Noted for its six Corinthian columns and marble dome, this monument was built to house the prize awarded to the winners of a drama competition in 334 BC. Later the monument was incorporated into the library of a Capuchin monastery, where it was known as the Lantern of Demosthenes. Lord Byron once stayed at the monastery and is said to have written part of Childe Harold while sitting between the monument's columns. Epimenidi and Vyronos streets (just east of the Acropolis), Plaka, Athens.