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Paphos

An area on the flat lands near the sea in the modern Cypriot city of Paphos has been designated a world heritage site because of the quality and quantity of archaeological material, primarily from the Hellenistic and Roman periods, to be found there. Large rock-cut tombs of the Hellenistic period (the so-called tombs of the kings) demonstrate architectural links with Alexandria. Nea Paphos was the administrative center of cyprus in the Roman period. Excavated public buildings of this period include an odeon with adjacent agora, a temple of Asklepios, and a theater. Villas of the period, excavated by a Polish team under A. W. Daszewski, are decorated with fine mosaics. One of these (the house of Theseus) may have been the villa of the Roman governor. Recent expansion of the modern city and hotel construction in the