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Its architectural peculiarities were the result of the endeavor to leave certain points with religious meaning untouched as well as the as the endeavor to have a variety of uncommon forms of worship coexisting in the building at one and the same time. |
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| It was pillared building with six columns on the facade. Internally divided by a transverse wall into two parts which do not communicate with each other. The two sections of the shrine had a difference of three meters in height and did not communicate with each other. The west side of the building was not enclosed by a wall but had five openings separated by railings with four intermediary Ionic columns which during the Roman period were converted into windows. | ||
On the north side of the west part of the structure a four-pillared entrance porch was fashioned in a "u" shape with six Ionic columns. |
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| The entrance door from the north porch into the west apartment of the shrine was particularly well crafted. The door, adorned with repeated and profusely decorated motifs, large rosettes and two cornices to the left and the right, is a marvelous example of what the Ionic style was like at the end of the 5th century BC. | ||
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| The motifs on the frieze have not been clearly deciphered. They most probably reflected the local myths of the town. On the pediments were found the birth of Athena from Zeus' head and the dispute of Poseidon and Athena over the rule of Attica. Near the Erectheion is the entrance or the exit of the passage to the Cave of Aglauron Athena where according to mythology the goddess' sacred snake entered and left the Acropolis. |
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Photos and informations taken from "Athens - Attica" (Toubis Editions) (C)Copyright for the Web: Greekislands.com |
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