Athens
Founded 850 BC, the city of Athens (Αθηνα) was named after the goddess Athena, and is the capital of Greece. Athens was home to one of the earliest recorded formal democracies, and is the site of the Acropolis and its Parthenon. The ancient port city of Piraeus has been absorbed by modern Athens. As of the 2001 census of the National Statistical Service of Greece, Athens has a population of 3,761,810, making it by far Greece's largest city, with over a third of the country's total population (10,964,020). It is served by a newly constructed and opened airport, the Eleftherios Venizelos Airport, about a 40-minute taxi ride from the city centre (depending upon traffic). The current airport replaced Ellinikon International Airport, which was infamous for widespread bad service. Historical population 1853: 30,600 inhabitants 1879: 65,500 1896: 123,000 1925: 443,000 Things to see in Athens The Acropolis, with the Parthenon. Agora. Arch of Hadrian. National Archaeological and Benakis Museum. National Gardens, planted in the XIX Century. Kerameikon. Likabitos hill. Lysikrates monument. Monastiraki Square, with a colourist street marketplace. Olympeion. Piraeus harbour. Philopappos monument, Plaka. Pnyx. Syndagma Square, the heart of the modern Athens. Tower of the Winds. Athens was the host of the 1896 Olympics, the 1906 Intermediary Olympics and will be the host of the 2004 Summer Olympics.
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