Hellenistic and Roman times
Athens in Hellenistic and Roman times depended for its embellishment less on its own resources than on the generosity of foreign princes. One of the Ptolemies (rulers of Egypt) gave a gymnasium, erected near the sanctuary of Theseus, and the Ptolemies were probably also instrumental in the founding of the sanctuary of the Egyptian gods Isis and Serapis. More important were the donations of the Attalids of Pergamum (a dynasty of Asia Minor). Eumenes II (197–159 bce) gave a large two-story colonnade on the south slope of the Acropolis near the theatre. His brother Attalus II (159–138 bce), who had studied at Athens under the philosopher Carneades, head of the New Academy, likewise gave a colonnade. This was a large, elaborate, two-story building more than 350 feet long with a row of shops at the rear. It was located on the eastern side of the Agora and has been reconstructed in modern times (1953–56) to serve as the museum of the Agora excavations. The Stoa of Attalus was the first element in a large-scale reconstruction of the Agora. It was followed in quick succession by three buildings, the Middle Stoa, the East Building, and the South Stoa, which together formed a separate South Square.
The capture of Athens by the Roman general Sulla in 86 bce was accompanied by great slaughter and much destruction of private houses, but the only public building to be destroyed was the Odeum of Pericles, burned by the defenders lest its timbers be used by the enemy. The Odeum was rebuilt a few years later through the generosity of King Ariobarzanes of Cappadocia.
Under the Roman Empire, Athens enjoyed imperial favour. A spacious market for the sale of oil and other commodities was laid out east of the old Agora with funds originally provided by Julius Caesar and supplemented by the emperor Augustus. In the old Agora itself, a new odeum, or concert hall, was built in the middle of the square by Marcus Agrippa, the emperor’s son-in-law and one of his chief lieutenants. A large building, perhaps a lawcourt, was also erected at the northeast corner. At the southeast corner of the Agora, a handsome library was erected about 100 ce, the gift of one T. Flavius Pantainus and his family. It was decorated with a group of marble sculptures representing Homer flanked by the Iliad and the Odyssey. On the Acropolis a small round temple was erected to the goddess Roma and the emperor Augustus.
The emperor Hadrian (117–138 ce) completed the great temple of Olympian Zeus, started more than 600 years earlier by the Peisistratids. This temple formed the chief ornament of the new eastern suburb of Athens, and Hadrian gave the area a monumental entrance through a gateway, the inscriptions on which proclaimed, on one side, “This is the Athens of Theseus, the old city” and, on the other, “This is the city of Hadrian, not of Theseus.” Hadrian also built a library, a gymnasium, and a pantheon (a sanctuary of all the gods). His aqueduct, which brought water from the mountains to the north, has been reconditioned and still serves the modern city.
In the reign of Valerian (253–260 ce), the walls of Athens, which had been neglected since Sulla’s capture of the city in 86 bce and had fallen into ruin, were rebuilt, and the circuit was extended to include the new suburb northeast of the Olympieion. This was done because of the threat of a barbarian invasion, but when that invasion came, in 267 ce, the walls were of no avail. The Heruli, a Germanic people from northern Europe, easily captured Athens, and, though the historian P. Herennius Dexippus rallied 2,000 men on the city outskirts, they could only resort to guerrilla tactics. The lower town was sacked, and all the buildings of the Agora were burned and destroyed. The Acropolis, however, may have held out; at least there is no evidence of extensive damage at this time.
This sack of Athens is comparable only to that by the Persians in 480 bce, but now the reaction was quite different. The Athenians abandoned the outer circuit and established a new and much smaller line north of the Acropolis, leaving even the Agora area outside the walls. This new wall, which, on the evidence of coins, was built in the reign of Probus (276–282 ce), consisted of material taken from ruined buildings in the lower town.
