Pnyx in the context of "Ecclesia (ancient Athens)"

⭐ In the context of the ecclesia in ancient Greece, the Pnyx is best considered...

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⭐ Core Definition: Pnyx

The Pnyx (/nɪks, pəˈnɪks/; Ancient Greek: Πνύξ [pnýks]; Greek: Πνύκα, Pnyka) is a hill or hillside in central Athens, the capital of Greece. Beginning as early as 507 BC (Fifth-century Athens), the Athenians gathered on the Pnyx to host their popular assemblies, thus making the hill one of the earliest and most important sites in the creation of democracy.

The Pnyx is located less than 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) west of the Acropolis and about 2 km south-west of the Syntagma Square in the centre of Athens. The "mainly natural hollow" was first used from before 500 BC to perhaps 404 BC, when the arrangement was changed by adding a retaining wall below the speakers' platform, with the space between filled with earth.

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👉 Pnyx in the context of Ecclesia (ancient Athens)

The ecclesia or ekklesia (Greek: ἐκκλησία) was the assembly of the citizens in city-states of ancient Greece.

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Pnyx in the context of Diateichisma

The Diateichisma (Greek: διατείχισμα, lit.'cross wall') was an addition to the city walls of Athens constructed in the 280s BC.

The Diateichisma was built after the Battle of Chaeronea (338 BC). It was 900m long and built across the crests of the three hills: that of the Muses, of the Nymphs, and the Pnyx. It joined the Themistoclean Wall at north and south and had square and circular towers and two gates. However it cut through inhabited suburbs of ancient Athens, leaving the demes of Melete and Koile outside the wall and vulnerable.

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