Category
page 1Monuments and memorials in Greece
Choragic Monument of Lysicrates
ancient Greek choragic monument in Athens
Philopappos Monument
ancient Greek mausoleum in Muses hill in Athens
Arch of Hadrian
Roman arch in Athens
Vido
Vido () is an island of the Ionian Islands group of Greece.

Philippeion
The Philippeion () in the Altis of Olympia was a tholos made of in limestone and marble. Originally, it contained chryselephantine (ivory and gold) statues of the family of Philip II, including himself, his son Alexander the Great, one of his wives Olympias, his father Amyntas III, and his mother Eurydice I. It was made by the Athenian sculptor Leochares as a memorial celebrating Philip's victory at the battle of Chaeronea (338 BC). It was the only structure inside the Altis dedicated to human beings rather than gods.
Asclepieion of Athens
temple complex in ancient Athens
Statue of Liberty, Mytilini
statue in Mytilene, Lesbos, Greece
Peripatos (Akropolis)
archaeological site
Choragic Monument of Thrasyllos
ancient monument in Athens
Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, Athens
memorial to Greece's war dead, below the Parliament building
Monument of Nikias
choregic monument on Acropolis south slope
Menorah in flames
Holocaust memorial in Thessaloniki
Maitland Monument
neoclassical monument in rotunda style in Corfu island, Greece
Zarmanochegas
Zarmanochegas (; according to Strabo) or Zarmarus (according to Dio Cassius) was a gymnosophist (naked philosopher), a monk of the Sramana tradition (possibly, but not necessarily a Buddhist) who, according to ancient historians such as Strabo and Dio Cassius, met Nicholas of Damascus in Antioch in the first years of Augustus' rule over the Roman Empire, and shortly thereafter proceeded to Athens where he burnt himself to death. He is estimated to have died in 19 BC.
Caves of Apollo, Zeus and Pan
caves in the rock of the Acropolis of Athens