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136:, it was a circular structure on flat terrain with elevated steps. A walkway intersected through the center, where a podium was placed. It could accommodate 7,500 to 8,000 people in the beginning of the fifth century BC, after it was expanded. Such a circular structure was unusual for its location in
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were moved to the theater. The meetings of the assembly could attract large audiences: 6,000 citizens might have attended in Athens during the fifth century BC. Hansen and
Fischer-Hansen argue that theaters were primarily built for performances and that their use by the
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Hansen, Mogens Herman; Fischer-Hansen, Tobias (1994). "Political
Architecture in Archaic and Classical Greek Poleis". In Whitehead, David (ed.).
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the building could take a variety of forms. Many consisted of steps built in the slope of a hill, similar to theaters but much smaller.
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222:. Historia: Einzelschriften. Vol. 87. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag. pp. 23–90.
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From
Political Architecture to Stephanus Byzantius: Sources for the Ancient Greek Polis
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however, because it could only seat 500 to 600 people in a relatively large city.
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37:(ἐκκλησιαστήριον) was the meeting place of the popular assembly (
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Plato's
Magnesia and Philosophical Polities in Magna Graecia
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The ekklesia in Athens convened on a hill called the
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108:. Around 300 BC, all the meetings of the
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269:Ancient Greek buildings and structures
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117:was a convenient extra function.
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237:Horky, Philip Sidney (2007).
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132:had a roofed building. In
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279:Legislative buildings
124:which had a separate
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47:Greek city-state (
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158:References
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80:In a few
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