Athens ( ; ,
Athina, ), the capital
and largest city of Greece
, dominates
the Attica
periphery;
as one of the world's oldest
cities, its recorded history
spans around 3,400 years.
The Greek capital has a population of 745,514 (in 2001) within its
administrative limits and a land area of . The
urban area of Athens extends beyond the
administrative
city limits with a
population of 3,130,841 (in 2001) and a land area of . According to
Eurostat, the Athens
Larger Urban Zone (LUZ) is the 7th most
populous LUZ in the
European Union
(the 5th most populous capital city of the
EU) with a population of 4,013,368 (in 2004).
A bustling and cosmopolitan metropolis, Athens is central to
economic, financial, industrial, political and cultural life in
Greece and it is rated as an alpha-
world
city. It is rapidly becoming a leading business centre in the
European Union. In 2008, Athens was ranked the world's 32nd richest
city by purchasing power and the 25th most expensive in a
UBS study.
Classical
Athens
was a powerful city-state. A centre for the arts,
learning and philosophy, home of Plato's Academy
and Aristotle's Lyceum, It is
widely referred to as the cradle of Western civilization and
the birthplace of democracy, largely due
to the impact of its cultural and political achievements during the
5th and 4th centuries BC on the rest of the then known European continent.
The
heritage of the classical era is
still evident in the city, represented by a number of ancient monuments and works of art, the
most famous of all being the Parthenon
, widely considered a key landmark of early Western civilization. The city also
retains a vast variety of
Roman and
Byzantine monuments, as well as a
smaller number of remaining
Ottoman
monuments projecting the city's long history across the centuries.
Landmarks
of the modern era are also present, dating back to 1830 (the
establishment of the independent Greek state), and taking in the
Hellenic Parliament (19th
century) and the Athens Trilogy consisting of the National Library
of Greece
, the Athens
University and the Academy of Athens
. Athens was the host city of the
first modern-day Olympic Games in 1896,
and 108 years later it welcomed home the
2004 Summer Olympics.
Etymology
In
Ancient Greek, the name of Athens
was ; , related tο name of the goddess
Athena
(
Attic and
Ionic ).
The city's name was in the plural, like those
of (Thēbai
), (Mukēnai
), and (Delphoi
).
In the 19th century, (
Athinai / ) was formally re-adopted
as the city's name. Since the official abandonment of
Katharevousa Greek in the 1970s,
Αθήνα
(
Athína / ) has become the city's official name.
History
Athens has been continuously inhabited for at least 7000 years.
Classical
Athens
became the leading city of Ancient Greece in the 5th century BC, with its cultural
achievements laying the foundations of Western civilization. By the end of
Late Antiquity the city experienced
decline followed by recovery in the second half of the Middle
Byzantine Period (9th-10th centuries AD), and was relatively
prosperous during the
Crusades, benefiting
from Italian trade; after a long period of decline under the rule
of the
Ottoman Empire.
Athens re-emerged in the 19th century as the capital of the
independent Greek state. In 1896 Athens hosted the first modern
Olympic Games. In the 1920s a number
of Greek refugees, expelled from
Asian
Minds after the
Greco-Turkish War , swelled
Athens' population; nevertheless it was most particularly following
the
World War II, and from the 1950s
and 1960s, that the population of the city exploded, and Athens
experienced a gradual expansion in all directions. In the 1980s it
became evident that smog from factories and an ever increasing
fleet of automobiles, as well as a lack of adequate free space due
to overcongestion, had evolved into the city's most important
challenges.
A series of anti-pollution measures taken by
the city's authorities in the 1990s, combined with a substantial
improvement of the city's infrastructure (including the Attiki Odos motorway, the expansion of the
Athens Metro, and the new Athens
International Airport
), considerably alleviated pollution and transformed
Athens into a much more functional city.
Geography
Athens
sprawls across the central plain of Attica
that is
often referred to as the Attica Basin. The basin is bound by
four large mountains; Mount Aegaleo
to the west, Mount Parnitha
to the north, Mount Penteli
to the northeast and Mount Hymettus
to the east of the Athens Metropolitan Area.
The
Saronic
Gulf
lies in the southwest. Mount Parnitha is the
tallest of the four mountains ( ) and it has been declared a
national park.
Athens is built around a number of hills.
Lycabettus
is one of the tallest hills of the city proper and
allows the entire Attica Basin to be seen. The geomorphology
of Athens causes the so-called
temperature inversion phenomenon
which, along with the failure of the Greek Government to control
industrial pollution, is responsible for the air pollution problems
the city has recently faced.
(Los Angeles
and Mexico
City
also suffer with similar geomorphology inversion
problems).
Climate
Athens experiences a hot-summer
Mediterranean climate (
Köppen climate
classification Csa), with extremely long periods of
sunshine throughout the year and with the greatest amounts of
precipitation mainly
occurring from mid-October to mid-April; any precipitation is
sparse during summer and it generally takes the form of showers
and/or
thunderstorms. Due to its
location in a
rain shadow because of
Mount Parnitha the Athenian climate
is much drier compared to most of the rest of
Mediterranean Europe. The mountainous
northern suburbs, for their part, experience a somewhat
differentiated climatic pattern, with generally lower
temperatures.
Fog is highly unusual
in the city centre but it is more frequent to the east, behind the
Hymettus
mountain range.
