Visit to Athens acropolis
General admission is 12 euros
Students 6 euros
EU students free
Admission is free for all on Sundays from 1 November to 31 March.
The same ticket also covers:
- The Acropolis Museum
- Ancient Agora
- The Theatre of Dionysos
- The Roman Agora
- Kerameikos
- The Temple of Olympian Zeus
The ticket is valid for four days.
Once inside the site, it’s quite a climb for about fifteen minutes until you reach the Parthenon. There are no refreshments available but there is a drinking fountain next to the old museum building by the entrance to the toilets.
From the viewpoint where the Greek flag flies, you can see:
- Ahead to the left, Lykavitos Hill
- Straight ahead, the creamy brown parliament building next to Syntagma Square
- Ahead to the right, the stadium, reconstructed for the 1896 Olympic Games, Hadrian’s Arch and the Temple of Olympian Zeus.
The visit to the Acropolis – excluding the museum – takes about one hour.
From the exit gate, the path straight ahead leads to the souvenir shop, snack bar and main ticket office.
The metro is back to the left.
The path down to the right leads to the Ancient Agora.

The greatest and finest sanctuary of ancient Athens,
dedicated primarily to its patron, the goddess Athena, dominates
the centre of the modern city from the rocky crag known as the
Acropolis. The most celebrated myths of ancient Athens, its
greatest religious festivals, earliest cults and several
decisive events in the city's history are all connected to this
sacred precinct. The monuments of the Acropolis stand in harmony
with their natural setting. These unique masterpieces of ancient
architecture combine different orders and styles of Classical
art in a most innovative manner and have influenced art and
culture for many centuries. The Acropolis of the fifth century
BC is the most accurate reflection of the splendour, power and
wealth of Athens at its greatest peak, the golden age of
Perikles.
Pottery sherds of the Neolithic period (4000/3500-3000 BC) and,
from near the Erechtheion, of the Early and Middle Bronze Age,
show that the hill was inhabited from a very early period. A
fortification wall was built around it in the thirteenth century
BC and the citadel became the centre of a Mycenaean kingdom.
This early fortification is partially preserved among the later
monuments and its history can be traced fairly accurately. The
Acropolis became a sacred precinct in the eighth century BC with
the establishment of the cult of Athena Polias, whose temple
stood at the northeast side of the hill. The sanctuary
flourished under Peisistratos in the mid-sixth century BC, when
the Panathinaia, the city's greatest religious festival, was
established and the first monumental buildings of the Acropolis
erected, among them the so-called “Old temple” and the
Hekatompedos, the predecessor of the Parthenon, both dedicated
to Athena. The shrine of Artemis Brauronia and the first
monumental propylon also date to this period. Numerous opulent
votive offerings, such as marble korai and horsemen, bronze and
terracotta statuettes, were dedicated to the sanctuary. Several
of these bear inscriptions that show the great importance of
Athena's cult in the Archaic period. After the Athenians
defeated the Persians at Marathon, in 490 BC, they began
building a very large temple, the so-called Pre-Parthenon. This
temple was still unfinished when the Persians invaded Attica in
480 BC, pillaged the Acropolis and set fire to its monuments.
The Athenians buried the surviving sculptures and votive
offerings inside natural cavities of the sacred rock, thus
forming artificial terraces, and fortified the Acropolis with
two new walls, the wall of Themistokles along the northern side
and that of Kimon on the south. Several architectural elements
of the ruined temples were incorporated in the northern wall and
are still visible today.
In the mid-fifth century BC, when the Acropolis became the seat
of the Athenian League and Athens was the greatest cultural
centre of its time, Perikles initiated an ambitious building
project which lasted the entire second half of the fifth century
BC. Athenians and foreigners alike worked on this project,
receiving a salary of one drachma a day. The most important
buildings visible on the Acropolis today - that is, the
Parthenon, the Propylaia, the Erechtheion and the temple of
Athena Nike, were erected during this period under the
supervision of the greatest architects, sculptors and artists of
their time. The temples on the north side of the Acropolis
housed primarily the earlier Athenian cults and those of the
Olympian gods, while the southern part of the Acropolis was
dedicated to the cult of Athena in her many qualities: as Polias
(patron of the city), Parthenos, Pallas, Promachos (goddess of
war), Ergane (goddess of manual labour) and Nike (Victory).
After the end of the Peloponnesian war in 404 BC and until the
first century BC no other important buildings were erected on
the Acropolis. In 27 BC a small temple dedicated to Augustus and
Rome was built east of the Parthenon. In Roman times, although
other Greek sanctuaries were pillaged and damaged, the Acropolis
retained its prestige and continued to attract the opulent
votive offerings of the faithful. After the invasion of the
Herulians in the third century AD, a new fortification wall was
built, with two gates on the west side. One of these, the
so-called Beul? Gate, named after the nineteenth century French
archaeologist who investigated it, is preserved to this day.
In subsequent centuries the monuments of the Acropolis suffered
from both natural causes and human intervention. After the
establishment of Christianity and especially in the sixth
century AD the temples were converted into Christian churches.
The Parthenon was dedicated to Parthenos Maria (the Virgin
Mary), was later re-named Panagia Athiniotissa (Virgin of
Athens) and served as the city's cathedral in the eleventh
century. The Erechtheion was dedicated to the Sotiras (Saviour)
or the Panagia, the temple of Athena Nike became a chapel and
the Propylaia an episcopal residence. The Acropolis became the
fortress of the medieval city. Under Frankish occupation
(1204-1456) the Propylaia were converted into a residence for
the Frankish ruler and in the Ottoman period (1456-1833) into
the Turkish garrison headquarters. The Venetians under F.
Morozini besieged the Acropolis in 1687 and on September 26th
bombarded and destroyed the Parthenon, which then served as a
munitions store. Lord Elgin caused further serious damage in
1801-1802 by looting the sculptural decoration of the Parthenon,
the temple of Athena Nike and the Erechtheion. The Acropolis was
handed over to the Greeks in 1822, during the Greek War of
Independence, and Odysseas Androutsos became its first Greek
garrison commander.
After the liberation of Greece, the monuments of the Acropolis
came under the care of the newly founded Greek state. Limited
investigation took place in 1835 and 1837, while in 1885-1890
the site was systematically excavated under P. Kavvadias. In the
early twentieth century N. Balanos headed the first large-scale
restoration project. A Committee for the Conservation of the
Monuments on the Acropolis was created in 1975 with the aim to
plan and undertake large-scale conservation and restoration on
the Acropolis. The project, conducted by the Service of
Restoration of the Monuments of the Acropolis in collaboration
with the First Ephorate of Prehistoric and Classical
Antiquities, is still in progress.
Text and photos courtesy of http://odysseus.culture.gr/h/3/eh351.jsp?obj_id=2384
