Loading cities...
Loading cities...
Loading city...
43 places
The Acropolis is the defining symbol of Athens and Western civilization — a rocky hilltop crowned by the Parthenon and four other ancient temples. Rising 150 meters above the city, it has been sacred ground for over 3,000 years.
The Hammam Baths Athens is a restored Ottoman-era bathhouse offering traditional hammam experiences in a beautifully renovated historic building with marble rooms, steam, and massage.
The Panathenaic Stadium (Kallimarmaro) is the only stadium in the world built entirely of marble. It hosted the first modern Olympic Games in 1896 and sits in the exact spot of a 4th-century BC Greek stadium.
The Erechtheion is an elegant and unusual ancient Greek temple on the Acropolis, famous for its Porch of the Caryatids — six draped female figures serving as columns — and its asymmetric design accommodating multiple shrines on uneven ground.
Areopagus Hill (Mars Hill) is a bare, slippery marble outcrop northwest of the Acropolis, once the site of Athens' ancient high court. Today it's the city's most popular sunset gathering spot, where crowds sit on the rock to watch the sun sink.
The Ancient Agora was the civic heart of classical Athens — the marketplace, political forum, and social hub where Socrates debated, democracy was practiced, and citizens gathered. The remarkably intact Temple of Hephaestus presides over the ruins.
The Theatre of Dionysus is the birthplace of Greek tragedy, built into the southern slope of the Acropolis in the 6th century BC. The plays of Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, and Aristophanes were first performed here.
The Acropolis Museum is a world-class museum built directly over an archaeological excavation, displaying the original sculptures, friezes, and artifacts from the Acropolis. Its top-floor Parthenon Gallery is aligned precisely with the temple above.
The Temple of Olympian Zeus (Olympieion) was the largest temple in ancient Greece, dedicated to the king of the gods. Fifteen of its original 104 colossal Corinthian columns still stand, each 17 meters tall.
The National Archaeological Museum is the largest museum in Greece and one of the most important archaeological museums in the world, with collections spanning from the Neolithic era through late antiquity.
The Tower of the Winds is an octagonal Pentelic marble clocktower built in the 1st century BC, functioning as a sundial, water clock, and weather vane. It's one of the world's oldest meteorological stations.
The Odeon of Herodes Atticus is a magnificently preserved Roman amphitheatre on the southwestern slope of the Acropolis, still used for performances during the Athens & Epidaurus Festival each summer.
Lycabettus Hill is the highest point in central Athens at 277 meters, a pine-covered limestone peak offering the most spectacular 360-degree panorama in the city — from the Acropolis to the Saronic Gulf islands.
Plaka is the oldest continuously inhabited neighborhood of Athens, a charming maze of neoclassical houses, flower-draped balconies, and narrow pedestrian streets cascading down the northern slope of the Acropolis.
Syntagma (Constitution) Square is the central square of modern Athens, dominated by the Hellenic Parliament building and the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, guarded day and night by the elite Evzones presidential guard.
Cape Sounion is a dramatic clifftop promontory 70 km south of Athens, crowned by the Temple of Poseidon — its 15 remaining Doric columns perched 65 meters above the Aegean Sea, creating one of Greece's most iconic sunset vistas.
Kerameikos is Athens' ancient cemetery and potter's quarter, a peaceful archaeological site with the city's oldest tombs, the Sacred Way to Eleusis, and replicas of remarkable funerary monuments.
Hadrian's Arch is a monumental Roman gateway built in 132 AD to mark the boundary between the ancient Greek city of Theseus and the new Roman quarter of Hadrian. It stands 18 meters high at the edge of the Temple of Zeus.
The Benaki Museum is Greece's finest private museum, tracing Greek culture from prehistory through the modern era in an elegant neoclassical mansion near the National Garden. Its collection spans 6,000 years.
Philopappos Hill (also called the Hill of the Muses) is a wooded elevation across from the Acropolis, offering the single best unobstructed view of the Parthenon. The 2nd-century Philopappos Monument crowns its summit.