Snowfalls are not common and these do not normally lead to
significant, if any, disruption. Nonetheless, the city has
experienced several heavy snowfalls, not least in the past decade.
During the blizzards of March 1987; February 1992; 4 January-6,
2002; 12 February-13, 2004 and 16 February-18, 2008, snow blanketed
large parts of the metropolitan area, causing havoc across much of
the city.
Spring and fall (autumn) are considered ideal seasons for
sightseeing and all kinds of indoor activities. Many people die
there due to overexposure to heat, also known as heathermonia.
Summers can be particularly hot and at times prone to
smog and pollution related conditions (however, much
less so than in the past). The average daytime maximum temperature
for the month of July is and heatwaves are relatively common,
occurring generally during the months of July and/or August, when
hot
air masses sweep across Greece from the
south or the southwest. On such days temperatures soar over .
Athens
holds the all-time temperature record in Europe of which was
recorded in Elefsina
, a suburb of Athens. The respective
low-temperature record is , recorded at Nea Filadelfia
.
Pollution and environment
By the late 1970s, the pollution of Athens had become so
destructive that according to the then Greek
Minister of Culture,
Constantine Trypanis, "
...the carved details on the five the
caryatids of the Erechtheum had seriously degenerated, while the
face of the horseman on the Parthenon's west side was all but
obliterated." A series of strict measures that were taken by
the authorities of the city throughout the 1990s finally resulted
in a dramatic improvement of air quality; the appearance of smog
(or
nefos as the Athenians used to call it) has nowadays
become an increasingly rare phenomenon.
Widespread measures taken by the Greek authorities throughout the
1990s have effectively improved the quality of air over the Attica
Basin. Nevertheless, air pollution still remains an issue for
Athens (although to a limited degree), particularly during the
hottest summer days.
In late June 2007, the Attica
region
experienced a number of brush
fires, including one that burned a significant portion of a
large forested national park in Mount
Parnitha, which is considered critical to maintaining a better
air quality in Athens all year round. Damage to the park has
led to worries over a stalling in the improvement of air quality in
the city.
The major waste management efforts undertaken in the last decade
(especially the plant built on the small island of Psytalia) have
improved
water quality in the Saronic
Gulf, and the coastal waters of Athens are now accessible again to
swimmers.
In January 2007, Athens briefly faced a
waste management problem when its landfill
near Ano
Liosia
, an Athenian suburb, reached capacity. The
crisis eased by mid-January when authorities began taking the
garbage to a temporary landfill.
Urban Landscape
Architecture
The city of Athens contains a variety of different
architectural styles, ranging from
Greco-Roman,
Neo-Classical, to modern. They are
usually all found together in the same areas as Athens lacks a
certain uniformity of architectural style. Many of the most
prominent buildings of the city are either Greco-Roman or
neo-classical in style.
Some of the neo-classical buildings to be
found are public buildings erected during the mid-nineteenth
century under the guidance of Theophil Freiherr von Hansen
and Ernst Ziller include the Athens
Academy
, Athens City Hall,
Greek Parliament, Old
Parliament
(1875–1932) (Now the National Historical Museum),
University of Athens, and
Zappeion
Hall.
Modern architecture
Beginning in the 1930s, the
International style and
other architectural movements such as
Bauhaus and
Art Deco
influenced almost all of Greek architects and many private
buildings like apartment buildings but also public buildings like
schools were built in Athens according to these styles.
Areas
with a great number of such buildings are Kolonaki
and generally the centre of the city and
neighbourhoods developed during those decades like Kypseli
.
In the 1950s and 1960s during the vast extension and development of
Athens, modern architecture played a very important role. The
centre of Athens was largely rebuilt and this demanded the
demolition of several small and private neoclassical buildings. The
architects of that era used new materials such as glass, marble and
aluminium and they often blended modern and classical elements.
After
World War II, many
internationally famous architects designed several buildings too.
Walter Gropius designed the US Embassy and
Eero Saarinen the east terminal of the
Ellinikon
Airport
.
Great architects of the 1930s-1960s were
Konstantinos Doxiadis,
Dimitris Pikionis,
Pericles A. Sakellarios,
Aris Konstantidis and others.
Neighbourhoods
The
Municipality of Athens is divided into several districts: Omonoia
, Syntagma
, Exarcheia
, Aghios Nikolaos,
Neapolis, Lykavittos
, Lofos Strefi, Lofos Finopoulou, Lofos Filopappou,
Pedion
Areos
, Metaxourgeio, Aghios
Kostantinos, Larissa Station, Kerameikos
, Psiri
, Monastiraki
, Gazi, Thission
, Kapnikarea, Aghia Irini,
Aerides, Anafiotika, Plaka
, Acropolis, Pnyka
,
Makrygianni, Lofos Ardittou, Zappeion
, Aghios Spyridon, Pangration, Kolonaki
, Dexameni, Evaggelismos, Gouva, Aghios Ioannis,
Neos
Kosmos
, Koukaki, Kynosargous, Fix,
Ano Petralona, Kato Petralona, Rouf, Votanikos, Profitis Daniil, Akadimia
Platonos
, Kolonos
, Kolokynthou, Attikis Square, Lofos Skouze,
Sepolia, Kypseli
, Aghios Meletios, Nea Kypseli, Gyzi, Polygono,
Ampelokipoi, Panormou-Gerokomeio,
Pentagono, Ellinorosson, Kato
Filothei
, Ano Kypseli, Tourkovounia-Lofos Patatsou, Lofos
Elikonos, Koliatsou, Thymarakia, Kato Patisia, Treis Gefyres,
Aghios Eleftherios, Ano Patisia,
Kypriadou, Prompona.
