Here's our highly selective list of the very best things to see and do.
Acropolis. If you do nothing else while in Athens, visit the Acropolis, or
"High City," a testament to the Golden Age of Greece. Perched atop a rocky
outcrop, it dominates the modern city and is Greece's most famous symbol. Foundations were
laid here for a temple honoring Athena in 490 BC but were destroyed by the Persians;
following the Susa peace treaty, Pericles undertook reconstruction on a monumental scale.
Buildings include the architecturally complex Erechtheion temple, most sacred of the
Acropolis shrines, and the Parthenon, built between 447 and 438 BC.
Dionyssiou Areopagitou, tel.
01/321-0219. Admission: 2,000 dr., joint ticket for Acropolis and Acropolis Museum. Open
weekdays 8-6:30 (winter 8-4), weekends 8-3.
Acropolis Museum. Tucked in the southeast corner of the Acropolis site, the
museum has nine rooms filled with sculptures found on the Acropolis plus the votive
offerings to Athena. It houses some superb works, including the Caryatids and a large
collection of colored korai (statues of women dedicated to the goddess Athena).
Acropolis, tel.
01/323-6665. Admission: 2,000 dr., joint ticket for Acropolis and Acropolis Museum. Open
Mon. 11:30-6:30, Tues.-Fri. 8-6:30, weekends 8:30-3; winter hours vary.
Ancient Agora. This marketplace was the hub of ancient Athens: Here Socrates met
with his students while merchants squabbled over the price of olive oil, the Assembly met
before moving to the Pnyx, and locals gathered to talk about current events. The Agora
first became important under Solon (6th century BC), who founded Athenian democracy;
construction continued for almost a millennium. Today, the site's sprawling confusion of
stones, slabs, and foundations is dominated by the best-preserved Doric temple in Greece,
the Hephaistion, built during the 5th century BC, and the impressive reconstructed Stoa of
Attalos II, which houses the Museum of the Agora Excavations.
Three entrances: from Monastiraki on
Adrianou; from Thission on Apostolou Pavlou; and descending from Acropolis on Ayios
Apostoli, tel. 01/321-0185. Admission: 1,200 dr. Open Tues.-Sun. 8:30-3.
Archaeological Museum. Besides an admirable collection of funerary stelae, urns,
monuments, and korai, this museum's prize exhibits include the exquisitely made Piraeus
Kouros, probably a cult statue of Apollo from the 6th century BC; a 4th-century bronze
of a pensive Athena; and two bronze versions of Artemis.
Harilaou Trikoupi 31, Piraeus, tel.
01/452-1598. Admission: 500 dr. Open Tues.-Sun. 8:30-3.
Byzantine Museum. The only museum in Europe concentrating exclusively on
Byzantine art, this collection is housed in the mansion of the Duchess of Plaisance, built
from 1840 to 1848 by Kleanthis. Rooms are arranged to look like Greek churches of
different eras, and the upper floor contains mostly icons, many quite valuable. Much of
the museum is closed for restoration.
Vasilissis Sofias 22, tel. 01/721-1027. Admission: 500 dr. during
restoration. Open Tues.-Sun. 8:30-3.
Goulandris Cycladic Museum. The museum has an outstanding collection dating from
the Bronze Age, with especially notable slender marble figurines, the primitive Cycladic
form of the Great Earth Mother. A new wing for special exhibits opened in 1994 in the
gorgeous Stathatos Mansion.
Neofitou Douka 4 and Irodotou 1, tel. 01/722-8321 through 01/722-8323.
Admission: 400 dr. Open weekdays 10-4, Sat. 10-3.
Little Mitropolis. This church snuggles up to the pompous Mitropolis, the
ornate Cathedral of Athens. Also called Panayia Gorgoepikoos (the "Virgin Who Answers
Prayers Quickly"), Little Mitropolis dates to the 12th century; its outer walls are
covered with reliefs dating from the Classical to the Byzantine periods. Reliefs of
figures and fanciful zodiac signs decorate slabs set above the entrance. Most of the
paintings inside have been destroyed, but the famous 13th- to 14th-century Virgin, said to
perform miracles, remains.
