那就比一场。

1 minS
AthenaPoseidonKing Cecrops+1
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😢

一炮炸碎两千年

1687年9月26日

两千多年,帕特农神庙什么大风大浪没见过。地震、大火、六七个帝国轮番上阵。

1 minA
弗朗切斯科·莫罗西尼柯尼斯马克伯爵奥斯曼守军+1
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🏛️

伯里克利与雅典的荣光

449-429 BCE

公元前449年,伯里克利提出了一个大胆的计划:重建雅典卫城。但他要用的那笔钱,来自提洛同盟的国库。

1 minA
PericlesPhidiasIctinus+3
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⚔️

圣岩上的三天

508 BCE

公元前508年的雅典,空气里弥漫着火药味。一个在人类历史上炸响了两千五百年的想法,即将在这里诞生——普通人,可以自己治理自己。

1 minA
克里斯提尼伊萨哥拉斯斯巴达国王克里奥梅尼斯+1
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👩

少女柱——用身体撑起天空的女人们

421-406 BCE (Erechtheion construction)

雅典卫城上有六个女人,已经站了两千五百年。不是摆在展柜里的雕像——她们就是柱子本身。头顶扛着屋顶,身体撑起整座门廊。

1 minA
The Six CaryatidsThe women of CaryaeAlkamenes (possible sculptor)
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🏺

帕特农石雕:是抢救,还是抢劫?

1801-1812 (removal), debate ongoing

1801年,希腊不属于希腊人。一个苏格兰贵族拿着一张画素描的许可证来到雅典。结果他干的事,两百多年了还没吵完。

1 minA
Thomas Bruce, 7th Earl of ElginGiovanni Battista Lusieri (Elgin's agent)Ottoman authorities+1
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🔥

废墟上的誓言

480 BCE

公元前480年的秋天,波斯帝国的薛西斯大帝站在雅典城中央的山丘上,眼前是一片火海。他带来了古代世界有史以来最庞大的军队——大约三十万人——一路碾压过希腊。

1 minA
薛西斯特米斯托克利雅典祭司与守卫+1
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History

👑 Built by

Pericles (patron); Phidias (artistic director); Ictinus and Callicrates (Parthenon architects)

~1600 BCE - Mycenaean palace and Cyclopean walls constructed

~800 BCE - First temple to Athena built

566 BCE - Great Panathenaea festival established; procession to the Acropolis

480 BCE - Persians destroy the archaic Acropolis

479 BCE - Greeks defeat Persians at Plataea; rubble of old temples buried as memorial

447 BCE - Construction of the Parthenon begins under Pericles

438 BCE - Parthenon completed; gold-and-ivory Athena statue installed

437-432 BCE - Propylaea constructed

427-424 BCE - Temple of Athena Nike constructed

421-406 BCE - Erechtheion constructed

5th century CE - Parthenon converted to Christian church (Church of the Parthenos Mary)

1458 CE - Ottoman conquest; Parthenon converted to mosque

1687 - Venetian bombardment explodes Ottoman ammunition stored in Parthenon

1801-1812 - Lord Elgin removes sculptures (now in British Museum)

1834 - Greek Archaeological Society begins clearing Ottoman additions

1975-present - Major restoration program ongoing

1987 - UNESCO World Heritage Site designation

Tags

#acropolis#athens#parthenon#athena#greece#ancient#sacred#unesco#classical#pericles#phidias#democracy#philosophy#architecture#temple