Athens remained confined within this narrow circuit for several generations, but in the 4th and 5th centuries it experienced a revival. The old outer circuit of the walls was restored, and many new buildings were erected. Athens at this time was still the cultural capital of the Greek world and a stronghold of paganism. Its schools of philosophy, which retained their ancient names, however different their outlooks may have been, flourished, attracting students from all parts. These included the emperor Julian the Apostate and two Fathers of the Church, Basil and Gregory of Nazianzus. While the schools existed, Athens remained a place of consequence, but, when they were closed by the emperor Justinian in 529 ce, Athens sank to the level of a small provincial town. Power and wealth had long since moved to Constantinople, the new centre of the Greek world.
The Byzantine and Turkish periods
Christianity started early in Athens, with the visit of the Apostle Paul in 51 ce and the conversion of Dionysius the Areopagite, a former archon and member of the Court of the Areopagus that had heard Paul’s defense of his teachings. The little Christian community did not flourish, however, and Athens remained a stronghold of older ways. In the 5th and 6th centuries, however, after the formal establishment of Christianity and the abolition of pagan worship, churches began to be built. These were sometimes ancient temples converted to Christian worship—for example, the Parthenon, the Erechtheum, and the temple of Hephaestus (the Theseum). Newly built churches had a basilica plan and a wooden roof, but these now survive only in foundations. In all, some 22 churches of this period are known.
The 7th–10th century was a dark time for Athens. The city is almost never mentioned in the history of the period, and archaeological remains are few. In the 11th and 12th centuries a measure of prosperity returned, and the taste of Athenians then can be gauged by the number of small stone and brick churches surviving, built on the Byzantine cross-in-square plan, such as the Kapnikaréa and those of St. Theodore and the Holy Apostles.
Athens fell to the Crusaders in 1204 and remained in Latin hands for 250 years. The town’s outward appearance changed little, except that the Parthenon—now a Roman Catholic, not an Orthodox, cathedral—received a bell tower.
After the siege of Athens by the Turks in 1456–58, the Parthenon became a mosque (1460), and its bell tower was turned into a minaret. Other mosques were built in the lower town, but in general the age of gunpowder was to prove disastrous for Athenian architecture, especially on the Acropolis, which was still virtually intact as late as the mid-17th century.
Athens after Greek independence
Greek insurgents surprised the city in 1821 and captured the Acropolis in 1822, but in 1826 Athens again fell into the hands of the Turks, who bombarded and took the Acropolis in the following year (the Erechtheum suffered greatly, and the monument of Thrasyllus was destroyed). The Turks remained in possession of the Acropolis until 1833, when Athens was chosen as the capital of the new kingdom of Greece. Its subsequent history is that of the kingdom.
In World War I, Athens was the scene of the incidents of 1916–17 that led to the deposition of King Constantine by the Allies. It was occupied by German troops during World War II, but the city was spared aerial bombardment.
In the second half of the 20th century, the population of the Athens metropolitan area swelled, though the growth was concentrated in suburban and exurban communities. By the 1980s Athens had become known for having some of the worst traffic congestion and concomitant air pollution of any European city. The failure of public transportation to alleviate these problems was one of the reasons cited for the failure of Athens’s bid to host the 1996 Olympic Games. In securing the hosting of the 2004 Games, Athens undertook a massive transportation infrastructure improvement effort. Some observers doubted that the city would be able to complete its transportation upgrade and civic improvements in time for the Games, but a new international airport was opened in 2001, the metropolitan transit system was expanded, a new tram system was up and running, and the cement was dry on the new sports venues before the opening ceremony. Athens also met the challenge of providing shelter and sustenance for the migrants and refugees displaced by turmoil in Africa and the Middle East in the mid-2010s.
Although Greece’s national sport is football (soccer), basketball has rapidly increased in popularity, especially after Athens-born Giannis Antetokounmpo became one of the most dominant basketball players in the world and led the Milwaukee Bucks of the NBA to a championship in 2021.
Eugene Vanderpool The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica