Showing posts with label Greek history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Greek history. Show all posts

Friday, July 12, 2013

Museums in Greece

Museums in Greece constitute a major reference point for the Greek identity where visitors have a total view of the birth and the flourishing of the ancient Greek art, the main source of inspiration for the western world, the beautiful Byzantine architecture and the folklore tradition in the 18th century spanning 6,000 years of civilization.

The museums of the Greek State host countless exhibits which span over thousands of years of human civilization, achievements and conquests. The 300 national and private museums that exist in the entire country keep a huge treasure of cultural wealth, from the Neolithic to modern times. The archeological, Byzantine and Historical museums are those which highlight the aspects of ancient and modern Greece. The most important museums in Greece are located close to the excavated sites, discovering the traces of civilizations that once prospered in and around the area.
Of major interest are the archeological museums of Delphi, Ancient Olympia, Mycenae and the Acropolis Museum. Equally important are the hidden treasures that are kept in the lesser known museums, like the ones in the Cycladic islands.

 Most of the museums in Greece are devoted to the Byzantine art owing a bewitching collection of exquisite marble architecture, mosaics and rare manuscripts. One of the most attractive exhibits from that era can be traced in Athens and Thessaloniki. The Folklore museums of Greece focus on the traditional works of art that local artists made through the ages. These include traditional uniforms, jewels, agricultural tools, furniture and great paintings. One of the museums that lead by example is the Folklore Museum of Nafplion as well as Benaki Museum in the centre of Athens. Equally interesting folklore museums can be found in many islands and villages around the country.

The National Archaeological Museum of Athens was founded in 1889 and is one of the most important Archaeological museums in the world as it houses the historical past of one of the greatest civilisations in the world .
In the museum there are findings from all the places of ancient Greece and the Greek world, the exhibits include, statues, vases, jewellery, sculpture, weapons, religious items from the Neolithic times, early Cycladic civilisation, the Minoan civilisation, the classical and Hellenistic period and the roman period.

Among the most significant items of the museum is the golden mask of Agamemnon and other treasures from Mycenae, the statue of Poseidon of Artemision, the statue of Zeus with thunder from Dodona, the lekithus of Myrrinae, the bronze statue of the riding boy , the Marathon boy, the statues of Asclepius, Demeter and Persephone,  a wonderful bronze statue of the young man from Antikythira, the statue of Aphrodite and Pan, the King Nestor's cup and the mechanism of Antikythira that it was probably used for astronomical observations.
In the museum there are also a huge collection of vases from the geometric period, a collection of frescoes and other items from the findings in Santorini (Thira) and a huge library. The Museum is located in Patission street next to the Athens Polytechnic school.

 The new museum of the Acropolis is under the south slope of Acropolis in Dionyssiou Areopagitou street. The metro station Acropolis takes you at the gate of the museum. Contains mainly pediment sculpture, reliefs and statues found on the rock of the Acropolis, which formed part of the decoration of its buildings or were dedicated to the goddess Athena. Among the latter is the unique collection in the world of statues of female figures of the archaic era known as the "Korai" with the well known archaic smile, such as the Kore of Lyons, the Kore of Naxos, the Kore of Chios, the Peploforos Kore, the Kore of Antinor, the Kore of Euthidikos, etc. From the remaining votive offering sculptures, those of outstanding interest are the Moschoforos (man carrying a calf across his shoulders), Rampin's horseman, a hunting dog, the Boy by Kritias, the head of the blonde youth, etc. There are also sphinxes, four-horse chariots and many votive reliefs such as that of Lenormant, Athena in Meditation, etc.

The museum use to be the old Parliament of Greece during the rein of King Otto, the first king of Greece after the war of independence (many Greeks refer to it as Palea Vouli (old parliament) . The building became the National historical museum of modern Greece in 1962.  Among its exhibits are items from the modern Greek history from the revolution of 1821 until the second world war. In the museum the visitor will see uniforms and weapons of the Greek revolution as well as uniforms and weapons from the Greek army during the Balkan wars and the 2 world wars. Portraits of the Greek leaders of the revolution, the dresses of King Otto and Amalia  and many other items from the modern history of Greece. The museum is at Stadiou street 13 a short walk from Syntagma square. Outside of the museum is the bronze statue of Theodoros Kolokotronis the Great general of the Greek revolution in 1821.
The Athens city Museum is about the modern history of Athens from the time that Athens became the Capital of Greece. It has many paintings, individual collections and artefacts from the the history, the culture and the way of life of the modern city of Athens from the early 19th century to the middle 20th century , is located at 7 Paparigopoulou St.