Athens in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
Capital of Attica, the center of Grecian refinement and
philosophy. Paul visited it in journeying from Macedonia,
and stayed sometime (Acts 17:14, etc.; FOUR-DRACHM OF
ATHENS. 1 Thessalonians 3:1). Four hills are within it, the
Acropolis, N.E., a square rock 150 feet high; W. of it is
the Areopagus. (See AREOPAGUS.) S.W. is the Pnyx, or
Assembly Hill. S. of this is the Museum Hill. The Agora
where Paul disputed was in the valley between the four. The
newsmongering taste of the people (Acts 17:21) is noticed by
their great orator Demosthenes, "Ye go about the marketplace
asking, Is there any news?"
Their pure atmosphere, open air life, and liberal
institutions, stimulated liveliness of thought. Pausanias
(1:24, sec. 3) confirms Paul's remark on their religiousness
even to superstition: "the zeal devoted by the Athenians to
the rites of the gods exceeds that of all others." (See
ALTAR; AREOPAGUS.) Dionysius the Areopagite convert of Paul
was, according to tradition, the first bishop of an Athenian
church. Theseus' temple is the most perfect of the remaining
monuments. The Parthenon or temple of Minerva, built of
Penrelic marble, 228 feet long, 102 broad, 66 high, with 8
Doric columns on each front and 17 on each side, was the
masterpiece of Athenian architecture. The colossal statue of
Minerva Promachus, Phidias' workmanship, was 70 feet high,
so as to be seen towering above the Parthenon by the mariner
in doubling Cape Suniurn. Lord Elgin deposited in the
British Museum several of the finest sculptures.
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