Acropolis
Alternative forms
Origin
From Ancient Greek ἀκÏόπολις, from ἄκÏος (akros, "topmostâ€, “tipâ€, “summit") + πόλις (polis, "city").
“Acropolis†listed in the Oxford English Dictionary, second edition (1989)
Full definition of acropolis
Noun
- A promontory (usually fortified with a citadel) forming the hub of many Grecian cities, and around which many were built for defensive purposes before and during the Classical Greece; compare Acropolis.
- 1850: Karl Otfried Müller and John Leitch (translator), Ancient Art and Its Remains; or, A Manual of the Archæology of Art, page 146:The Etruscans, then, appear in general as an industrious people ( φιλότεχνον ἔϑνος), of a bold and lofty spirit of enterprise, which was greatly favoured by their priestly aristocratic constitution. Massive walls, mostly of irregular blocks, surround their cities (not merely their acropoleis); the art of protecting the country from inundations by the construction of canals, and outlets from lakes, was very zealously practised by them.
Related terms
- acropolitan pertaining adjective
- acropoli non-standard plural