Library of Hadrian at Athens
Creators: Robert McNeil
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https://pleiades.jazkarta.com/places/728329644
37.9752724, 23.7260097
- Representative Locations:
- OSM location of so-called Hadrian's Library (30 BC - AD 300) accuracy: +/- 20 meters.
- Imagery location of the Library of Hadrian (30 BC - AD 640) accuracy: +/- 5 meters.
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- Hadrian's Library (English, modern)
- Library of Hadrian (English, modern)
- Library of Hadrian at Athens connection Athenae (unspecified date range)
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None
architectural complex
- See Further:
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- Ancient History Encyclopedia, The Library of Hadrian
- Choremi-Spetsieri, A. 1995. "The Library of Hadrian at Athens: Recent Finds." Ostraka 4:137-47.
- Glowacki, Kevin T. "The Ancient City of Athens: The Library of Hadrian. N.p., n.d. Web. 22 Mar. 2015.
- Spawforth 2011, 247
- ToposText Library of Hadrian (Athens)
- Travlos 1971, 244-52, fig. 314-324
- Wikipedia (English) Hadrian's Library
- See Also:
- Related:
Pleiades
Located northeast of the Athenian Agora, the Library of Hadrian is a building constructed under the Roman emperor Hadrian in AD 132. The columns and architecture have a distinctively Roman style, much like the buildings of the Roman Agora in Athens. The Library featured one hundred columns of Phrygian marble, had gilded roofwork and alabaster architectural details, and was decorated with many statues and frescoes. This building, along with many others of the same style, was part of a Hadrianic building program that Hadrian himself undertook at Athens in an attempt to enhance the urban appearance of the city. It served primarily as a library and a place where the city's elite could come together to exchange ideas. It included a large room for the storage of the scrolls, as well as smaller rooms that could be used for lectures.
The library was damaged in AD 267 during the Herulian sack. The complex was repaired during the early fifth century and then became the site of a paleochristian church. Subsequently a three-aisled basilica was built (seventh century) that was replaced by a single-aisle church in the eleventh century. In 2001 the library began to be used as an archaeological storeroom and was closed to the public.
Robert McNeil, Mallory Barbosa, Jeffrey Becker, McKenzie Cornish, Denitsa Dzhigova, Tom Elliott, Tyler Engalla, Brady Kiesling, Adam Rabinowitz, and Jennifer Townzen, 'Library of Hadrian at Athens: a Pleiades place resource', Pleiades: A Gazetteer of Past Places, 2018 <https://pleiades.jazkarta.com/places/728329644> [accessed: 25 April 2025]
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