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In 318 BC. Pyrrhus of Epirus acceded to the throne. He was related to Alexander the Great via Alexander’s mother, Olympias. Epirus was but a small kingdom at the time, under Macedonia’s sphere of influence. Soon, the young king would turn it into a superpower and win his place in posterity as one of the most charismatic and noble leaders of Greek Antiquity.
Pyrrhus’ expansionist politics necessitated changes, so he transferred the administrative center of his kingdom from the interior to Amvrakia. The king expressed his ambitious vision in his new capital, decorating it with magnificent new buildings and brilliant works of art. According to Dionysius of Halicarnassus, a historian of the 1stcentury BC, these included the construction of two theaters, a large imposing theatre like the ancient theatre of Dodona and a smaller one close to the temple of Apollo.
Of the grand Theater of Amvrakia very little has come to light. Its largest part remains buried beneath the buildings of modern day Arta. The small theater however, the smallest theater ever discovered in Greece, has been satisfactorily preserved. It does not appear to have been intended primarily as a space for entertainment. Minor plays and musical works may have been performed there, but it was used mostly as a place of assembly. Amvrakians would gather in the small theatre to discuss administrative and religious matters, everything that preoccupied the Great Epirus of King Pyrrhus.
In contrast to most ancient Greek theatres, the small Theater of Amvrakia was not built on a natural incline, but rested on a filled slope. The backfill included older constructions: the foundations of houses dating to the 5thcentury BC and baths dating to the 4th century BC. The floors of the baths, made of small black and white river or sea pebbles depicted dolphins, an Erotideus (young Eros) stretching his hand to a swan, another blowing a conch.
With the passage of time, the small theater of Amvrakia was in turn covered by other buildings, possibly byzantine, ottoman, recent. Excavations uncovered it in 1976. It has since remained visible, a significant memento of the ancient city that has risen from below modern day Arta.
cavea diameter: 6,70
date of construction: 4th-3rd c. BC
in use: No