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Delos

The island of Delos (/ˈdlɒs/; Greek: Δήλος [ˈðilos]; Attic: Δῆλος, Doric: Δᾶλος), near Mykonos, near the centre of the Cyclades archipelago, is one of the most important mythological, historical, and archaeological sites in Greece. The excavations in the island are among the most extensive in the Mediterranean; ongoing work takes place under the direction of the Ephorate of Antiquities of Cyclades, and many of the artifacts found are on display at the Archaeological Museum of Delos and the National Archaeological Museum of Athens.

Delos
Native name:
Δήλος
General view of Delos
In the Cyclades
Delos
Geography
Coordinates37°23′36″N 25°16′16″E / 37.39333°N 25.27111°E / 37.39333; 25.27111Coordinates: 37°23′36″N 25°16′16″E / 37.39333°N 25.27111°E / 37.39333; 25.27111
ArchipelagoCyclades
Area3.43 km2 (1.32 sq mi)
Highest elevation112 m (367 ft)
Highest pointMt. Kynthos
Administration
Greece
RegionSouth Aegean
Regional unitMykonos
Demographics
Population24 (2011)
Pop. density6,8/km2 (176/sq mi)
CriteriaCultural: ii, iii, iv, vi
Reference530
Inscription1990 (14th Session)

Delos had a position as a holy sanctuary for a millennium before Olympian Greek mythology made it the birthplace of Apollo and Artemis. From its Sacred Harbour, the horizon shows the three conical mounds that have identified landscapes sacred to a goddess (it is predicted that the deity's name is Athena) - in other sites: one, retaining its Pre-Greek name Mount Cynthus,[1] is crowned with a sanctuary of Zeus.

In 1990, UNESCO inscribed Delos on the World Heritage List, citing its exceptional archaeological site which "conveys the image of a great cosmopolitan Mediterranean port", its influence on the development of Greek architecture, and its sacred importance throughout Ancient Greece.[2]

History

Ancient Greece

 
The island of Delos, Carl Anton Joseph Rottmann, 1847
 
The theatre
 
The Terrace of the Lions

Investigation of ancient stone huts found on the island indicate that it has been inhabited since the third millennium BC. Thucydides identifies the original inhabitants as piratical Carians who were eventually expelled by King Minos of Crete.[3] By the writing of the Odyssey, the island was already famous as the birthplace of the twin gods Apollo and Artemis (although some confusion seems to exist of Artemis' birthplace being either Delos or the island of Ortygia).

Between 900 BC and 100 AD, Delos was a major cult centre, where the gods Dionysus and Leto, mother of the twin deities Apollo and Artemis, were revered. Eventually acquiring Panhellenic religious significance, Delos was initially a religious pilgrimage for the Ionians.

A number of "purifications" were performed by the city-state of Athens in an attempt to render the island fit for the proper worship of the gods. The first took place in the sixth century BC, directed by the tyrant Pisistratus, who ordered that all graves within sight of the temple be dug up and the bodies moved to another nearby island. In the fifth century BC, during the sixth year of the Peloponnesian War and under instruction from the Delphic Oracle, the entire island was purged of all dead bodies. Prohibition of dying was then ordered, so that no one should be allowed to die (or give birth) on the island due to its sacred importance, and to preserve its neutrality in commerce since no one could then claim ownership through inheritance. Immediately after this purification, the first quinquennial festival of the Delian games were celebrated there.[4] Four years later, all inhabitants of the island were removed to Adramyttium in Asia as a further purification.[5]

After the Persian Wars, the island became the natural meeting ground for the Delian League, founded in 478 BC, the congresses being held in the temple (a separate quarter was reserved for foreigners and the sanctuaries of foreign deities). The league's common treasury was kept here as well until 454 BC, when Pericles removed it to Athens.[6]

During the Hellenistic period, a well-established Phoenician colony on the island had extensive trade relations.[7]

The island had no productive capacity for food, fiber, or timber, which were all imported. Limited water was exploited with an extensive cistern and aqueduct system, wells, and sanitary drains. Various regions operated agorae (markets).

