THE BRIGHT JEWEL OF ATHENS

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One of the most popular touristic attraction of Athens (a city that undeniably has so many) is the Panathenaic stadium or else the Kallimarmaron (in greek it means beautiful marble). With a capacity of 50000 seats and its place in the centre of the city, Kallimarmaron is more than a stadium for the Greeks.

A stadium was built on the site of an ancient racecourse by the Athenian statesman Lykourgos. It was used for the first time for the celebration of the Great Panathenaia in 330/29 BC. By 144 BC, it was rebuilt in pentelic marble by an Athenian Roman senator Herodes Atticus (he also funded a number of building projects including the Odeon located on the southwest slope of Acropolis). In the late 4th A.C, Emperor Theodosius banned Hellenistic spectacles so the stadium was gradually abandoned until 1836, when archaeological excavations uncovered traces of the stadium of Herodes Atticus.

In the mid-1890s a reconstruction plan was prepared by architect A. Metaxas with the sponsoring of G. Averoff (a greek businessman). In 1896 it opened its gates and held the opening and closing ceremonies of the first modern Olympic Games. The rebuilt of the Stadium from pentelic marble was intentional so that the new stadium would resemble the ancient monument of Herodes. It is the only stadium in the world that is built entirely of marble.

Except from the Classic Marathon Race that finishes every year at the Panathenaic Stadium, various events and special ceremonies are being held there. Concerts ( like "Rock In Athens" -1985, with the participation of Depeche Mode, The Cure, The Clash, etc), the World Athletics Championships in 1997 or the Welcome Ceremony for the Hellenic National Football Team, which won the Euro 2004 Championship.







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