Omonoia
Omonoia
Square
( ) is the oldest square in Athens.
It is
surrounded by hotels and fast food outlets, and contains a train
station used by the Athens Metro and
the Ilektrikos, appropriately named Omonoia Station
. The square often becomes the focus for
celebration of sporting victories, as seen after the country's
winning of the Euro 2004 and the Eurobasket 2005 tournaments.
Psiri and Gazi
The
reviving Psiri
( )
neighbourhood – aka Athens's "meat packing district" – is dotted
with renovated former mansions, artists' spaces, and small gallery
areas. A number of its renovated buildings also now
host a wide variety of fashionable bars, making it a hotspot for
the city in the last decade, while a number of live music
restaurants known as "rebetadika", after Rebetiko, a unique form of music that blossomed in
Syros
and Athens from the 1920s until the 1960s, are also
to be found. Rebetiko is admired by
many, and as a result rebetadika are often crammed with people of
all ages who will sing, dance and drink till dawn.
The Gazi ( ) area, one of the latest in full
redevelopment, is located around a historic gas factory, now
converted into the Technopolis
cultural multiplex, and also includes artists'
areas, a number of small clubs, bars and restaurants, as well as
Athens' nascent "Gay Village".
The
metro's system recent expansion to the western suburbs of the city
has brought easier access to the area since spring 2007, as the
blue line now stops at Gazi (Kerameikos
station).
Syntagma
Syntagma
Square
, ( /Constitution Square), is the capital's central
and largest square,
lying adjacent to the Greek
Parliament (the former Royal Palace) and the city's most noted
hotels. Ermou Street, an
approximately 1 km-long pedestrian road connecting Syntagma
Square
to Monastiraki, has traditionally been a consumer
paradise for both Athenians and tourists. Complete with
fashion shops and
shopping centres
promoting most international brands, it now finds itself in the top
5 most expensive shopping streets in Europe, and the tenth most
expensive retail street in the world. Nearby, the renovated Army
Fund building in Panepistimiou Street includes the "Attica"
department store and several
upmarket designer stores.
Plaka, Monastiraki, and Thission
Plaka
( ), lying
just beneath the Acropolis, is famous for
its plentiful neoclassical
architecture, making up one of the most scenic districts of the
city. It remains a traditionally prime tourist destination
with a number of picturesque
tavernas, live
performances and street salesmen.
Nearby Monastiraki
( ), for its part, is well-known for its string of
small shops and markets, as well as its crowded flea market and tavernas specialising in
souvlaki. Another district
notably famous for its student-crammed, stylish cafés is Theseum
or Thission ( ), lying just west of
Monastiraki. Thission is home to the ancient Temple of
Hephaestus
, standing atop a small hill. This area also
has a pictursque 11th Century Byzantine church, as well as a 15th
Century Ottoman mosque.
Kolonaki
The
Kolonaki
( ) area, at the base of Lycabettus hill
, is full of boutiques catering to well-heeled
customers by day, and bars and more fashionable restaurants by
night, but at other points also a wide range of art galleries and
museums. This is often regarded as one of the more
prestigious areas of the capital.
Exarcheia
Exarcheia
( ), located north of Kolonaki, has a mixed
reputation as the recent or current location of the city's anarchist scene and as a culturally active student
quarter with many cafés, bars and bookshops. Exarcheia is home to
the Athens Polytechnic
and the National
Archaeological Museum
; it also contains numerous important buildings of
several 20th-century styles: Neoclassicism, Art
Deco and Early Modernism
(including Bauhaus influences).
Suburbs

Kifissias Avenue at night and northern
Suburbs.
The Athens Metropolitan Area consists of 73 densely populated
municipalities, sprawling around the city in virtually all
directions.
According to their geographic location in
relation to the city of Athens, the suburbs are divided into four
zones; the northern suburbs (including Ekali
, Nea Erythrea
, Agios
Stefanos
, Drosia
, Dionysos, Kryoneri
, Kifissia
, Maroussi
, Pefki
,
Lykovrisi, Heraklio, Glyka
Nera
, Vrilissia
, Melissia
, Pendeli
, Halandri
, Psychiko
and Filothei
); the southern suburbs, (including Palaio Faliro
, Elliniko
, Glyfada
, Alimos
, Voula
and the
southernmost suburb of Vouliagmeni
); the eastern suburbs, (including Acharnes
, Zografou
, Vyronas
, Kaisariani
, Cholargos
, Papagou
and Aghia Paraskevi
; and the western suburbs (including Peristeri
, Ilion
, Egaleo
, Petroupoli
and Nikaia
).
The
Athens city coastline, extending from the major commercial port of
Piraeus
to the southernmost suburb of Varkiza
for some , is also connected to the city centre by
a tram.
