The Odeon of Athens or Odeon of Pericles in Athens was a 4,000 m2 odeon, built at the southeastern foot of the Acropolis in Athens, next to the entrance to the Theatre of Dionysus.
It was first built in 435 BC by Pericles for the musical contests that formed part of the Panathenaea, for audiences from the theatre to shelter in case of bad weather and for chorus rehearsals. Few remains of it now survive, but it seems to have been "adorned with stone pillars" and square instead of the usual circular shape for an odeon. It was covered with timber made from captured Persian ships, culminating in a square pyramid-like roof resembling a tent. Pausanias wrote that the 1st century BC rebuild of it was "said to be a copy of Xerxes' tent", and that might well have applied to the original building.
Source: Wikipedia.org
Copyright: Creative Commons 3.0
Περιφερειακή Ενότητα Κεντρικού Τομέα Αθηνών
Περιφερειακή Ενότητα Κεντρικού Τομέα Αθηνών
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Source: George E. Koronaios
Copyright: Creative Commons 2.0
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Source: George E. Koronaios
Copyright: Creative Commons 2.0
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