Suda writes that the Greeks used the proverb "ᾌδεις ὥσπερ εἰς Δῆλον πλέων", meaning you sing as if sailing into Delos in reference to someone who is happy, light-hearted, and enjoying himself.[8]

Iamblichus writes that Delos Mysteries (similar to the Eleusinian Mysteries) were established.[9]

Roman era

Strabo states that in 166 BC, the Romans converted Delos into a free port, which was partially motivated by seeking to damage the trade of Rhodes, at the time the target of Roman hostility. In 167 or 166 BC, after the Roman victory in the Third Macedonian War, the Roman Republic ceded the island of Delos to the Athenians, who expelled most of the original inhabitants.[10] Roman traders came to purchase tens of thousands of slaves captured by the Cilician pirates or captured in the wars following the disintegration of the Seleucid Empire. It became the center of the slave trade, with the largest slave market in the larger region being maintained here.

The Roman destruction of Corinth in 146 BC allowed Delos to at least partially assume Corinth's role as the premier trading center of Greece, but Delos' commercial prosperity, construction activity, and population waned significantly after the island was assaulted by the forces of Mithridates VI of Pontus in 88 and 69 BC, during the Mithridatic Wars with Rome.[11] Before the end of the first century BC, trade routes had changed; Delos was replaced by Puteoli as the chief focus of Italian trade with the east, and as a cult centre, too, it entered a sharp decline.

Despite its decline, Delos maintained some population in the early Roman Imperial period. Pausanias (8,33,2), writing in the second century AD, states that Delos was uninhabited apart from a few custodians of the sanctuaries. Evidence has been found of Roman baths, coins, an aqueduct, residential and elite houses, multiple churches, basilicas, and a monastery all from the first to sixth centuries AD, which, however, does not suggest that the island was continuously inhabited in the period.[12][13] The pottery found indicates that produce, such as wine and oil, continued to be imported from regional centres. Also, a number of wine presses were found amidst the ruins of the ancient city that date to this period, suggesting that the population at this time was engaged in considerable viticultural endeavour.[14]

Delos was eventually abandoned around the eighth century AD.[15]

Landmarks

  • The small sacred lake in its circular bowl, now intentionally left dry by the island's caretakers to suppress disease-spreading bacteria,[16] is a topographical feature that determined the placement of later features.
  • The Minoan Fountain was a rectangular public well hewn in the rock, with a central column; it formalized the sacred spring in its present sixth-century BC form, reconstructed in 166 BC, according to an inscription. Tightly laid courses of masonry form the walls; water can still be reached by a flight of steps that fill one side.
  • Several market squares were found; the Hellenistic Agora of the Competaliasts by the Sacred Harbour retains the postholes for market awnings in its stone paving. Two powerful Italic merchant guilds dedicated statues and columns there.
  • The Temple of the Delians, dedicated to Apollo, is a classic example of the Doric order. Beside the temple, once stood a colossal kouros of Apollo, only parts of which remain. Dating to the sixth century BC, parts of the upper torso and pelvis remain in situ, a hand is kept at the local museum, and a foot is in the British Museum.[17]
 
The Terrace of the Lions
  • The Terrace of the Lions, also was dedicated to Apollo by the people of Naxos shortly before 600 BC. It originally had 9-12 squatting, snarling marble guardian lions along the Sacred Way; one was removed and is presently situated over the main gate of the Venetian Arsenal. The lions create a monumental avenue comparable to Egyptian avenues of sphinxes. (A Greek sphinx is in the Delos Museum.) Today, only seven of the original lions remain.
  • The Oikos of the Naxians (House of the Naxians), first quarter of sixth century BC, has a long hall with one central ionic colonnade, a west porch tristyle in antis, and an east marble prostasis of the middle of the six,th century BC.[18]
  • The Establishment of the Poseidoniasts, clubhouse of "the Koinon of the Berytian Poseidoniast merchants, shipmasters, and warehousemen",[19][20][21] during the early years of Roman hegemony, late 2nd century BC. To their protective triad of Baal/Poseidon, Astarte/Aphrodite and Eshmun/Asklepios, they added Roma.
 
