
According to experts, an old Greek lecture hall has been discovered inside a school difficult in , Italy, making it one of the earliest known example of a school-like service in the ancient globe.
According to an , April 9 , media launch from the , Free University , and of , Berlin, the , Agrigento , service, which was constructed in the second century B.C., is thought to be among the first to incorporate natural health and academic achievement.
Agrigento is the largest Greek colony in Sicily, which was established in 580 B.C. and has been in existence for more than 1, 000 decades, according to the release.
No other school in the ancient world had a lesson hall, according to the release, and it is the only known framework of its kind discovered in the Eastern Mediterranean, according to the researchers.
Between 250 and 300 years after the site’s construction of Agrigento and Pergamon, the closest case of a combined school and presentation hall was constructed, according to experts in the release, at the site in modern-day Turkey.
According to researchers, the theater, which was discovered during excavations in March, appears to have been a protected theatre with eight circular rows of ascending seats and could have seats for about 200 people.
According to experts, the hall was probable used for classes or shows and eventually turned into a large house with benches.
According to experts, the site’s special gymnasium portion had formerly been excavated and contained 650-foot-long tracks and a huge swimming pool.
According to experts, Gymnasiums were a significant component of ancient Greek culture, especially for young men, and an important component of their urban infrastructure.
According to experts, the site also contained two writings: one that mentions the name of the gymnasium’s mind, and the other that appears to refer to repairs that were funded by a member and given to Hermes and Heracles.
Despite its long history, experts claim that very few writings have been discovered at , Agrigento .
In collaboration with the Politecnico di Bari, Bari, and the Parco Archeologico Valle dei Templi di Agrigento, and funded by the , German Research Foundation, the construction was led by instructors from the , Free University, of , Berlin, and in agreement.
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The Bradenton Herald, 2025
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