Its style is that of amphiporo which means it has a portico at each end and an absence of columns on the sides. Four columns are located at both the east and the west facades. Although still standing today the temple has been through a lot during its stance. In the middle ages the Parthenon became a Byzantine, a Roman Catholic Church, an Ottoman conquest of Greece, and a mosque. The Christians then removed the large statute of Athena but added curved apse at the east end to house an altar. When the Ottomans were in control they added a tower to call Muslims to prayer. During the siege by the Venetians in 1687, the Parthenon was blown apart in the middle due to a rocket taking out the Ottoman’s ammunition stock. Whilst the Temple of Athena Nike survived such a past and restoration in 2012 it faces a new enemy. The marble of the temple is starting to decompose due to the corrosive emission from the factories and automobiles. Sadly, since these factors are not ceasing anytime soon, it is likely all that will be left of the Temple of Athena Nike for future generations will be pictures and ruins to …show more content…
Built by Libon of Ellis from 470BCE until 450BCE it was the original site of the Olympic Games. Although in ruins today at its height is was lavish with statutes filling both pediments and narrative relief adorning the six metopes. As common during the time it was built in the Doric style. It is a peripeteral hexastyle with 13 columns at the sides with an east west orientation. The columns measure 10.43 meters high and 2.25 meters in diameters and was built by local shell limestone. Zeus was the God of the sky, ruler of the Gods, and husband to Hera, father to Athena and many more much to Hera’s displeasure. He held domain over the rain which could be why he was so worshipped as without the rain you would not have anything to drink nor any food so he was crucial to the survival of the people. Ironically his weapon was that of a thunderbolt which he preferred to use again liars and oath breakers, but not himself of course, even though he was consistently unfaithful to Hera. The temple itself was never fully completed and in AD426 Theodosius II ordered it burnt and what was left of the temple was destroyed during earthquakes in AD551 and AD552. Although in ruins, the meaning and magnitude of the Temple is not lost on a