Dionysus riding a panther mosaic in the House of Dionysos
  • The Doric Temple of Isis was built on a high, overlooking hill at the beginning of the Roman period to venerate the familiar trinity of Isis, the Alexandrian Serapis, and Anubis.
  • The Temple of Hera, circa 500 BC, is a rebuilding of an earlier Heraion on the site.
  • The House of Dionysus is a luxurious second-century private house named for the floor mosaic of Dionysus riding a panther.
  • The House of the Dolphins is similarly named from its atrium mosaic, where erotes ride dolphins; its Phoenician owner commissioned a floor mosaic of Tanit in his vestibule.
  • The Stoivadeion dedicated to Dionysus bears a statue of the god of wine and the life-force. On either side of the platform, a pillar supports a colossal phallus, the symbol of Dionysus. The southern pillar, which is decorated with relief scenes from the Dionysiac circle, was erected around 300 BC to celebrate a winning theatrical performance. The statue of Dionysus was originally flanked by those of two actors impersonating Paposilenoi (conserved in the Archaeological Museum of Delos). The marble theatre is a rebuilding of an older one, undertaken shortly after 300 BC.
  • The Delos Synagogue, the oldest synagogue known today.[citation needed]

Current population

The 2001 Greek census reported a population of 14 inhabitants on the island. The island is administratively a part of the municipality of Mýkonos.

According to more recent numbers, in 2011 the island counted 24 inhabitants.

Gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ The combination -nth- is a marker for Pre-Greek words: Corinth, menthos, labyrinth, etc. A name Artemis and even Diana retained was Cynthia.
  2. ^ "Delos". UNESCO World Heritage Convention. United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization. Retrieved 20 November 2022.
  3. ^ Thucydides, I,8.
  4. ^ Thucydides, III,104.
  5. ^ Thucydides, V,1.
  6. ^ Thucydides, I,96.
  7. ^ Boussac, Marie-Françoise (1982). "À propos de quelques sceaux déliens". Bulletin de correspondance hellénique (in French). 106 (1): 445–446. doi:10.3406/bch.1982.1923. ISSN 0007-4217.
  8. ^ Suda, alpha, 455
  9. ^ Iamblichus, Life of Pythagoras, § 28.151
  10. ^ Tang, Birgit (2005), Delos, Carthage, Ampurias: the Housing of Three Mediterranean Trading Centres, Rome: L'Erma di Bretschneider (Accademia di Danimarca), p. 14, ISBN 8882653056.
  11. ^ Tang, Birgit (2005), Delos, Carthage, Ampurias: the Housing of Three Mediterranean Trading Centres, Rome: L'Erma di Bretschneider (Accademia di Danimarca), pp. 14, 32, ISBN 8882653056.
  12. ^ DODD, EMLYN K. (2020). ROMAN AND LATE ANTIQUE WINE PRODUCTION IN THE EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN : a comparative ... archaeological study at antiochia ad cragum. [Place of publication not identified]: ARCHAEOPRESS. ISBN 978-1-78969-403-1. OCLC 1139263254.
  13. ^ Le Quéré, Enora (2015). Les Cyclades sous l'Empire romain : histoire d'une renaissance. Impr. Université Rennes 2). Rennes: Presses universitaires de Rennes. ISBN 978-2-7535-4045-3. OCLC 919408437.
  14. ^ DODD, EMLYN K. (2020). ROMAN AND LATE ANTIQUE WINE PRODUCTION IN THE EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN : a comparative ... archaeological study at antiochia ad cragum. [Place of publication not identified]: ARCHAEOPRESS. ISBN 978-1-78969-403-1. OCLC 1139263254.
  15. ^ DODD, EMLYN K. (2020). ROMAN AND LATE ANTIQUE WINE PRODUCTION IN THE EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN : a comparative ... archaeological study at antiochia ad cragum. [Place of publication not identified]: ARCHAEOPRESS. ISBN 978-1-78969-403-1. OCLC 1139263254.
  16. ^ "Sacred Lake | Greece Attractions". Lonely Planet. Retrieved 2020-04-12.
  17. ^ British Museum Collection
  18. ^ Gruben G., Griechische Tempel und Heiligtümer, München, 2001
  19. ^ Gazette numismatique suisse. 1992. p. 124.
  20. ^ Carter, Jane B. (1997). "Thiasos and Marzeaḥ". In Langdon, Susan (ed.). New Light on a Dark Age. p. 99. ISBN 9780826210999.
  21. ^ Hephaistos. 2006. p. 129.

Further reading and viewing

  • Claude Vial, Inscriptions de Délos. Index, tome II: les Déliens (Paris: De Boccard, 2008).
  • Delos: Island at the Center of the World. Princeton, New Jersey: Films for the Humanities and Sciences, 2006.

