Ancient Town-Planning by F. (Francis John) Haverfield
page 37 of 128 (28%)
page 37 of 128 (28%)
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[Illustration: FIG. 6. GENERAL OUTLINE OF PRIENE. A, B, C. Gates. D, E, F, H, M, P. Temples (see fig. 7). G. Agora, Market. I. Council House, K. Prytaneion. L, Q. Gymnasium. N. Theatre, O. Water-reservoir, R. Race-course.] [Illustration: FIG. 7. PART OF PRIENE AS EXCAVATED 1895-8. (From the large plan by Wiegand and Schrader.)] [Illustration: FIG. 8. PRIENE, PANORAMA OF THE TOWN. (As restored by Zippelius.)] _Priene_ (figs. 6-8). The best instance of the new system is not perhaps the most famous. Priene was a little town on the east coast of the Aegean. The high ridge of Mycale towered above it; Miletus faced it across an estuary; Samos stood out seawards to the west. In its first dim days it had been perched on a crag that juts out from the overhanging mountain; there its life began, we hardly know when, in the dawn of Greek history. But it had been worn down in the fifth century between the upper and the nether millstone of the rival powers of Samos and Miletus. Early in the Macedonian age it was refounded. The old Acropolis was given up. Instead, a broad sloping terrace, or more exactly a series of terraces, nearer the foot of the hill, was laid out with public buildings--Agora, Theatre, Stoa, Gymnasium, Temples, and so forth--and with private houses. The whole covered an area of about 750 yds. in length and 500 yds. in width. Priene was, therefore, about half the size of Pompeii (p. 63). It had, as its excavators |
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