File Panticapaeum.Prytaneion 2.jpg thumb 300 px Prytaneion of Panticapaeum , II b.c. Kerch, Ukraine A Prytaneion was seat of the Prytaneis Executive government executive , and so the seat of government in ancient Greece . The term is used to describe any of a range of ancient structures where officials met normally relating to the government of a city but the term is also used to refer to the building where the officials and winners of the Olympic games met at Olympia, Greece Olympia . The Prytaneion normally stood in centre of the city, in the agora . The building contained the holy fire of Hestia , the goddess of the hearth, and symbol of the life of the city. Tholos, Athens At the southwest side of the agora in Athens , and part of the Bouleuterion complex stood the Tholos, a round temple tholos is the Greek word for circle , eighteen metres in diameter, which served as seat of the Prytaneis of Athens and so was their Prytaneion. It was this round feature that allowed archaeologists to identify the badly damaged buildings surrounding it. ref Camp, John McK. The Athenian Agora Excavations in the Heart of Classical Athens. New York, N.Y. 500 Fifth Ave., New York 10110 Thames and Hudson, 1992. Print ref It functioned as a kind of all purpose venue, with both a dining hall and sleeping quarters for some of the officials. ref name a http traumwerk.stanford.edu 3455 Archaeopaedia ... Prytaneion Bouleuterion Birthplace of Democracy . ref Prytaneion, Olympia At Olympia, the Prytaneion ... 2C Prytaneion&object Building Project Perseus , Olympia, Prytaneion Building ref was where the priests ... It also housed the Altar of Hestia where the original Olympic flame once burnt. ref name d Prytaneion ... G. The Prytaneion. Its Function and Architectural Form . Berkeley University of California Press ... and structures architecture stub cs Prytaneion de Prytaneion es Pritaneo eu Pritaneo fr Prytan e io Pritaneo it Pritaneo nl Prytaneion pl Prytanejon ru sk Prytaneion fi Prytaneion ... more details
wiktionary tholos holos , a circular building, may refer to Tholos tomb, or Beehive tomb Tholos, keyhole shaped houses of the Halaf culture of the Ancient Near East A circular temple of Ancient Greece The Tholos at Athens, a building which housed the Prytaneion , or seat of government, in ancient Athens The Delphi Tholos Tholos at Delphi , a circular building located approximately 800 metres from the main site of the ruined Temple of Apollo The Tholos at Epidaurus , a circular building with an ornate astronomical floor design Tholos Ancient Rome , a structure found in the centre of the macellum The tallest part of the United States Capitol dome , on which the Statue of Freedom stands disambiguation sk Tolos sh Tolos ... more details
Leos may also occur as a plural form of Leo . For the football team, see BC Lions . In Greek mythology , the name Leos may refer to Leos, one of the ten or twelve Eponyms of the Attic phyle phylae whose statues were at the Athens Athenian agora near the Prytaneion Tholos . ref Pausanias , Description of Greece , 1. 5. 2 ref ref Photius Lexicon and Suda s. v. Ep nymoi ref He was a son of Orpheus and father of a son Cylanthus and of three daughters, Praxithea or Phasithea, Phrasithea , Theope and Eubule. In obedience to the Delphi an oracle he had his three daughters sacrificed in order to relieve the city of famine. A location in Attica and a heroon hero shrine was said to have received the name Leokorion after these daughters of Leos , Le korai . ref Photius and Suda s. v. le korion ref ref Claudius Aelianus Aelian , Various Histories 12. 28 ref ref Etymologicum Magnum 560. 34 ref ref Scholia on Thucidides 1. 20, on Demosthenes 54. 7 ref In reality though, the story of the daughters of Leos could have been invented to explain the placename. ref http press.princeton.edu books lyons appendix.html Lyons, Deborah. Gender and Immortality Appendix A Catalogue of Heroines. Princeton University Press, 1996. under Leo korai ref Leos, a native of Agnus, Attica, the herald of the sons of Pallas son of Pandion Pallas . He betrayed them by informing Theseus of their imminent attack, which let him strike at the opponents at unawares and win. From that circumstance there was no intermarriage between the deme s Agnus and Pallene, and the Pallenian heralds never used the formula Listen, people because of the homophony of the word le s people and Leos name. ref Plutarch , Life of Theseus , 13. 2 3 ref The people of Agnus, on the contrary, sacrificed to Leos. ref Stephanus of Byzantium , s. v. Agnous ref See also Hyacinthus of Lacedaemon References reflist Greek myth stub Category Greek mythology Category Attic mythology Category Greek mythological hero cult ... more details
