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Argos
The Town Hall
Railway Station
The Municipal Market
Konstantopoulos Mansion
Trikoupis Mansion
Kapodistrias Public School
Xintaropoulos Building
Kapodistrias Barracks
Church of Aghios Ioannis Prodromos
Church of Aghios Konstantinos
Church of the Dormition of the Theotokos
The Church of Panaghia Portokalousa (Katekekrymeni)
Panaghia of the Castle
Aghios Petros Cathedral and Central Square
Kefalari and Erasinos River
The Archaelogical Museum (Kallergeio)
The Courthouse Square
The Street Market
The Ancient Theatre
Serapeio-Asklipeio-Baths A
Theatre with the Straight Rows of Seats
The Temple of Aphrodite
The Ancient Agora of Argos
Hypostyle Chamber
The Northern Arcade and the Theatre of the Agora
The War Memorial
The South Arcade and Palaestra
Stadium Track
The Dome and the Nymphaeum of Argos
Monument D
The Agora's Drain
Monument M
Larissa and the Castle
Prophet Elias Hill (the Shield)-Deiras-Prehistoric Times
Temple of Athena Oxyderkes and Apollo Deiradiotis
The Criterion, the Nymphaeum and the Aqueduct
Gordon Residence
Residence of General Dimitris Tsokris
The Diamantopoulos Residence
The Baths A
The Odeon
The Square Nymphaeum
The Hellenic Pyramid of Ellinikos
ΑΡΓΟΣ - Church of Aghios Ioannis Prodromos
Building work on the church in Gounaris Street began sometime after 1822 and was finished in 1829. It served as the Cathedral of Argos. The bell tower was built in 1853. The hagiography inside the church is especially rich and impressive. A piece of artwork that is worthy of special note is the gold-plated iconostasis, the work of Michael Zographos and his son Panagiotis Zographos, which was place in the church in 1888. The church is connected to the historic events of the Greek revolution, as it was here that a service was held and the plenipotentiaries of the first national council were sworn in in December 1821. The National Council then began its work inside, which was later continued at Nea Epidaurus.