14
PLANS AND DRAWINGS OF ATHENIAN BUILDINGS.
K. End of the lintel block of the inner architrave of the door, with a sinking
and two pins to fix a console.
L. Notch cut to receive the end of the lintel of the inner marble door
frame.
M. M. Part of the door-jamb cut away when the opening was widened
probably in Christian times.
N. Inner moulded door-frame, shown in its supposed position.
O. Outer step.
P. Limit to which this outer step reached.
Q. Q. Great marble slab which roofed over the salt water tank.
R. R. Cross wall of poros stone which formed one side of the tank, and was
the foundation of the western partition wall in the cella.
S. S. Start of the pavement outside, worked in the same block of marble as
the inner and outer steps (D and 0) and the slab Q which covered
the tank.
OTHER ATHENIAN BUILDINGS.
XXIII. Plan of the Aslckpw-ion (Pl. 18).
1. Cave containing the sacred spring, paved with pebble mosaic.
2. Wall built of fine poros blocks with dado and coping of Hymettian
marble.
3. Rudely built Byzantine wall added in front of the original wall.
4. Original cross wall, now destroyed, near the end of the stoa of
Asklepios.
5. Foundation blocks of the inner row of columns of the stoa.
6. 6. Rudely built wall and arcade, added in Byzantine times.
7. Original end wall of stoa, built of very neat draughted poros blocks.
8. 8. Existing marble steps and bases of the front row of columns.
9. Marble slab, formerly a low screen at the S. E. angle of the stoa.
10. Marble-lined bath added in Byzantine times.
11. Foundations of the altar of Asklepios.
12. Polygonal wall at the east end of the Asklepieion.
13. 13. Polygonal wall on the south.
14. Upper part of choragic monument which now lies on the south
polygonal wall.
15. Ancient wall.
16. Walls supporting the cavea of the great theatre.
17. 17. Wall of the passage and stairs to the theatre, built of conglomerate
stone.
XXIII. This is based on the plan by
M. Mitsakis in the ripaicriKa for 1878. M.
did not add so much here as in other eases,
but there are some observations of detail worth
preserving.
8. This stoa, and especially its front, had
not been thoroughly worked out by M.
10. Now buried in the earth, and so in-
visible.
PLANS AND DRAWINGS OF ATHENIAN BUILDINGS.
K. End of the lintel block of the inner architrave of the door, with a sinking
and two pins to fix a console.
L. Notch cut to receive the end of the lintel of the inner marble door
frame.
M. M. Part of the door-jamb cut away when the opening was widened
probably in Christian times.
N. Inner moulded door-frame, shown in its supposed position.
O. Outer step.
P. Limit to which this outer step reached.
Q. Q. Great marble slab which roofed over the salt water tank.
R. R. Cross wall of poros stone which formed one side of the tank, and was
the foundation of the western partition wall in the cella.
S. S. Start of the pavement outside, worked in the same block of marble as
the inner and outer steps (D and 0) and the slab Q which covered
the tank.
OTHER ATHENIAN BUILDINGS.
XXIII. Plan of the Aslckpw-ion (Pl. 18).
1. Cave containing the sacred spring, paved with pebble mosaic.
2. Wall built of fine poros blocks with dado and coping of Hymettian
marble.
3. Rudely built Byzantine wall added in front of the original wall.
4. Original cross wall, now destroyed, near the end of the stoa of
Asklepios.
5. Foundation blocks of the inner row of columns of the stoa.
6. 6. Rudely built wall and arcade, added in Byzantine times.
7. Original end wall of stoa, built of very neat draughted poros blocks.
8. 8. Existing marble steps and bases of the front row of columns.
9. Marble slab, formerly a low screen at the S. E. angle of the stoa.
10. Marble-lined bath added in Byzantine times.
11. Foundations of the altar of Asklepios.
12. Polygonal wall at the east end of the Asklepieion.
13. 13. Polygonal wall on the south.
14. Upper part of choragic monument which now lies on the south
polygonal wall.
15. Ancient wall.
16. Walls supporting the cavea of the great theatre.
17. 17. Wall of the passage and stairs to the theatre, built of conglomerate
stone.
XXIII. This is based on the plan by
M. Mitsakis in the ripaicriKa for 1878. M.
did not add so much here as in other eases,
but there are some observations of detail worth
preserving.
8. This stoa, and especially its front, had
not been thoroughly worked out by M.
10. Now buried in the earth, and so in-
visible.