Archaeological Museum of Piraeus explained
The Archaeological Museum of Piraeus contains mainly sculptures, discovered in Piraeus and in the area of the Attic coast from Bronze Age to Roman times,[1]
Collections
The museum's displayed objects are divided in sections:[2]
- Prehistoric collection (Mycenaean)
- Pottery collection
- Bronze statues
- A reconstruction of a typical Classical sanctuary (Cybele's)
- Classical gravestones
- Large funerary monuments
- Hellenistic sculptures
- Roman sculptures
The building
The old building of the museum (330 m2), which is currently used as a storage room, was built in 1935.[3] The new two-store building, which was inaugurated in 1981, covers a total area of total 1.394 m2. Both buildings neighbour on the Zeas (Greek, Modern (1453-);: Ζέα) ancient classical theater. In the near future, the theater site is going to be used as an open-air sculpture exhibition.
Visitors information
The museum is accessible with the Athens metro or bus lines. It is 15-minute walk from Piraeus station and a couple minute walk from bus station. Moreover, it is a 5-minute walk from the area for the reception of Cruise ships of the Piraeus port.
See also
References
- Web site: Hellenic Ministry of Culture Archaeological Museum of Piraeus . Hellenic Ministry of Culture . Kornilia Axioti . el . 2007-04-29 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070508132457/http://odysseus.culture.gr/h/1/gh151.jsp?obj_id=3371. 8 May 2007 . live.
- Ministry of Culture (Archaeological Receipts Funds), Archaeological Museum of Piraeus (brochure)
- Web site: Steinhauer . George . The Archaeological Museum of Piraeus . John S. Latsis Public Benefit Foundation . 2001 . 2011-03-16 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20111003001026/http://www.latsis-foundation.org/en/elibrary/1/38/book.html . 2011-10-03 .
External links
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