thumb|260px|View of the Ancient Agora of Athens in the foreground. The [[Temple of Hephaestus is to the left and the Stoa of Attalos to the right.]]
An agora was the central public square of an ancient Greek city, typically surrounded by temples, shops, and covered walkways where citizens gathered for commerce, politics, and social life. It matters because the agora was fundamental to how ancient Greeks organized their communities and conducted both everyday business and democratic activities.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
thumb|260px|View of the Ancient Agora of Athens in the foreground. The [[Temple of Hephaestus is to the left and the Stoa of Attalos to the right.]]
The agora (; , romanized: '''', meaning "market" in Modern Greek) was a central public space in ancient Greek city-states. The literal meaning of the word "agora" is "gathering place" or "assembly". The agora was the centre of the athletic, artistic, business, social, spiritual, and political life in the city. The Ancient Agora of Athens is the best example.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).