Yes, a temple called the Necromanteion was built in honour of Persephone and Hades. It was almost entirely destroyed by invasion and time, the ruins of it however are still visible today.
Persephone, as Queen of the Underworld, was a deity of death, to draw her attention was to invite death as the Greeks thought it.
Ancient Greek temple and other public buildings were mainly constructed of stone by the Egyptian Stone Frame method. These replaced earlier timber structures. The stone used was mainly local marble and limestone. Houses were mainly mud brick, or timber, but fired clay bricks began to be used with a similar lime mortar to that used for the stone buildings Roofs were mainly thatch in early Ancient Greek construction, but fired clay roof tiles in both curved and flat forms were used more later in the period. Temples were built from marble and limestome.
by mading it
The Greeks begin to build temples back in the early 7th century BC, with the transition stone architecture around 600BC.They built temples to most of their gods. We build churches. Same thing.
Ancient Greek houses were made out of sun dried brick on a foundation of stones. Roofs were made out of overlapping clay stones. The flooring of the house was just piles of dirt. where did they build their homes
Temples dedicated to specific gods or goddesses.
The Greeks built temples for the gods they worshiped.
They built special buildings, such as temples and theaters
Persephone is important to the Greeks, because she is the Queen of the Underworld and a vegetation goddess.
The structure of columns with cross beams was copied from the Egyptians.
Throughout the history of ancinet Egypt, Anubis had many temples, his center cult cities were called by the ancient Greeks Lycopolis and Cynopolis.
pooev
Yes.
Persephone, as Queen of the Underworld, was a deity of death, to draw her attention was to invite death as the Greeks thought it.
These buildings are temples, but if you mean where the Greeks thought they lived, they would not live in one bulding. They would have seperate palaces or houses.
The Romans did not invent columns. They adopted the use of column to support the roofs of temples and for porticoes form the Greeks. They also adopted the three orders (styles) the Greeks used for columns: Doric, Ionic and Corinthian. They developed the Composite order which combined elements of two orders. The Egyptians used columns for their temples before the Greeks.
Ancient Greek temple and other public buildings were mainly constructed of stone by the Egyptian Stone Frame method. These replaced earlier timber structures. The stone used was mainly local marble and limestone. Houses were mainly mud brick, or timber, but fired clay bricks began to be used with a similar lime mortar to that used for the stone buildings Roofs were mainly thatch in early Ancient Greek construction, but fired clay roof tiles in both curved and flat forms were used more later in the period. Temples were built from marble and limestome.