The Archaeological Museum of Pythagoreion contains the following collections: Archaic stelae, Portraits of Roman emperors, Relief funeral banquets, Pottery spanning the period between the 9th and the 2nd centuries B.C.
The most important items of the exhibition are: Marble statue of seated Aiakes. According to the inscription, it was dedicated to Hera by Aiakes, father of Polycrates, as a tithe of the wealth he acquired by piracy. It was found at the Pythagoreion and dates from ca. 540 B.C., Marble monumental sarcophagus in the shape of a temple, dated to the second half of the 6th century B.C., Small poros grave stele. It is crowned with a palmette and bears the iscription "Diagoras of Delos". Dated to 530 B.C., Marble grave stele crowned with a palmette. It was found at Chora and dates from 500/490 B.C., Statue of the emperor Trajan. Marble, larger-than-life statue of the Roman emperor (height 2.71m.), Marble portrait of Augustus (height 0.49m.), Marble portrait of Claudius (height 0.53m.).
Source: odysseus.culture.gr