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Encyclopedia > Kerameikos

The Kerameikos is the name of the deme or part of Athens to the northwest of the Acropolis and includes an extensive area both within and outside of the city walls.


The "inner Kerameikos" was the former "potter's quarter" of the city and the "outer Kerameikos" covers the cemetery and the also the "demosion sema" (a public burial monument) where Pericles delivered his funeral oration in 431 BC. The cemetery was also where the procession to Eleusis began during the Eleusinian Mysteries.


A plague pit and approximately 1000 tombs from the 4th and 5th century BC were discovered during excavations for a subway station just outside the cemetery. Thucydides describes the panic caused by the plague, which struck Athens and Sparta in 430 BC, lasting for two years, killing a third of the population. He wrote that bodies were abandoned in temples and streets, to be subsequently collected and hastily buried. The disease reappeared in the winter of 427 BC. The Greek archaeologist Efi Baziotopoulou-Valavani, who excavated the site, has dated the grave to between 430 and 426 BC.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Kerameikos (265 words)
Kerameikos was named after the community of the potters (kerameis) who occupied the whole area along the banks of river Eridanos.
It was found at the cemetery of Kerameikos, in Athens.
Dated to 430-420 B.C. Outside the city walls, along the sides of both roads lay the official cemetery of the city, which was continuously used from the 9th century B.C. until the late Roman period.
Kerameikos: The Ancient Cemetery of Athens Archaeology Site and Museum (709 words)
Kerameikos was on the northwest fringe of the ancient city and and is now the outer edge of the areas visited by most travelers.
Kerameikos is named after Keramos, son of Dionysios and Ariadne, hero of potters.
Kerameikos is open from Tuesday to Sunday from 8am to 3pm.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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