Athens has a history stretching back to Mycenaean times and in the fifth
century BC it became the most significant community for the development
of political thought and practice, art and culture that had ever been
seen and which still retains a vital influence on the present day. When
the Ancient Olympics were first revived at the end of the nineteenth
century they took place in Athens--an occasion remembered in the Games
of 2004. A Traveller's History of Athens describes the whole history of
this great city from mythological and prehistoric times, through its
artistic flowering in the classical age; its transformation in Roman
times from a major player in world politics to a quiet university city;
its decline into ruin and insignificance in the Middle Ages when it
became the playground of Crusaders and their successors; the long period
of subjection to the Ottoman empire; its recreation as the capital of a
new nation in the nineteenth century, and one of the finest
new-classical cities in Europe; its troubled history in the twentieth
century and its continuing place in the hearts and minds of all
visitors. Throughout, quotations from contemporary sources enliven and
illuminate the text. The author, who visits Athens at least once a year,
also incorporates a chronological history and includes helpful
information on Athens' museums and galleries and archaeological sites,
excursions from the city and on transport and communications.