File:The Stoa of Eumenes in Athens. 2nd cent. B.C.jpg

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English: The Stoa of Eumenesis placed between the Theatre of Dionysos and the Odeion of Herodes Atticus, along the Peripatos (the ancient road around the Acropolis). The king of Pergamon, Eumenes II, donated this Stoa to the Athenian city, during his sovereignty, which endured from 197 B.C. to 159 B.C. This elongated building, 163 m. long and 17,65 wide, had two storeys. The ground floor façade was formed from a colonnade of 64 doric columns, while the interior colonnade consisted of 32 columns of Ionic order. On the upper storey, the exterior colonnade had the equivalent number of double semi-columns of Ionic order and the interior columns had the rather rare type of capitals, the Pergamene ones. Nowadays, a visible part of the monument is the north retaining wall, reinforced with buttresses connected by semicircular arches. This wall was constructed in order to hold the north earth embankment in place and to support the Peripatos. Today are also visible: the Krene (spring) included in the north wall, the stylobates of the inner colonnade on the ground floor and the foundation of the exterior colonnade. Besides, a part of the substructure of the east wall of the stoa has also survived, in addition to the west wall, who suffered some changes during the Roman period, when the Odeion of Herodes Atticus was erected. Text CREDIT: Inscription placed at the archaeological site.
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Author George E. Koronaios

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current18:16, 7 April 2018Thumbnail for version as of 18:16, 7 April 20186,000 × 4,000 (11.65 MB)George E. Koronaios (talk | contribs)User created page with UploadWizard

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