In the
northern suburb of Maroussi, the upgraded main Olympic
Complex
(known by its Greek acronym OAKA) dominates the
skyline. The whole area has been redeveloped according to a
design by the Spanish architect
Santiago Calatrava, with steel arches,
landscaped gardens, fountains, futuristic glass, and a landmark new
blue glass roof which was added to the main stadium.
A second Olympic
complex, next to the sea at the beach of Kallithea
(Faliron), also features modern stadia, shops and
an elevated esplanade. Work is underway to transform the grounds of
the old Athens Airport – named Hellinikon
– in the southern suburbs, into one of the largest
landscaped parks in Europe, to be named the Hellenikon Metropolitan
Park.
Many of
the southern suburbs (such as Alimos
, Palaio Faliro
, Elliniko
, Voula
, Vouliagmeni
and Varkiza
) host a number of sandy beaches, most of which are
operated by the Greek National Tourism
Organisation and require an entrance fee, which is not
excessive in most cases. Casinos operate on both Mount Parnitha, some
from downtown Athens, (accessible by car or cable car) and the
nearby town of Loutraki
(accessible by car via the Athens – Corinth
National Highway, or the suburban
railroad).
Parks

The National Garden.
Parnitha National Park has well-marked paths, gorges, springs,
torrents and caves dot the protected area. Hiking and
mountain-biking in all four mountains remain popular outdoor
activities for many residents of the city.
The National
Garden of Athens
was completed in 1840 and is a green refuge of 15.5
hectares in the center of the Greek capital. It's located between
the Parliament and Zappeion
buildings the latter of which has its own garden of
7 hectares.
Parts of the city centre have been redeveloped under a masterplan
called the
Unification of Archeological Sites of Athens,
which has also gathered funding from the EU to help enhance the
project. The landmark Dionysiou Aeropagitou street has been
pedestrianised, forming a scenic route.
The route starts from
the Temple of Olympian Zeus
at Vasilissis Olgas Avenue, continues under the
southern slopes of the Acropolis near Plaka
, and
finishes just beyond the Temple of Hephaestus
in Thiseio
. The route in its entirety provides visitors
with views of the Parthenon
and the Agora
(the meeting point of ancient Athenians), away from
the busy city centre.
The hills of Athens provide also green space.
Lycabettus
, Philopappos hill
and the area around it including Pnyx
and
Ardettos hill are all planted with
pines and other trees and they are more like small forests than
typical urban parks. There is also Pedion tou Areos
(Field of Mars) of 27.7 hectares near
National Archaeological
Museum which is currently under renovation.
Culture and contemporary life
Archaeological hub
The city is one of the world's main centres of
archaeological research.
Apart from national
institutions, such as Athens
University, the Archaeological Society,
several archaeological Museums (including the National
Archaeological Museum
, the Cycladic Museum
, the Epigraphic Museum,
the Byzantine Museum, as well as museums
at the ancient Agora
, Acropolis
, and Kerameikos
), the city is also home to the Demokritos laboratory for Archaeometry as well as several regional and
national archaeological authorities that form part of the Greek Department of
Culture. Additionally, Athens hosts 17
Foreign
Archaeological Institutes which promote and facilitate research
by scholars from their respective home countries. As a result,
Athens has more than a dozen archaeological libraries and three
specialized archaeological laboratories, and is the venue of
several hundred specialized lectures, conferences and seminars, as
well as dozens of archaeological exhibitions, per year. At any
given time, Athens is the (temporary) home to hundreds of
international scholars and researchers in all disciplines of
archaeology.
Museums
The most
important museums of Athens are: the National
Archaeological Museum
which is also the most important archaeological
museum of Greece and some of the most important internationally as
it contains a vast collection of antiquities. Its artifacts
cover a period of more than 5,000 years, from late
Neolithic Age to
Roman
Greece.
The Benaki Museum
with several branches for each of its collections
which include ancient, byzantine and ottoman Greek art, Islamic art
and Chinese art and others. The Byzantine
and Christian Museum
is one of the most important museums of Byzantine art while the Numismatic
Museum
houses a great collection of Greek coins.
The
Museum of
Cycladic Art
contains an extensive collection of Cycladic Art icluding the famous figurines made
of white marble. The New Acropolis Museum
, opened in 2009, replaced the old one which was on
the Acropolis. There are also many other museums often
private and smaller concerning Greek culture and arts.
Tourism
Athens has been a popular
destination for travellers since
antiquity. Over the past decade, the city's infrastructure and
social amenities have improved, in part due to its successful bid
to stage the
2004 Olympic Games.
The Greek
Government, aided by the EU, has
funded major infrastructure projects such as the state-of-the-art
Eleftherios Venizelos International
Airport
, the expansion of the Athens Metro system, and the new Attiki Odos Motorway.
Entertainment and performing arts
Athens is
home to 148 theatrical stages, more than any other city in the
world, including the famous ancient Herodes
Atticus Theatre
, home to the Athens
Festival, which runs from May to October each year. In
addition to a large number of multiplexes, Athens plays host to a
variety of romantic, open air garden cinemas.
The city also
supports a vast number of music venues, including the Athens
Concert Hall
, known as the "Megaron Moussikis", which
attracts world-famous artists all year round. The Athens
Planetarium, located in
Andrea Syngrou Avenue is one of the
best equipped digital planetariums in the world.
