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![]() When the time came for their showdown, Poseidon struck the rock of the Acropolis with his trident and at that point a horse sprang out among with rushing water. Athena replied by striking the rock right next to it with her spear and the first olive tree sprang forth. The gods finally declared Athena as the victress and so she became the protectress of the town, which took her name. | |
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| Attica is also connected to the goddess Demeter and her daughter Persephone whom Hades abducted in order to make her his wife. During the goddess' desperate quest for her daughter, she was given hospitality at the home of Keleos, the King of Eleusis. In gratitude for the hospitality Keleos had offered her, Demeter taught the inhabitants of Eleusis how to cultivate the earth. At the site where Athenians first encountered the goddess, a temple was built, in which the Eleusinian Mysteries were conducted in her honor. | ||
| The hero of Athens was Theseus, a historical person, but with a mythical dimension. The life of Theseus was laying between the myth and reality. | ||
He was considered as a demigod, who accomplished amazing feats, with his incredible physical strength and his free spirit. To him is attributed the act of uniting the small settlements of the area and the creation of a single town, Athens. |
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| This act was celebrated with great processions and contests called the Panathenaia. Theseus had also a strange relationship with Cape Sounion area. | ||
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| After their settlement, Attica was divided into separate small towns which made their own, independent decisions and only held consultations with the king in times of war. Then Kekrops appeared, and he is considered to be the first king of Athens. His successors were Pandion, Erecheus, Aegeus and finally Theseus. | ||
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The military command was held by a chief, who was named for life, the executive authority was assumed by an Archon and the enactment of laws by a group of legislators. With the gradual decline of the monarchy, an aristocratic regime was established by the nobles and landowners who held authority in their hands. In the middle of the 7th century BC there were a large number of social and political disturbances in Athens. |
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| One of the main factors in Athen's course toward democracy was the tyrant Peisistratos who ruled the city during the 6th century BC. His concern for the arts and sciences created a cultural explosion, which was socially effective. His policies also led to a vast increase of the output of the mines at Lavrio in the 5th century BC, as well as to the rapid growth of the town's commerce. | ||
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| citizens institutions to consolidate the power that would stop the extension of the Persian Empire onto the European continent. At the beginning of the 5th century BC the Persians decided on a campaign against the Greeks, spurred mainly by the uprising of the Greeks in Ionia. The conquest of the Greek peninsula and the Aegean Sea, however, would be stopped by their defeat in 490 BC at Marathon. Athens, led in this battle by Miltiades, showed its superiority over the rest of the Greeks. The Persians 10 years later tried again to conquest Greece, this time lead by Xerxes the successor to the Persian throne. They were once more defeated by the Athenians at the naval battle of Salamis (480 BC). This time the Athenians were leaded by Themistocles and Aristides the Just. | ||
Pericles reformed many of the laws of Solon, strengthened democracy, the army and the fleet, increased the wages of the judges, established free theater for the people and under his guidance Athens reached its zenith. |
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| Pericles, who managed to surpass even the brilliance of Athens at its greatest moment, started the construction of the Parthenon and the Propylaia of Acropolis. The contribution of Athens to the cultural and political sector, constituted the basis of European civilization. | |
The Peloponnesian Wars (431- 404 BC), however, destroyed the city, but showing remarkable determination reorganized itself and again dominated the economic and cultural life of the 4th century BC with world's greatest philosophers such as Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle. |
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| In 399 BC the Athenian democracy did the greatest mistake in its history with the death of Socrates! The rise of the power of Alexander the Great, as well as the Roman Empire later, did not lessen Athens' intellectual dominance in the world. A large scale of public works were carried out in the town. | ||
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The Franks occupied the town in the 13th century and the Turks in 1456. In 1821, the history and the strategic importance of the location led to the regeneration of the town and soon became the capital of Greece. By 1896 its development was so advanced that it hosted the revived Ïlympic Games. Today Athens looks into the future proud of its glory! |
Photos and informations taken from "Athens - Attica" (Toubis Editions) (C)Copyright for the Web: Greekislands.com |
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