External links

  • Hellenic Ministry of Culture site: Delos
  • (in French)
  • English translations of inscriptions from Delos
  • Delos Island on WikiMapia
  • The Barrington Atlas Directory notes: Delos GRE

delos, other, uses, disambiguation, island, greek, Δήλος, ˈðilos, attic, Δῆλος, doric, Δᾶλος, near, mykonos, near, centre, cyclades, archipelago, most, important, mythological, historical, archaeological, sites, greece, excavations, island, among, most, extens. For other uses see Delos disambiguation The island of Delos ˈ d iː l ɒ s Greek Dhlos ˈdilos Attic Dῆlos Doric Dᾶlos near Mykonos near the centre of the Cyclades archipelago is one of the most important mythological historical and archaeological sites in Greece The excavations in the island are among the most extensive in the Mediterranean ongoing work takes place under the direction of the Ephorate of Antiquities of Cyclades and many of the artifacts found are on display at the Archaeological Museum of Delos and the National Archaeological Museum of Athens DelosNative name DhlosGeneral view of DelosIn the CycladesDelosGeographyCoordinates37 23 36 N 25 16 16 E 37 39333 N 25 27111 E 37 39333 25 27111 Coordinates 37 23 36 N 25 16 16 E 37 39333 N 25 27111 E 37 39333 25 27111ArchipelagoCycladesArea3 43 km2 1 32 sq mi Highest elevation112 m 367 ft Highest pointMt KynthosAdministrationGreeceRegionSouth AegeanRegional unitMykonosDemographicsPopulation24 2011 Pop density6 8 km2 176 sq mi UNESCO World Heritage SiteCriteriaCultural ii iii iv viReference530Inscription1990 14th Session Delos had a position as a holy sanctuary for a millennium before Olympian Greek mythology made it the birthplace of Apollo and Artemis From its Sacred Harbour the horizon shows the three conical mounds that have identified landscapes sacred to a goddess it is predicted that the deity s name is Athena in other sites one retaining its Pre Greek name Mount Cynthus 1 is crowned with a sanctuary of Zeus In 1990 UNESCO inscribed Delos on the World Heritage List citing its exceptional archaeological site which conveys the image of a great cosmopolitan Mediterranean port its influence on the development of Greek architecture and its sacred importance throughout Ancient Greece 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 Ancient Greece 1 2 Roman era 2 Landmarks 3 Current population 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading and viewing 8 External linksHistory EditAncient Greece Edit Further information Mosaics of Delos The island of Delos Carl Anton Joseph Rottmann 1847 The theatre The Terrace of the Lions Investigation of ancient stone huts found on the island indicate that it has been inhabited since the third millennium BC Thucydides identifies the original inhabitants as piratical Carians who were eventually expelled by King Minos of Crete 3 By the writing of the Odyssey the island was already famous as the birthplace of the twin gods Apollo and Artemis although some confusion seems to exist of Artemis birthplace being either Delos or the island of Ortygia Between 900 BC and 100 AD Delos was a major cult centre where the gods Dionysus and Leto mother of the twin deities Apollo and Artemis were revered Eventually acquiring Panhellenic religious significance Delos was initially a religious pilgrimage for the Ionians A number of purifications were performed by the city state of Athens in an attempt to render the island fit for the proper worship of the gods The first took place in the sixth century BC directed by the tyrant Pisistratus who ordered that all graves within sight of the temple be dug up and the bodies moved to another nearby island In the fifth century BC during the sixth year of the Peloponnesian War and under instruction from the Delphic Oracle the entire island was purged of all dead bodies Prohibition of dying was then ordered so that no one should be allowed to die or give birth on the island due to its sacred importance and to preserve its neutrality in commerce since no one could then claim ownership through inheritance Immediately after this purification the first quinquennial festival of the Delian games were celebrated there 4 Four years later all inhabitants of the island were removed to Adramyttium in Asia as a further purification 5 After the Persian Wars the island became the natural meeting ground for the Delian League founded in 478 BC the congresses being held in the temple a separate quarter was reserved for foreigners and the sanctuaries of foreign deities The league s common treasury was kept here as well until 454 BC when Pericles removed it to Athens 6 During the Hellenistic period a well established Phoenician colony on the island had extensive trade relations 7 The island had no