Sports
Athens has a long tradition in sports and sporting events, being
home of the most important clubs in
Greek sports and having a large number of
sports facilities. The city has also served as a host of several
sports events of international notability.
Athens has hosted the
Summer
Olympic Games twice, in
1896 and
2004.
The 2004 Summer Olympics inspired the
development of the Athens Olympic Stadium
, which has gained a reputation as one of the most
beautiful stadia in the world and one of the most interesting
modern monuments. The biggest stadium in Greece has hosted
two finals of the
UEFA Champions
League, in
1994
and
2007.
The other
major stadium of Athens, located in Piraeus
area, is the Karaiskakis Stadium
, a state-of-the-art sports and entertainment
complex, host of the 1971 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup
Final. Athens has hosted the Euroleague final three times, the first in 1985
and second in 1993, both at the
Peace and
Friendship Stadium
, most known as SEF, one of the largest and most
attractive indoor arenas in Europe, and the third in 2007 at the Olympic
Indoor Hall
. A large number of events in other sports
such as
athletics,
volleyball,
water
polo etc, has also been hosted in the capital's venues.
Athens is home to three prestigious European multi-sport clubs:
Olympiacos,
Panathinaikos and
AEK Athens. In
football,
Olympiacos have dominated the domestic
competitions,
Panathinaikos made it
to the
1971 European Cup
Final, while
AEK Athens is the
other member of the
big three. These clubs
have also prominent
basketball
departments;
Panathinaikos and
Olympiacos are among the top powers
in European basketball having won the
Euroleague five times and once respectively, with
AEK Athens being the first Greek
team to win a European trophy in any team sports. Other clubs with
great tradition in sports within Athens are
Panionios,
Panellinios,
Ethnikos Piraeus and
Maroussi. Athenian clubs have made significant
domestic and international success so far in other sports as
well.
The Athens area encompasses a variety of
terrain, notably hills and mountains rising around
the city, and the capital is the only major city in Europe to be
bisected by a
mountain range. Four
mountain ranges extend into city boundaries and thousands of miles
of trails crisscross the city and neighbouring areas, providing
exercise and wilderness access on
foot and
bike. Beyond Athens and across the
county a great variety of outdoor activities are available and
popular, including
skiing,
rock climbing,
hang
gliding and windsurfing. Numerous outdoor clubs serve these
sports, including the Athens Chapter of the
Sierra Club, which leads over 4,000 outings
annually in the area.
Demographics

Athens population distribution.

Athens urban area shown here with its
55 municipalities.
The municipality of Athens has an official population of 745,514
with a metropolitan population of 3.2 million (population including
the suburbs). The actual population, however, is believed to be
higher, because during census-taking (carried out once every 10
years) some Athenian residents travel back to their birthplaces,
and register as local citizens there.
Reflecting this uncertainty about population figures, various
sources refer to a population of around 5 million people for
Athens.
Athens: Ecology + Environment + Architecture quote:
Modern Athens, a city which was laid out in the 1830’s as a
garden city for 50,000 inhabitants, is home today for nearly 5
million people, almost half of the population of Greece.
Airmiles UK quote:
Did you know...? Nearly
five million people – almost half of Greece's entire population -
live in Athens.
Taxis.gr quote:
In any other city with a
population of five million..
BBC News Europequote:
The capital, with its
population of five million,
Europa quote:
the metropolitan area of
Athens contains over five million inhabitants.
International Railway Journal, August, 2000
quote:
The Athens urban area has a population of about five
million Also unaccounted for is an undefined number
of unregistered immigrants originating mainly from Albania
, other Eastern
European countries and Pakistan
.
The ancient site of the city is centred on the rocky hill of the
acropolis.
In ancient times the port of Piraeus
was a separate city, but it has now been absorbed
into greater Athens. The rapid expansion of the city
initiated in the 1950s and 1960s continues today, because of the
transition from an agricultural to an
industrial nation.
The expansion is now
particularly toward the East and North East (a tendency greatly
related to the new Eleftherios Venizelos International
Airport
and the Attiki Odos, the
freeway that cuts across Attica
). By
this process Athens has engulfed many former suburbs and villages
in Attica, and continues to do so. Throughout its long history,
Athens has experienced many different population levels. The table
below shows the historical population of Athens in recent
times.
The Athens
urban area consists of 55
municipalities, 48 of the Athens Prefecture and the 7 of the
mainland Piraeus Prefecture.
The second largest municipality of the urban
area, after Athens city proper, is that of Piraeus
, with Peristeri
and Kallithea
following. It spans and has a population of
3,130,841 (in 2001), which makes it one of the
largest urban
areas of the
European
Union.
| Year |
City population |
Urban population |
Metro population |
| 1833 |
4,000 |
- |
- |
| 1870 |
44,500 |
- |
- |
| 1896 |
123,000 |
- |
- |
| 1921 (Pre-Population exchange) |
473,000 |
- |
- |
| 1921 (Post-Population
exchange) |
718,000 |
- |
- |
| 1971 |
867,023 |
- |
- |
| 1981 |
885,737 |
- |
- |
| 1991 |
772,072 |
- |
3,444,358 |
| 2001 |
745,514 |
3,130,841 |
3,761,810 |
Administration
Athens
became the capital of Greece in
1834, following Nafplion
which was the provisional capital from 1829.
