Hellenic Parliament
The Hellenic Parliament occupies what was once the Royal Palace, a neoclassical beauty from 1843 that dominates Syntagma Square.
About Hellenic Parliament
The Hellenic Parliament occupies what was once the Royal Palace, a neoclassical beauty from 1843 that dominates Syntagma Square. You're here for the Evzones guards in their theatrical uniforms: white fustanella kilts, red caps with tassels, and shoes with enormous pom-poms called tsarouchia. These presidential guards perform a slow-motion changing ceremony every hour at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, moving like mechanical dolls in perfect synchronization.
The hourly ceremony unfolds with surreal precision as two guards march in exaggerated slow motion, lifting their legs impossibly high and stamping their feet with force that echoes across the square. Their faces remain stone-serious while tourists snap photos of their theatrical uniforms. The Sunday 11 AM ceremony brings the full guard marching down from the barracks, accompanied by a military band, creating genuine spectacle rather than the brief weekday shows.
Most guides oversell this as a major attraction when it's really a quick photo stop. The building itself isn't open for tours, so you're looking at architecture and watching guards for maybe 15 minutes total. Skip the souvenir shops around the square (overpriced tourist traps) and don't expect profound historical insight. Come for the Instagram shots and the novelty of seeing grown men in elaborate costumes taking their job very seriously.
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