The myth about naming Athens
The myth about Athens’s name
Come with me and I will mentally travel you at this very moment that Athens was named after the goddess Athena.
Once upon a time…Greek goddess of wisdom Athena and her uncle god of the sea Poseidon were fighting about protecting and naming their favorite city. So, they decided to put themselves into a competition. They called all the other Olympian gods and that’s time king of Athens’ Cecrops to gather at Acropolis.
Poseidon hit his trident at the rocks and salt water came out.
Athena plant an olive tree at the rocks with lots of olives.
Zeus tells the other gods and Cecrops to decide. The king of Athens saw that was already existing salt water from the sea around the city and at all over the country, so he decided that the olive tree is more useful for his citizens. The city of Cecropia then renamed into Αθήνα-Athena in order to honor the goddess Αθηνά-Athena.
Poseidon was angry about this decision and cursed the city to have water drought-scarcity’until today.
But the fact is that the foundation of Athens was before the Mycenaean Era as you can see below at the most important events that define the character of this city.
Athens timetable
3000 b.C. Proof of the existence of the first settlement around the Acropolis
1400 b.C. The Acropolis turns into a royal fortress
620 b.C. The tyrant Dracon formalizes the laws of Athens and Attica
594-593 b.C. Democracy is born under Solon's law
490 b.C. The Battle of Marathon. Athens defeats the Persians.
480 b.C. Persian invasion of Athens
479 b.C. Defeat of the Persians in Plataea by the Greek power leading by the Spartans
461 b.C. Pericles replaces Kimonas as the lord of Athens
461-429 b.C. The Golden Age of Pericles. The construction of the Parthenon and others.
431 b.C. Start of the Peloponnesian war against Sparta
430-428 b.C. The plague eradicates over a quarter of the population of Athens, including Pericles (429 BC)
404 b.C. The Peloponnesian war with Sparta ends with the defeat of the Athenians
338 b.C. Philip II of Macedonia conquers Athens and other Greek cities-states
336 b.C. Assassination of Philip and succession of his son Alexander the Great
336-323 b.C. Alexander's expansion of the Macedonian empire through the Mediterranean and the Middle East to India
146 b.C. The Roman Empire subjugates the Macedonians. Athens is incorporated into the province of Achaia
200 b.C. -300 a.D. Roman domination in Greece
50 a.D. The Apostle Paul visits Athens to preach the word of Christ.
330 a.D. Constantine I's founding of the Byzantine Empire as successor to the Roman Empire
395 a.D. Athens is conceiving by Visigoths
529 a.D. Justinian I closes the Academy.
1204 a.D. Conquest of Constantinople by Franks and Venetians, who split Greece between them
1456-1821 Athens under Turkish sovereignty-domination (365years of slavery-turcocracia)
1687 The Venetians besiege the Acropolis
1821 a.D. Greek Revolution Against Turks
1821-1829 The Greek Revolution
1832 Prince Otto of Bavaria selected by Western powers for king of modern Greek state
1834 The capital of modern Greece is transferred from Nafplio to the Peloponnese in Athens
1896 The first modern Olympic Games are hosted in Athens
1917 Greece joins the Allied forces and enters World War I
1920-1923 Greece at war with Turkey
1923 End of the Greek-Turkish war. Massive influx of Greek refugees from Asia Minor to Athens and Piraeus
1940 Metaxas denies access to Mussolini's fleet in Greek ports with the word "NO"
1941 40,000 Athenians die of severe food shortages due to German and Italian domination
1944 Liberation of Greece
1944-49 Greek Civil War
1967 Military coup-putsch. Greece is ruled by Colonel Papadopoulos
1974 Overthrow of the military junta-dictatorship
1981 Greece becomes a member of the European Union
1985 Athens becomes Europe's first Cultural Capital
2004 Athens hosts the Olympics
Parthenon-Acropolis hill (+302103210219)
Opening hours: April-December, 8am daily until sunset. January-March 8.30-14.30 daily.
Acropolis Museum (+302109000900, 15 Dionysiou Areopagitou Street)
Visit times: Monday - Sunday: 8.00-20.00
Contact email: info@theacropolismuseum.gr