Cathedral Square.
Mikrolimano. The most touristy part of the port of Piraeus, this graceful small
harbor is known to old-timers as Turkolimano. Sitting under the awnings by the sea and
watching the gaily painted fishing boats is the next best thing to hopping a ferry for the
islands. During high season, it's a good idea to have lunch here, as many of the
restaurants lining the harbor are packed in the evening. Akti Koumoudourou.
Monastiraki Square. This former Turkish bazaar retains Oriental vestiges from
the 400-year period when Greece was subject to the Ottoman Empire. The square takes its
name from Panayia Pantanassa Church, commonly called Monastiraki (Little
Monastery). It once flourished as an extensive convent, perhaps dating to the 10th
century. The square's focal point, the Tzistarakis Mosque (1759) houses the Museum
of Traditional Greek Ceramics.
Just south of intersection of Ermou and Athinas, tel. 01/324-2066.
Museum admission: 500 dr. Museum open Wed.-Mon. 9:30-2:30.
Mt. Lycabettus. A steeply inclined teleferique (funicular) takes visitors
to the summit of Athens' highest hill, crowned by whitewashed Ayios Georgios chapel
with a bell tower donated by Queen Olga. On the side of the hill, near the I Prasini Tenta
café, a small shrine to Ayios Isidoros is built into a cave. From Mt. Lycabettus,
you can watch the sunset and then turn in the other direction to see the moon rise over
Hymettus.
Funicular
at Aristippou and Ploutarchou, tel. 01/722-7065. Admission: 800 dr. round-trip, 400 dr.
one-way. Open Fri.-Wed. 8:45 AM-midnight, Thurs. 10:30 AM-midnight.
National Archaeological Museum. Too huge to cover in one day, this magnificent
collection extends from Neolithic to Roman times, with sculpture, ceramics, jewelry, and
frescoes, to name but a little. The most celebrated finds are in the central Hall of
Mycenaean Antiquities, Room 4, the stunning gold treasures from Schliemann's excavations
of Mycenae in 1876.
28 Patission 44, tel. 01/821-7717. Admission: 2,000 dr. Open Mon. 12:30-7 (winter 11-5),
Tues.-Fri. 8-7 (winter 8-5), weekends 8:30-3.
Plaka and Anafiotika. Plaka is the main residential and tourist district of
Athens, inhabited since prehistoric times. The early 1980s witnessed a renewal of the
area, which had been taken over by noisy discos and tacky pensions. The section of Plaka
known as Anafiotika is the closest thing to a Cycladic village in the city. In the shadow
of the Acropolis and still populated by many descendants of the original Anafi islanders
who settled here, Anafiotika is an enchanting area of simple stone houses, nestled right
into the bedrock, some changed little over the years, others stunningly restored.
On northeast slope of
Acropolis rock.
Syntagma (Constitution) Square. This is the center of modern Athens. At the top
of the square stands Parliament, formerly the royal palace, completed in 1838 for
the new monarchy. Here you can watch the changing of the Evzone guard at the Tomb
of the Unknown Soldier, which happens every day at different times, except on Sunday,
when it is scheduled for 11:25 AM.
Where Vasilissis Sofias becomes Panepistimiou.
Tower of the Winds. The octagonal Tower of the Winds (Aerides), in the Roman
Agora, is the most appealing and well preserved of the Roman monuments of Athens, keeping
time since the 1st century BC. It was originally a sundial, water clock, and weather vane
topped by a bronze Triton with a metal rod in his hand, which pointed in the direction of
the wind. Expressive reliefs around the octagonal tower personify the eight winds, called Oi
Aerides (the Windy Ones) by Athenians.
Pelopida and Eolou, tel. 01/324-5220. Admission: 600 dr. Open
Tues.-Sun. 8:30-3.