productive capacity for food fiber or timber which were all imported Limited water was exploited with an extensive cistern and aqueduct system wells and sanitary drains Various regions operated agorae markets Suda writes that the Greeks used the proverb ᾌdeis ὥsper eἰs Dῆlon plewn meaning you sing as if sailing into Delos in reference to someone who is happy light hearted and enjoying himself 8 Iamblichus writes that Delos Mysteries similar to the Eleusinian Mysteries were established 9 Roman era Edit Strabo states that in 166 BC the Romans converted Delos into a free port which was partially motivated by seeking to damage the trade of Rhodes at the time the target of Roman hostility In 167 or 166 BC after the Roman victory in the Third Macedonian War the Roman Republic ceded the island of Delos to the Athenians who expelled most of the original inhabitants 10 Roman traders came to purchase tens of thousands of slaves captured by the Cilician pirates or captured in the wars following the disintegration of the Seleucid Empire It became the center of the slave trade with the largest slave market in the larger region being maintained here The Roman destruction of Corinth in 146 BC allowed Delos to at least partially assume Corinth s role as the premier trading center of Greece but Delos commercial prosperity construction activity and population waned significantly after the island was assaulted by the forces of Mithridates VI of Pontus in 88 and 69 BC during the Mithridatic Wars with Rome 11 Before the end of the first century BC trade routes had changed Delos was replaced by Puteoli as the chief focus of Italian trade with the east and as a cult centre too it entered a sharp decline Despite its decline Delos maintained some population in the early Roman Imperial period Pausanias 8 33 2 writing in the second century AD states that Delos was uninhabited apart from a few custodians of the sanctuaries Evidence has been found of Roman baths coins an aqueduct residential and elite houses multiple churches basilicas and a monastery all from the first to sixth centuries AD which however does not suggest that the island was continuously inhabited in the period 12 13 The pottery found indicates that produce such as wine and oil continued to be imported from regional centres Also a number of wine presses were found amidst the ruins of the ancient city that date to this period suggesting that the population at this time was engaged in considerable viticultural endeavour 14 Delos was eventually abandoned around the eighth century AD 15 Landmarks Edit The Agora of the Competaliasts The small sacred lake in its circular bowl now intentionally left dry by the island s caretakers to suppress disease spreading bacteria 16 is a topographical feature that determined the placement of later features The Minoan Fountain was a rectangular public well hewn in the rock with a central column it formalized the sacred spring in its present sixth century BC form reconstructed in 166 BC according to an inscription Tightly laid courses of masonry form the walls water can still be reached by a flight of steps that fill one side Several market squares were found the Hellenistic Agora of the Competaliasts by the Sacred Harbour retains the postholes for market awnings in its stone paving Two powerful Italic merchant guilds dedicated statues and columns there The Temple of the Delians dedicated to Apollo is a classic example of the Doric order Beside the temple once stood a colossal kouros of Apollo only parts of which remain Dating to the sixth century BC parts of the upper torso and pelvis remain in situ a hand is kept at the local museum and a foot is in the British Museum 17 The Terrace of the Lions The Terrace of the Lions also was dedicated to Apollo by the people of Naxos shortly before 600 BC It originally had 9 12 squatting snarling marble guardian lions along the Sacred Way one was removed and is presently situated over the main gate of the Venetian Arsenal The lions create a monumental avenue comparable to Egyptian avenues of sphinxes A Greek sphinx is in the Delos Museum Today only seven of the original lions remain The Oikos of the Naxians House of the Naxians first quarter of sixth century BC has a long hall with one central ionic colonnade a west porch tristyle in antis and an east marble prostasis of the middle of the six th century BC 18 The Establishment of the Poseidoniasts clubhouse of the Koinon of the Berytian Poseidoniast merchants shipmasters and warehousemen 19 20 21 during the early years of Roman hegemony late 2nd century BC To their protective triad of Baal Poseidon Astarte Aphrodite and Eshmun Asklepios they added Roma Dionysus riding a panther mosaic in the House of Dionysos The Doric