
Plaka
As soon as you start walking around Plaka 's stone-paved, narrow streets, you will have the feeling that you are traveling back in time. This is Athens oldest and, thanks to the restoration efforts which went into its buildings in recent years, most picturesque neighborhood. You will be delighted by the beauty of the neo-classical colors of its houses, their architecture, their lovingly tended little gardens, the elegance, and the total atmosphere of the area. In Plaka, even the air is different; lighter, clearer, scented, like a gift from the gods. When you decide to take a walk around it be sure to bring a map along, because Plaka is a labyrinth and you may get the feeling that you are lost in its maze of narrow streets and alley ways. No need for alarm though. It is easy to orientate yourself: uphill is the Acropolis and downhill are Syntagma and Monastiraki.
PHILOMOUSOU ETAIRIAS SQUAREPlaka's central square was named after the Philomousos
Etairia ( You will find the square at the crossroads of
Kydathenaeon, Farmaki, Olympiou Dios and Anghelou Geronda Streets. KYDATHENAEON STREET The Children's Museum, a child's paradise. In its
attic you can see a reconstructed room complete with old furniture, radio and heater of an
old Athenian house.
Just outside the eastern side of the Roman Agora you will come across the octagonal monument, Andronikos Kyristes' clock. Built during the 1st century BC, housed an hydraulic clock. Each of its eight sides was decorated with representations of the eight winds. That is why the monument was nicknamed Aerides (winds) TOWARDS ACROPOLIS The Monument of LysikratesIn ancient Athens the staging of theatrical performances in the theater of Dionysos was sponsored by wealthy citizens called choregoi. The choregos who sponsored the best performance of the year was presented with a prize by the city. When wealthy Lysikrates won the prize (334 BC) he decided to build a monument to house it where it remains to this day. Its construction by Lysikrates was only the beginning of the monument's long and eventful story. In 1658 a Capuchin monastery was founded here by French friars of that order and in 1669 the monument was bought by them. It was in this monastery that Lord Byron stayed during his second visit to Greece. It was in its gardens that in 1818 the first tomato plant in Greece grew after Father Francis brought the seeds from abroad. In 1829 a foreign traveler in Greece was granted permission by the friars to take the monument with him but fortunately it proved too heavy. Later, Lord Elgin put his mind to the same task but was again stopped, this time by the monks. NEAR PLAKA The
Olympieion.
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Greek Folk Art Museum
The rich collections in this Museum cover the period from 1650 to the present. They
include textiles, embroideries, costumes, silverware and puppets. Also folk paintings,
works by Theofilos Hadjimichael, wood and stone carvings.
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