he published his first scholarly article on the Prytaneion Decree IG 1 sup 3 sup 131 . ref The Prytaneion ... Oxford 1969 Ostwald, Martin. The Prytaneion Decree Re examined, American Journal of Philology 72 ... more details
Infobox Museum name Archaeological Museum of Arta image Church Parigoritria, Arta, Greece.JPG imagesize 260 caption The collection is housed in the 13th century Paregoretissa church . alt map type map caption map alt latitude longitude established 1973 dissolved location Arta, Greece Arta , Arta Prefecture , Epirus region Epirus , Greece . type Archaeological museum collection visitors director president curator publictransit network website The Archaeological Museum of Arta is a museum in Arta, Greece Arta , Greece . It was established in 1973 as the Archaeological collection of Arta , and has been housed in the Trapeza dining room of the 13th century Paregoretissa church . It was established as a full museum in 2009. Exhibits The bulk of the collection are excavations from the ancient city of Ambracia , the Koudounotrypa cave, and several other sites in Arta Prefecture . Of note are numerous funerary stelae and burial offerings from cemeteries of ancient Ambracia. ref cite web url http www.culture.gr h 1 eh152.jsp?obj id 3288 title Archaeological Collection of Arta publisher Hellenic Ministry of Culture accessdate August 28, 2009 ref The exhibition includes three main sections the public life, the cemeteries, and the private life of Ambraciotes, whilst at the start and end of the exhibition there are individual smaller sections covering the birth and fall of Ambracia, respectively. The bulk of the collection from the city of Arta, Greece Arta come from excavations of the two cemeteries housed outside the walls of the ancient city of Ambracia east and southwest , from public buildings such as the small and large Greek Theatre , the Temple of Apollo and the Prytaneion, houses and other building residues, as well as ceramic and other laboratories, discovered by Archaeology archaeological research . The museum s exhibition spans a wide time period, from the Paleolithic Era Paleolithic up to the Roman Greece Roman period . The majority of exhibits belongs to the Hellen ... more details
for the 10th century Coptic saint Simon the Tanner Simon the Shoemaker was an associate of the Athenian philosopher Socrates in the late 5th century BCE. He is known mostly from the account given in Diogenes La rtius Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers . He is also mentioned in passing by Plutarch ref Plutarch, Maxime cum Principibus esse Disserendum , 776b ref and Synesius ref Synesius, Dion , 14 ref and another pupil of Socrates, Phaedo of Elis , is known to have written a dialogue called Simon . ref Diogenes La rtius, ii. 105 Suda, Phaidon ref Socrates was accustomed to visit Simon s shop, and converse with him on various subjects. These conversations Simon afterwards committed to writing, as far as he could remember them and it was said by some that he was the first person to write Socratic dialogues . His writings attracted the notice of Pericles , who offered to provide for his maintenance, if he would come and reside with him but Simon refused, on the grounds that he did not wish to surrender his independence. Diogenes La rtius lists thirty three conversations dialogi which were contained in one volume. In the past some scholars have suggested that Simon was a purely fictional figure, ref E. Zeller, 1868 , Socrates and the Socratic Schools , trans. O. J. Reichel. Longmans, Green & Co. ref perhaps invented by Phaedo of Elis for his dialogue Simon . However, archaeological investigations have revealed the remains of a shop near the Prytaneion Tholos in the southwest corner of the Agora of Athens which has yielded quantities of Hobnail footwear hobnails and a Pottery pot base with the word Simon s lang el inscribed on it. ref D. B. Thompson, 1960 , The House of Simon the Shoemaker , Archeology 13, 234 240. ref It cannot, of course, be certain if this is Simon s shop. In later times Simon seems to have been idealised by the Cynics . Among the surviving Cynic epistles , there are some spurious Socratic letters, written in the 2nd or 3rd century, in ... more details
can be found the Prytaneion and the Philippeion , as well as the array of Treasuries at Olympia ... sanctuary en.svg thumb center 700px 1 North East Propylaea Propylon 2 Prytaneion 3 Philippeion 4 Temple ..., and the hippodrome for chariot racing were constructed. The Prytaneion was built at the north west ... for the stadium, graves, and the location of the Prytaneion. From 1984 to 1996, Helmut Kyrieleis took over the site and the focus shifted to the earlier history of the sanctuary with excavation of the Prytaneion ... more details
