[Agora Webpage] Overview: The Notebooks

http://agathe.gr/overview/the_notebooks.html

The Notebooks The process of excavating an archaeological site is essentially destructive but the irrevocable features are preserved in a notebook. The excavator records his thoughts and observations, ... In the walls was found a piece of coarse moulding: Pentelic marble.” ... “By the end of the day most of the walls above the first floor of House 21 had been razed. From the walls: the thigh of a statue of Pentelic marble, rather micaceous.

[Agora Webpage] AgoraPicBk 16 2003: Aiakeion

http://agathe.gr/guide/aiakeion.html

Aiakeion Immediately to the east are the poor remains of a large square enclosure, open to the sky and measuring about 30 meters on a side. Built in the early 5th century, at the command of the oracle ... Aiakos was one of the judges of the underworld and the results of judgments handed down in Athens were displayed on the walls of the building.

[Agora Webpage] Overview: The Church of the Holy Apostles

http://agathe.gr/overview/the_church_of_the_holy_apostles.html

The Church of the Holy Apostles Though several churches were removed in the clearing of the site for excavation, it was decided to save and restore the little Byzantine church dedicated to the Holy Apostles ... On February 22 two workmen began stripping the plaster from the walls to determine the extent of the original walls. ... The structural elements of the church—the walls, columns, and vaulting—had been restored by late summer of 1955. ... Frescoes from the Church of Aghios Spyridon were reset in the walls of the restored narthex.

[Agora Webpage] AgoraPicBk 16 2003: Southwest Area

http://agathe.gr/guide/southwest_area.html

Southwest Area - Industry and Houses Leaving the area of the boundary stone, one can head southwest up a valley leading toward the Pnyx, meeting place of the Athenian assembly. Here are the complex remains ... These Athenian private houses were small, turning their blank faces to the street and deriving light and fresh air from an interior courtyard. Walls were of sun-dried mudbrick on stone foundations, with tiled roofs; most floors were of beaten clay with only occasional mosaics. ... The other walls and wells represent private houses dating from the 5th century B.C. to the Byzantine period.

[Agora Webpage] AgoraPicBk 16 2003: Bouleuterion

http://agathe.gr/guide/bouleuterion.html

Bouleuterion Just uphill from the Tholos was the Bouleuterion, meeting place of the boule, or senate. Five hundred Athenian citizens were chosen by lot to serve for a year, and met in this building every ... The remains are in a miserable state of preservation, with only the outlines of walls discernible in trenches sunk into bedrock.

[Agora Webpage] AgoraPicBk 16 2003: Church of the Holy Apostles

http://agathe.gr/guide/church_of_the_holy_apostles.html

Church of the Holy Apostles Several churches were removed following the excavation of the modern neighborhoods overlying the Agora. The Church of the Holy Apostles, because of its early date, was deemed ... The outer walls are adorned with decorative brickwork known as "kufic" (Arabic writing developed in the city of Kufa).

[Agora Webpage] AgoraPicBk 16 2003: Southwest Fountain House

http://agathe.gr/guide/southwest_fountain_house.html

Southwest Fountain House Closer to the agora proper a row of five public buildings lined the south side of the square in the Classical period (Fig. 29, 36). They comprise several important monuments, though ... Low parapets set between columns allowed access to the water, delivered to the fountain by means of channels set within the thickness of the walls. One of the largest fountains of the city, the building is dated on the basis of pottery to the years around 350–325 B.C.

[Agora Webpage] AgoraPicBk 16 2003: Stoa of Attalos

http://agathe.gr/guide/stoa_of_attalos.html

Stoa of Attalos Lining the east side of the Agora square is the Stoa of Attalos (Fig. 47), built during the reign of Attalos II of Pergamon (159–138 B.C.), who studied in Athens under the philosopher Karneades ... White Pentelic and blue Hymettian marble were used, along with limestone for the walls. The facetting of the lower part of the outer colonnade reflects the intense use of the building; lots of people and goods will have passed through, rubbing and banging against the columns, so there was little point in fluting them at the level of potential damage and wear.