The Parthenon, perhaps the most celebrated example of Classical Greek architecture, was only the first of a series of remarkable buildings to be constructed atop the Athenian Acropolis in the wake of the Persian Wars. Led by the renowned statesman Pericles, the city-state embarked on an ambitious rebuilding program which replaced all that had been razed by the Persians. The new complex, while dedicated to the gods and the legends that surrounded the Acropolis, were as much a declaration of Athens’ glory as they were places of worship – monuments to a people who had risen from the ashes of a war to become the most powerful and prosperous state in the ancient world.
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AD Classics: Acropolis of Athens / Ictinus, Callicrates, Mnesikles and Phidias
https://www.archdaily.com/804921/ad-classics-acropolis-athens-ictinus-callicrates-mnesikles-phidiasLuke Fiederer
AD Classics: The Parthenon / Ictinus and Callicrates
It is unsurprising that Athens, the city widely considered to be the cradle of Western civilization, would have made as celebrated a contribution to architecture as it has to countless other human pursuits. Built on a hilltop above the contemporary city, the weathered marble complex known as the Acropolis stands as a faded remnant from the former city-state’s ancient glory years, surrounded by the products of the centuries that followed. The greatest of these landmarks, the Parthenon, captures an age long past when Athens was the wealthiest and most powerful city-state in Greece and beyond.
https://www.archdaily.com/803931/ad-classics-the-parthenon-ancient-greece-ictinus-callicratesLuke Fiederer