Athens is the capital and largest city in Greece, cosmopolitan metropolis, which is rapidly becoming a leading business centre in the European Union.
Athens exudes a unique
charm, its lively character winning over tens of thousands of visitors every
year. Street markets, vine-covered tavernas, souvenir stalls and ancient
monuments are dotted among high-rise buildings in this capital city, which one
out of four Greeks call home. For tourists the greatest advantage is that most
attractions are accessible on foot in the central area around the landmark
Acropolis.
Athens
was named after Athena, the Greek goddess of wisdom, who according to mythology
won the city as prize after a duel against Poseidon. The city can chart its
history back thousands of years and is regarded as the cradle of western
civilisation; the place where democracy was invented and philosophy, art and
architecture were refined.
After a
classical golden age when it was home to Socrates, Plato and Aristotle, the
city declined in the Middle Ages, dwindling to nothing but a town with a few
thousand residents gathered in the colourful area that is now known as the
Plaka, until its rebirth as capital of an independent Greece in 1834.
Nowadays
the city is busy and bustling. While the pollution, frantic gridlock and dingy
buildings is of great contrast to the open beauty of Greece's coast and
islands, Athens is truly the heartbeat of the country, and ancient wonders like
the Acropolis, the Parthenon, and the Temples of Zeus and Hephaesus ensure that
Athens will always have its attractions.
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