In
addition, the municipality of Athens is the capital of the Attica
Periphery
and the Athens Prefecture.
Athens can refer either to the municipality of Athens or
to the entire
urban area. It sometimes
refers only to the Athens Prefecture, which is part of the urban
area.
Attica Periphery
Athens is located within the Attica
Periphery, which encompasses the most
populated region of Greece, with around 3.7 million people. The
Attica Periphery itself is split into four prefectures; they
include the
Athens Prefecture,
Piraeus Prefecture,
West Attica Prefecture, and the
East Attica Prefecture. It is, however, one of
the smaller peripheries in Greece, with an area of .
Athens Prefecture

The seven districts of Athens
municipality.
The
Athens Prefecture is the most
populous of the
Prefectures of
Greece, accounting 2,664,776 people (in 2001),with an area of .
It is made up by 48 municipalities, each one of which has an
elected district council and a directly elected mayor. Along with
the
Piraeus Prefecture, it forms
the Athens-Piraeus
super-prefecture.
Athens Municipality
The
municipality of Athens is the
most populous in Greece,
with a population of 745,514 people (in 2001) and an area of . The
current
mayor of Athens is
the
New Democracy politician,
Nikitas Kaklamanis. It is divided
into seven municipal districts, called
dimotika
diamerismata. The 7-district division is mainly used for
administrative purposes.
For Athenians the most popular way of
dividing the city proper is through its neighbourhoods, each with
its own distinct history and characteristics, such as Pagkrati, Ambelokipi, Exarcheia
, Patissia
, Ilissia, Petralona, Koukaki and
Kypseli
. For a traveller unfamiliar with Athens,
familiarity with the contours of these neighbourhoods can often be
particularly useful in both exploring and understanding the
city.
Education
Located
on Panepistimiou Street
, the old campus of the University of
Athens, the National Library
, and the Athens Academy
form the "Athens Trilogy" built in the mid-19th
century. Most of the university's workings have been
moved to a much larger, modern campus located in the eastern suburb
of Zográfou
. The second higher education institution in
the city is the Athens Polytechnic School
(Ethniko Metsovio Politechnio), found in
Patission Street. This was the location where on 17 November
1973, more than 13 students were killed and hundreds injured inside
the university during the
Athens Polytechnic uprising,
against the
military junta that
ruled the nation from 21 April 1967 until
23 July 1974.
Transportation
The
Athens Mass Transit
System consists of a large bus fleet, a
trolleybus fleet that mainly serves the downtown
area, the city's Metro, a
tram line connecting
the southern suburbs to the city centre, and the Athens
Suburban Railway service.
Athens Metro
The
Athens Metro is more commonly known
in Greece as the Attiko Metro ( ). While its main purpose is
transport, it also houses Greek artifacts found during construction
of the system. The Athens Metro supports an operating staff of 387
and runs two of the three metro lines; its two lines (red and blue)
were constructed largely during the 1990s, and the initial sections
opened in January 2000, and the lines run entirely underground. The
metro network operates a fleet of 42 trains consisting of 252 cars,
with a daily occupancy of 550,000 passengers.
The Blue Line runs
from the western suburbs, namely the Egaleo
station,
through the central Monastiraki
and Syntagma stations to Doukissis Plakentias avenue in the
northeastern suburb of Halandri
, covering a distance of , then ascending to ground
level and reaching Eleftherios Venizelos International
Airport
, using the Suburban Railway infrastructure and
extending its distance to . The Red Line, in counterpart, runs from
Aghios Antonios to Aghios
Dimitrios
and covers a distance of . Extensions to both
these lines are under construction, most notably westwards to
Piraeus
, southwards to the Old
Hellinikon Airport East Terminal
(the future Metropolitan Park), and
eastward toward the easternmost suburb of Aghia
Paraskevi
.
The eastern part is actually no extension per se, but rather an
opening of new stations between the
Ethniki Amyna and Doukissis Plakentias
stations.
The spring 2007 extension from Monastiraki
westwards, to Egaleo
, connected
some of the main night life hubs of the
city, namely the ones of Gazi (Kerameikos
station) with Psirri (Monastiraki station) and the
city centre (Syntagma
station).
Electric railway (ISAP)
The third line, not run by the Athens Metro, is the ISAP ( ), the
Electric Railway Company. This is the Green line of the
Athens Metro as shown on the adjacent map, and unlike the red and
blue routes running entirely underground, ISAP runs either
above-ground or below-ground at different sections of its journey.
This same operation runs the original metro line from Piraeus to
Kifisia; it serves 22 stations, with a network length of , an
operating staff of 730 and a fleet of 44 trains and 243 cars, and a
daily occupancy rate of 600,000 passengers.
The historic Green
Line, a -long and 24-station line which forms the oldest and for
the most part runs at ground level, connects the port of Piraeus
to the northern suburb of Kifissia
, and is set to be extended to Agios Stefanos, a
suburb located to the north of the city centre, reaching to
.
Suburban rail (Proastiakos)

Suburban Rail
The
Proastiakós connects Eleftherios Venizelos International
Airport
to the city of Corinth
, west of Athens, via the central Larissa train station and the port of Piraeus, and is
sometimes considered the fourth line of the Athens Metro.
