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the theatre of Dionysos
According to tradition it was Thespis who first travelled the land with his company and performed the
first drama in honour of the god Dionysos. When the Great Dionysian Festival in Athens attracted more and more
spectators, the site south of the acropolis was chosen. In the great times of Aischylos, Sophokles, Euripides,
Aristophanes and others, whose masterpieces were first performed here, the spectators probably still sat on wooden
benches. - The next architectural structures were modified by Lycourgos around 330 BC to accomodate 17,000 spectators on
67 rows of stone benches. Many of the ruins visible today belong to this period. |
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the odeion of Herodes Atticus
The odeion of Herodes Atticus was the third odeion to be built in Athens, after the odeion of
Perikles and that of Agrippa. It was erected by Herodes in memory of his wife Regilla, who died in AD 160. It is shaped
as a semicircular theatre with a radius of 38 m and could seat ca. 5,000 people. The massive facade was 28 m high.
The odeion is again used today for concerts and theatrical performances. |
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