Roman Agora
The Roman Agora sits like a forgotten theater set in modern Athens, where you can walk through the actual marketplace where Romans bought grain, oil, and gossip 2,000 years ago.
About Roman Agora
The Roman Agora sits like a forgotten theater set in modern Athens, where you can walk through the actual marketplace where Romans bought grain, oil, and gossip 2,000 years ago. The star here is the Tower of the Winds, an octagonal marble clocktower that's basically the world's first weather station. Each face shows a different wind god carved in relief, and if you look closely, you can still see the channels where water flowed through the ancient hydraulic clock mechanism.
You'll enter through the impressive Gate of Athena Archegetis, its four Doric columns still standing proud after two millennia. The site feels intimate compared to the chaos of the nearby Ancient Agora. You can walk right up to the Tower of the Winds and circle it completely, studying each wind god's personality carved into the marble. The morning light hits the sundial markings perfectly, making the ancient timekeeping system suddenly clear.
Most guides bundle this with other sites, but it deserves focused time. Skip the audio guide (€5) and just observe the tower's details yourself. The site connects to the Ancient Agora if you have a combo ticket, but honestly, seeing this first makes the larger agora feel overwhelming afterward. Entry costs €8, or it's included in the €30 multi-site ticket.
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