Treasuries at Olympia

The Treasuries at Olympia were a series of small temple-shaped buildings located to the north side of the Altis or sanctuary at the site of Olympia in Greece. All but two were erected by Greek colonies to store valuable votive offerings.

Treasuries at Olympia

The Treasuries were built on a natural terrace at the foot of Mt. Kronos. The best preserved and earliest treasury is that dedicated by Sicyon. The most recent treasury discovered is that of Syracuse. It was built to celebrate the victory over Carthago in 480 BC.

West to east the treasuries were dedicated by: Sicyon, Syracuse, Byzantion, Sybaris, Cyrene, Selinus, Metapontium, Megara and Gela.


Descriptions of Buildings

The miniature buildings consist of a single room preceded by a small entrance-hall with two columns, like a small temple. It was holding valuable offerings, some were items they won in war, most of it was money. It was protected by God.

Modern Day


gollark: Gambling is generally less cost-efficient than basically all other fun things ever, to my knowledge.
gollark: Not particularly. They're not cost effective for that.
gollark: Although I doubt the researchâ„¢ was able to researchâ„¢ the extreme high end.
gollark: As far as I know, life satisfactiony measures mostly increase logarithmically with money.
gollark: Fun fact: we live in a society.

See also

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.