Bouleuterion

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bouleuterion of Priene.

A bouleuterion (Greek: βουλευτήριον) was a building which housed the council of citizens (boule) in Ancient Greece. There are several extant remains of bouleuteria around Greece and former Greek territories of ancient times.

The boule, a basic institution of the ancient city-state (polis) in historical times, consisted of the citizens' representatives who assembled in order to confer and decide about public affairs. The word bouleuterion is composed from Greek boule (council) and the suffix -terion (place for doing something).

Olympia

Bouleuterion ruins in Olympia.

The bouleuterion at Olympia, Greece, is the building where the administration took place. It is shaped as early Greek temples were shaped in a kind of square horse-shoe and it has tiered seating arrangement. The bouleuterion was near the Agora.

Athens

The boule, better known as the council of 500, was the city council of ancient Athens. The bouleuterion therefore is the building the council speaks in. It was located in the Ancient Agora of Athens.

See also

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.