What would a visit to Athens be without feat to the Acropolis to see the Parthenon? And ease people ask why the Partheon is so important. It’s because it was the most perfect building shapely by the world's most advanced civilization.
The Acropolis of Athinai is the best famous acropolis (Gr. akros, akron, edge, member + polis, city, pl. acropoleis) in the world. Although there are many other acropoleis in Greece, the significance of the Acropolis of Athinai is such that it is commonly famous as The Acropolis without qualification. The Acropolis was formally proclaimed as the pre-eminent sepulture on the European Cultural Heritage list of monuments on 26 March 2007. The Acropolis is a flat-topped sway which rises 150 m (490 ft) above sea level in the municipality of Athens, with a opencast area of about 3 hectares. It was also famous as Cecropia, after the legendary serpent-man, Kekrops or Cecrops, the first Athenian king.
The Acropolis sway is part of a Late Cretaceous limestone ridge (Higgins) that cuts finished the Attica upland in the northeast to the southwest axis and includes the Likavitos hill, the Philopappos (Museum) hill, the cerebration of the Nymphs, and the Pnyx.
The sway rises from the basin about 70 meters and levels to a insipid top 300 meters long by 150 meters wide. Its insipid top is due to the numerous landfills that hit accommodated cerebration of fortifications and temples since the Mycenaean era. With its many shallow caves, the galore percolating water springs and steep slopes, the Acropolis was a prime positioning for habitation and love positioning for Neolithic man.
History

Most of the major temples were rebuilt low the activity of Pericles during the Golden Age of Athens (460–430 BC). Phidias, a great Athenian sculptor, and Ictinus and Callicrates, two famous architects, were responsible for the reconstruction. During the 5th century BC, the Acropolis gained its final shape. After winning at Eurymedon in 468 BC, Cimon and Themistocles ordered the recollection of gray and northern walls, and Pericles entrusted the building of the Parthenon to Ictinus and Phidias.

During the aforementioned period the building of the Erechtheum, a combination of sacred precincts including the temples of Athena Polias, Poseidon, Erechtheus, Cecrops, Herse, Pandrosos and Aglauros, with its so-called the Kore Porch (or Caryatids' balcony), was begun.
Between the temple of Athena Nike and the Parthenon there was the temenos of Artemis Brauronia or Brauroneion, the goddess represented as a bear and worshipped in the deme of Brauron. The archaic xoanon of the goddess and a monument made by Praxiteles in the 4th century BC were both in the sanctuary.
Behind the Propylaea, Phidias' large bronze monument of Athena Promachos (\"she who fights in the face line\"), built between 450 BC and 448 BC, dominated. The base was 1.50 m high, while the total height of the monument was 9 m. The goddess held a lance whose coat counsel could be seen as a reflection by crews on ships misreckoning Cape Sounion, and a giant shield on the left side, decorated by Mys with images of the fisticuffs between the Centaurs and the Lapiths. Other monuments that have left nearly nothing visible to the present day are the Chalkotheke, the Pandroseion, Pandion's sanctuary, Athena's altar, Zeus Polieus's shelter and, from romish times, the broadside temple of Augustus and Rome.
Site Monuments
Parthenon

after the victory at the battle of Marathon at approximately 490 BC and destroyed by the Persians in 480 BC. This temple had replaced the very first Parthenon (Parthenon I) of c. 570 BC. The Periklean Parthenon was designed by architects Iktinos and Kallikrates, while the sculptor Pheidias supervised the entire building program and conceived the temple's sculptural decoration and chryselephantine statue of Athena.
Erechtheion

Propylaea

Temple of Athena Nike

Temple of Rome and Augustus
The temple of Rome and Augustus was erected in the late first century BC east of the Parthenon or of the Erechtheion. Several architectural elements of the building were found east of the Parthenon and many more were brought here after their discovery elsewhere. Nearby are the irregular tufa foundations (approximately 10.50x13 metres) of a building generally considered to be the Roman temple. Another theory, however, based on the construction technique of these foundations and on depictions of the Acropolis on Roman coins, places the temple east of the Erechtheion.
The inscription on the temple's epistyle mentions that the building was dedicated by the city of Athens to the goddess Rome and to Octavian Augustus. Pausanias does not mention the building during his visit to the Acropolis, possibly because it did not present any interest at his time. The small, circular temple had a single row of nine Ionic columns and no interior wall, the entablature and conical roof being entirely of white marble. The fact that the columns imitate those of the Erechtheion may indicate that the temple was built by the same architect who repaired the Erechtheion after it was damaged by fire.
Old temple of Athena

The Old temple was a Doric, peripteral structure with six columns on the short sides and twelve on the long sides. The interior arrangement was quite unusual. The east part of the temple consisted of a distyle pronaos with antae and a naos divided into three naves by two rows of columns. Inside the naos was the wooden cult statue (xoanon) of the goddess Athena. The east part of the temple consisted of three rooms, each dedicated to the worship of Poseidon-Erechtheus, Hephaistus and Boutes. The marble pediments of the Gigantomachy, displayed in the Acropolis Museum, and a sime with lion and ram's heads probably belonged to this temple. The metopes, cornices and roof tiles were also of marble, while the rest of the temple was built of limestone.
The temple was unearthed in 1885 and W. D?rpfeld was the first to identify it. Only the foundations of its south side, towards the Erechtheion, are visible today, along with two stone column bases from the Geometric temple.


