Steven Sklifas - Writer Photographer

  • Home
  • Galleries
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • Blog
  • services
  • Writing
  • Contact
  • About
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x
search results
Image 13 of 26
Prev Next
Less

Syracuse_Sicily_Italy_008.tif

Add to Cart Add to Lightbox
twitterlinkedinfacebook

Syracuse. Sicily. Italy. View of the Greek Temple of Apollo, built in local limestone in the 6th century BC and the oldest peripteral Doric temple in Sicily. Dedicated to the Greek god Apollo, the Temple had an elongated plan with a colonnade of 6 by 17 columns, and its extensive ruins include part of the cella wall, columns stumps and two monolithic Doric columns, estimated to weigh 35 tons each. Through its long life, the temple was converted into a Christian Byzantine church, then an Arab mosque, a Norman church and lastly into Spanish prison. The Temple is located on the tiny island of Ortygia, the original settlement of Syracuse, a former power house of the Mediterranean, located on the south east corner of Sicily.

Copyright
Copyright Steven Sklifas. All Rights Reserved.
Image Size
3264x2448 / 22.9MB
www.stevensklifas.com
Keywords
Sicily, Italy, Trinacria, Greek, Ancient, civilisation, civilization, Hellenistic, Monuments, ruins, Archaeology, Archeology, Archaeological, columns, historic, history, vestiges, remnants, Mediterranean, Italia, Hellenes, Magna, Grecia, UNESCO, Sicilian, Magna Graecia, classical, famous, Antiquity, Island, Italians, isle, Syracuse, Siracusa, Hellenism, Greater, Greece
Contained in galleries
Syracuse - Sicily - Italy
Syracuse. Sicily. Italy. View of the Greek Temple of Apollo, built in local limestone in the 6th century BC and the oldest peripteral Doric temple in Sicily. Dedicated to the Greek god Apollo, the Temple had an elongated plan with a colonnade of 6 by 17 columns, and its extensive ruins include part of the cella wall, columns stumps and two monolithic Doric columns, estimated to weigh 35 tons each. Through its long life, the temple was converted into a Christian Byzantine church, then an Arab mosque, a Norman church and lastly into Spanish prison. The Temple is located on the tiny island of Ortygia, the original settlement of Syracuse, a former power house of the Mediterranean, located on the south east corner of Sicily.