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Smith, Arthur H. [Hrsg.]; British Museum <London> / Department of Greek and Roman Antiquities [Hrsg.]
Catalogue of sculpture in the Department of Greek and Roman Antiquities (Band 1) — London, 1892

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https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.18216#0230
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PART III.

THE SUCCESSORS OF PHEIDIAS.

SCULPTURES OF THE TEMPLE CALLED
THE THESEION.

The building which is commonly known as the Temple
of Theseus, or Theseion, stands about a quarter of a mile
to the north-west of the Acropolis of Athens.

The temple is of the kind called peripteral Jiexastyle.

31,77 - .-y

Fig. 15.- Flan of the Thf-seion. (From Baumeister )

Round the cella, or central chamber, is a single row of
columns, thirty-four in number, of which there are six at
each end. The order is Doric, with a frieze peculiarly
arranged. On the eastern front are ten sculptured me-
topes, and there are four on each of the adjacent sides,
making a total of eighteen sculptured metopes. The
remaining metopes of the temple, fifty in number, are
plain slabs, which may possibly have had painted on them
 
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