Temple of Isis was built on a high overlooking hill at the beginning of the Roman period to venerate the familiar trinity of Isis the Alexandrian Serapis and Anubis The Temple of Hera circa 500 BC is a rebuilding of an earlier Heraion on the site The House of Dionysus is a luxurious second century private house named for the floor mosaic of Dionysus riding a panther The House of the Dolphins is similarly named from its atrium mosaic where erotes ride dolphins its Phoenician owner commissioned a floor mosaic of Tanit in his vestibule The Stoivadeion dedicated to Dionysus bears a statue of the god of wine and the life force On either side of the platform a pillar supports a colossal phallus the symbol of Dionysus The southern pillar which is decorated with relief scenes from the Dionysiac circle was erected around 300 BC to celebrate a winning theatrical performance The statue of Dionysus was originally flanked by those of two actors impersonating Paposilenoi conserved in the Archaeological Museum of Delos The marble theatre is a rebuilding of an older one undertaken shortly after 300 BC The Delos Synagogue the oldest synagogue known today citation needed Current population EditThe 2001 Greek census reported a population of 14 inhabitants on the island The island is administratively a part of the municipality of Mykonos According to more recent numbers in 2011 the island counted 24 inhabitants Gallery Edit The Theatre Quarter Sacred Way Establishment of the Poseidoniasts House of Dionysus floor mosaic House of the Masks House of Cleopatra Statues at the House of Cleopatra House of the Lake Temple of Isis Bust of Hermes Mosaic from the Insula of the Jewellery A mosaic on the floor of the House of the Dolphins Agora of the Italians Heraion Temple of Hera House of the TridentSee also EditDelia festival Delian problem History of the CycladesReferences Edit The combination nth is a marker for Pre Greek words Corinth menthos labyrinth etc A name Artemis and even Diana retained was Cynthia Delos UNESCO World Heritage Convention United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization Retrieved 20 November 2022 Thucydides I 8 Thucydides III 104 Thucydides V 1 Thucydides I 96 Boussac Marie Francoise 1982 A propos de quelques sceaux deliens Bulletin de correspondance hellenique in French 106 1 445 446 doi 10 3406 bch 1982 1923 ISSN 0007 4217 Suda alpha 455 Iamblichus Life of Pythagoras 28 151 Tang Birgit 2005 Delos Carthage Ampurias the Housing of Three Mediterranean Trading Centres Rome L Erma di Bretschneider Accademia di Danimarca p 14 ISBN 8882653056 Tang Birgit 2005 Delos Carthage Ampurias the Housing of Three Mediterranean Trading Centres Rome L Erma di Bretschneider Accademia di Danimarca pp 14 32 ISBN 8882653056 DODD EMLYN K 2020 ROMAN AND LATE ANTIQUE WINE PRODUCTION IN THE EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN a comparative archaeological study at antiochia ad cragum Place of publication not identified ARCHAEOPRESS ISBN 978 1 78969 403 1 OCLC 1139263254 Le Quere Enora 2015 Les Cyclades sous l Empire romain histoire d une renaissance Impr Universite Rennes 2 Rennes Presses universitaires de Rennes ISBN 978 2 7535 4045 3 OCLC 919408437 DODD EMLYN K 2020 ROMAN AND LATE ANTIQUE WINE PRODUCTION IN THE EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN a comparative archaeological study at antiochia ad cragum Place of publication not identified ARCHAEOPRESS ISBN 978 1 78969 403 1 OCLC 1139263254 DODD EMLYN K 2020 ROMAN AND LATE ANTIQUE WINE PRODUCTION IN THE EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN a comparative archaeological study at antiochia ad cragum Place of publication not identified ARCHAEOPRESS ISBN 978 1 78969 403 1 OCLC 1139263254 Sacred Lake Greece Attractions Lonely Planet Retrieved 2020 04 12 British Museum Collection Gruben G Griechische Tempel und Heiligtumer Munchen 2001 Gazette numismatique suisse 1992 p 124 Carter Jane B 1997 Thiasos and Marzeaḥ In Langdon Susan ed New Light on a Dark Age p 99 ISBN 9780826210999 Hephaistos 2006 p 129 Further reading and viewing EditClaude Vial Inscriptions de Delos Index tome II les Deliens Paris De Boccard 2008 Delos Island at the Center of the World Princeton New Jersey Films for the Humanities and Sciences 2006 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Delos Hellenic Ministry of Culture site Delos EfA website with history of the Delos Archaeological site in French English translations of inscriptions from Delos Delos Island on WikiMapia The Barrington Atlas Directory notes Delos GRE Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Delos amp oldid 1123482605, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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