The Suburban Rail network currently extends to a length of , and is
expected to stretch to by 2010. The Proastiakos will be extended to
Xylokastro west of Athens and Chalkida. The urban and suburban
railway system is managed by three different companies; namely
ISAP, Attiko Metro (lines 2 & 3) and Proastiakós (line
4).
Buses
The service operated under Ethel ( )
Thermal Bus Company
is the main operator of buses in Athens. It consists of a network
of 300 bus lines which span the entire Attica Basin, with an
operating staff of 5,327, and a fleet of 1,839 buses. Of those
1,839 buses 416 run on
natural gas,
making up the largest fleet of natural gas-run buses in
Europe.
Besides being served by a fleet of natural-gas and normal buses,
the Athens metropolitan area is also serviced by
electric buses, or ILPAP, as the service is
known in Athens ( ).
The Electric Buses of the Athens and
Pireaus
Region (ILPAP) consists of 22 lines and an
operating staff of 1,137, and the network operates a fleet of 366
trolley buses able to run on diesel in case of power failure.
Tram

Athens Tram
Athens Tram SA operates a fleet of 35
vehicles, which serve 48 stations, employ 345 people with an
average daily occupancy of 65,000 passengers. The tram network
spans a total length of and covers ten Athenian suburbs.
This
network runs from Syntagma
Square
to the southwestern suburb of Palaio Faliro
, where the line splits in two branches; the first
runs along the Athens coastline toward the southern suburb of
Voula
, while the other heads toward the Piraeus
district of Neo Faliro. The network covers
the majority of the Saronic coastline.
Further extensions
are planned towards the major commercial port of Piraeus
. The expansion to Piraeus will include 12
new stations, increase the overall length of the tram by , and
increase the overall transportation network.
Eleftherios Venizelos International Airport
Athens is
served by the state-of-the-art Eleftherios
Venizelos International Airport
(AIA) located near the town of Spata
, in the
eastern Messoghia plain, some east of Athens. The airport
was awarded the "European Airport of the Year 2004" Award. Intended
as an expandable hub for air travel in
southeastern Europe, it was constructed in a record
51 months costing 2.2 billion euros, and employing a staff of
14,000.
An express bus service is provided,
connecting the airport to the metro system, and 2 express bus
services connect the airport to the port at Piraeus
and the city centre respectively. Eleftherios Venizelos accommodates 65
landings and take-offs per hour, with its 24 passenger boarding
bridges, 144 check-in counters and broader main terminal, and a
commercial area of which includes cafes,
duty-free shops, and a small museum. In
2007, the airport handled 16,538,390 passengers, an increase of
9.7% over the previous year of 2006. Of those 16,538,390
passengers, 5,955,387 passed through the airport for domestic
flights, and 10,583,003 passengers travelled through for
international flights. Beyond the dimensions of its passenger
capacity, AIA handled 205,294 total flights in 2007, or
approximately 562 flights per day.
Railways, highways and ferry connections
Athens is
the hub of the country's
national railway system (OSE), connecting the capital with
major cities across Greece and abroad (Istanbul
, Sofia
, and
Bucharest
). Ferries departing from the major port of
Piraeus
connect the city to the numerous Greek islands of the Aegean Sea
. There are two main highways; one heading
towards the western city of Patras in Peloponessus
(GR-8A,
E94) and the other heading to the north, towards
Greece's second largest city, Thessaloniki
(GR-1, E75). From 2001 to 2004, a
ring road toll-motorway (Attiki Odos) was gradually completed,
extending from the western industrial suburb of Elefsina
all the way to the Athens
International Airport
. The Ymittos
Periphery Highway is a separate section of Attiki Odos connecting the eastern suburb of
Kaisariani
to the northeastern town of Glyka Nera
; this is where it meets the main part of the
ring road. The span of the Attiki
Odos in all is .
Olympic Games
1896 Summer Olympics
1896 brought forth the revival of the modern Olympic Games, by
Frenchman
Pierre de Coubertin.
Thanks to his efforts, Athens was awarded the first modern Olympic
Games. In 1896, the city had an approximate population of 123,000
and the event helped boost the city's international profile.
Of the
venues used for these Olympics, the Kallimarmaro Stadium, and Zappeion
were most crucial. The Kallimarmaro is a
replica of the ancient Athenian stadiums, and the only major
stadium (in its capacity of 60,000) to be made entirely of white
marble from Mount Penteli
, the same material used for construction of the
Parthenon
.
1906 Summer Olympics
The
1906 Summer Olympics, or
the 1906 Intercalated games, were held very successfully in Athens.
The intercalated competitions were intermediate games to the
internationally organized
olympics, and
were meant to be organized in Greece.
This idea later lost
support from the IOC
and these
games were not made permanent.
2004 Summer Olympics
Athens
was awarded the 2004 Summer Olympics on 5 September 1997 in
Lausanne
, Switzerland
, after having lost a previous bid to host the
1996 Summer Olympics, to
Atlanta
, United States. It was to be the second time
Athens would have the honour of hosting the games, following the
inaugural event of 1896. After 1990's unsuccessful bid, the 1997
bid was radically improved also including an appeal to Greece's
Olympic history. In the last round of voting, Athens defeated Rome
with 66 votes to 41.
Prior to this round, the cities of Buenos Aires
, Stockholm
and Cape
Town
had already been eliminated from competition,
having received fewer votes.