Image Olympia ZeusTempelRestoration.jpg thumb right Wilhelm L bke s illustration of the temple as it might have looked in the 5th century BCE The Temple of Zeus at Olympia was an ancient Greek temple in Olympia, Greece , dedicated to the chief of the gods, Zeus . It was the very model of the fully developed classical Greek temple of the Doric order . ref name b http traumwerk.stanford.edu 3455 Archaeopaedia 243 Temple of Zeus at Archaeopaedia, Stanford University ref The temple, built between 472 and 456 BCE, stood in the most famous sanctuary of Greece, which had been dedicated to local and Pan Hellenic deities and had probably been established towards the end of the Mycenaean Greece Mycenaean period . The Altis , the enclosure with its sacred grove , open air altars and the tumulus of Pelops , was first formed during the tenth and ninth centuries BCE ref http odysseus.culture.gr h 3 eh351.jsp?obj id 2358 Hellenic Ministry of Culture The sanctuary site at Olympia, including the Temple of Zeus ref Greek Dark Ages Greece s Dark Age , when the cult of Zeus was joined to the already establish cult here of Hera. ref Preceding the Temple of Zeus in the temenos at Olympia were the archaic structures http odysseus.culture.gr h 3 eh351.jsp?obj id 2358 the temple of Hera, the Prytaneion, the Bouleuterion, the treasuries and the first stadium. ref main Statue of Zeus at Olympia It housed the renowned Statue of Zeus at Olympia statue of Zeus , which was one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World . The Chryselephantine statue was approximately convert 13 m ft 0 abbr on high and was made by the sculptor Phidias in his workshop on the site at Olympia. He took about twelve years to complete it. On his head was a sculpted wreath of olive sprays. In his right hand he held a figure of Nike mythology Nike , the goddess of victory, also made from ivory and gold, and in his left hand, a scepter made with many kinds of metal, with an eagle perched on the top. His sandals were made of ... more details
district which consisted of the Bouleterion and the Prytaneion, the cultural district containing ... crossed by the main street, is a series of halls. The municipal buildings, buleuterion and prytaneion ... more details
. The Bouleuterion Senate House , at the west side of the Agora. The Prytaneion Tholos , a round building close to the Bouleuterion, built c. 470 BC by Cimon , which served as the Prytaneion ... more details
meals at the town hall or prytaneion and front row seats at festivals such as the Lenaia and City ... as the sort of place where Cleon fishes for people he can put on trial in Athens line 262 Prytaneion ... who never stole food from the prytaneion unlike Cleon line283 . He is mentioned again in two ... at the prytaneion line 574 . Cunna and Salabaccho Two courtesans, they are considered by Cleon to be great ... more details
Refimprove date August 2011 Ancient Greek units of measurement varied according to location and epoch. Systems of ancient weights and measures evolved as needs changed Solon and other lawgivers also reformed them en bloc . cn date December 2011 Some units of measurement were found to be convenient for trade within the Mediterranean region and these units became increasingly common to different city states. The calibration and use of measuring devices became more sophisticated. By about 500 BC, Athens had a central depository of official weights and measures, the Prytaneion Tholos.2C Athens Tholos , where merchants were required to test their measuring devices against official standards. cn date December 2011 Length Some Greek measures of length were named after parts of the body, such as the lang grc daktylos, plural daktyloi or finger, and the lang grc pous, plural podes or foot. The values of the units varied according to location and epoch e.g., in Aegina a pous was approximately convert 333 mm abbr on , whereas in Athens Attica it was about convert 296 mm abbr on , ref name measures but the relative proportions were generally the same throughout the Greek world. Different values are found in different sources Hutton 1795 gives convert 12.084 in for the Greek foot, ref name hutton while Smith 1851 gives convert 12.135 in abbr on . ref name smith class wikitable style margin 1em auto 1em auto Smaller units of length Unit Greek name Equal to Metric equivalent Description daktylos lang grc align right 19.3  mm  finger kondylos lang grc align right 2 daktyloi align right 38.5  mm  palaist or d ron lang grc , lang grc align right 4 daktyloi align right 77.1  mm  palm dichas or h mipodion lang grc , lang grc align right 8 daktyloi align right 154.1  mm  half foot lichas lang grc align right 10 daktyloi align right 192.6  mm  orthod ron lang grc align ... more details