During
the first three years of preparations, the International Olympic
Committee
had repeatedly expressed some concern over the
speed of construction progress for some of the new Olympic
venues. In 2000 the Organising Committee's president was
replaced by
Gianna
Angelopoulos-Daskalaki, who was the president of the original
Bidding Committee in 1997. From that point on, preparations
continued at a highly accelerated, almost frenzied pace.
Although the heavy cost was criticized, estimated at $1.5 billion,
as is usually the case with most Olympic cities, Athens was
literally transformed into a more functional city that enjoys
state-of-the-art technology both in transportation and in modern
urban development. Some of the finest
sporting venues in the world were created in the city, all of which
were fully ready for the games. The games welcomed over 10,000
athletes from all 202 countries. The 2004 Games were judged a huge
success, as both security and organization were exceptionally good,
and only a few visitors reported minor problems mainly concerning
accommodation issues. The 2004 Olympic Games were described as
Unforgettable, dream Games, by IOC President
Jacques Rogge for their return to the
birthplace of the Olympics, and for superbly meeting the challenges
of holding the Olympic Games. The only observable problem was a
somewhat sparse attendance of some early events.
Eventually, however,
a total of more than 3.5 million tickets were sold, which was
higher than any other Olympics with the exception of Sydney
(more than 5 million tickets were sold there in
2000).
In 2008 it was reported that almost all of the Olympic venues have
fallen into varying states of disrepair: according to those
reports, 21 of the 22 facilities built for the games have either
been left abandoned or are in a state of dereliction, with several
squatter camps having sprung up around
certain facilities, and a number of venues afflicted by
vandalism, graffiti or strewn with rubbish. These
claims, however, are disputable and most likely inaccurate, as most
of the facilities used for the
Athens
Olympics are either in use or in the process of being converted
for post-Olympics use. The Greek Government has created a
corporation, Olympic Properties SA, which is overseeing the
post-Olympics management, development and conversion of these
facilities, some of which will be sold off (or have already been
sold off) to the private sector, while other facilities are still
in use just as they were during the Olympics, or have been
converted for commercial use or modified for other sports.
Twin towns - Sister cities
Athens has the following
sister/twin
cities:
- Los Angeles
, California
, United States
(1984)
- Moscow
, Russia
- Naples
, Italy
- Nicosia
, Cyprus
(1988)
- Seoul
, South
Korea
(2006)
- Tirana
, Albania
- Washington, D.C.
, United States
(2000)
- Yerevan
, Armenia
(1993)
Partnerships
Other Locations Named "Athens"
- Athens of Ayrshire – Troon
, Scotland
- Athens of Cuba – Matanzas
, Cuba
- Athens of Egypt – Alexandria
, Egypt
- Athens of Finland – Jyväskylä
, Finland
- Athens of Florida – DeLand,
Florida
, United States
- Athens of Indiana – Crawfordsville, Indiana
, United States
- Athens of Latin
America – Santo
Domingo
, Dominican Republic
- Athens of Nicaragua
- Granada, Nicaragua
- Athens of Minas Gerais
– Juiz
de Fora
, Brazil
- Athens of North America – Boston
, United States
- Athens of Sicily – Catania
, Italy
- Athens of South
America – Bogotá
, Colombia
- Athens of Tamaulipas – Matamoros, Tamaulipas
, Mexico
- Athens of the Bodrog – Sárospatak
, Hungary
- Athens of the East – Madurai
, India
- Athens of the Middle
Ages – Florence
, Italy
- Athens of the North – Edinburgh
, Scotland
- Athens of the South – Nashville
, United States
- Athens of the Southern
Hemisphere
– Dunedin
, New
Zealand
- Athens of the West (early 19th c.) –
Lexington
, United States
- Athens of the West – Berkeley, California
, United States
- Athens on the Isar – Munich
, Germany
- Athens on the Spree
– Berlin
, Germany
- Athens on the Torysa – Prešov
, Slovakia
- Brazilian Athens – São
Luís, Maranhão
, Brazil
- Czech Athens – Krnov
, Czech Republic
- Lusa
Athens – Coimbra, Portugal

- Little Athens – Pietrasanta
, Italy
- Sardinian Athens – Nuoro
, Italy
- Serbian Athens – Novi Sad
, Serbia
- Siberian Athens – Tomsk
, Russia
- Athens of the South – Tampa,
Florida
, United States
See also
References
- BBC History on Greek Democracy – Accessed on 26
January 2007
- Encarta: Ancient Greece – Retrieved on 26
January 2007. Archived 2009-10-31.
- S. Immerwahr, The Athenian Agora XII: the Neolithic and Bronze
Ages, Princeton 1971
- Hellenic Ministry of Culture: The Old Parliament
Building – Retrieved 16 February 2007
- Ta Nea onLine – Retrieved on 10 February
2007
- Greek Tourist Organizer – Retrieved on 6 January
2007
- http://www.aodos.gr/article.asp?catid=12069&tag=7275
External links
- cityofathens.gr - City of Athens official website
- eie.gr - Page on Archaeology of the City of Athens in
the National Hellenic Research Foundation website
- rg.ancients.info - Athenian Owl coins in Numis
website
- kronoskaf.com - Simulation of Athens in 421 BC