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Iron Age Greek migrations

The Iron Age Greek migrations were effected by a population of émigrés from amidst the displacements and reconstruction that occurred in Greece proper from the middle of the 11th century to the end of the 9th century BCE (the Greek Dark Ages). The movements resulted in the settlement of the Aegean islands, Cyprus, Crete and the western coast of Asia Minor and the founding of new cities, which afterwards became centers of the Greek civilization. The migrations by various tribal groups were effected in consecutive waves known as the Aeolic, Ionian, Doric and Achaean (Arcadian) migrations. The movements differed from the Greek colonisation of the Archaic period in that they were more ad hoc affairs, rather than being the result of a planned process of colonisation on the part of the mother city. They are also less well-documented historically and in folk histories are often said to have been led by a mythologized or semi-legendary leader, such as Hercules or Orestes.

The geographical distribution of Greek dialects at the close of the migration period

Movements within mainland Greece

The establishment of the Dorians within Central Greece

Within the span of the 13th century BCE the Dorians, in all probability transplanted from the regions of Epirus and southern Macedonia, were moving farther south and exerting strong rule in the area of Central Greece with its centre of power in Doris. The Dorians who displaced the previous inhabitants of Southern Greece knew ironworking and there grew rapidly a great power in the hill country of Central Greece, out of which afterwards the Dorians which will have of necessity expanded southward into the regions which were inhabited in historical times by the Aetolians and the Locrians. In acquiring the region they displaced the previous inhabitants, the Dryopes, who fled to Euboea, to the islands of the Cyclades and to southern Argolis. In Euboea they set up a state, with its seat in Carystus while in southern Argolis they founded the cities of Hermione, Asine, Heiones and Mases. This movement of the Drupones was the first meaningful one in the region of Southern Greece in the shift from the Bronze Age to the Iron Age.[1]

The Dorian Invasion of the Peloponnese

 
Hypothetical diagram of population movements within Greece

After their consolidation in the area of Stereas the Dorians organized a campaign against the wealthy and powerful kings of Achaea in the Peloponnese. They were joined in their campaign by two neighboring tribes, the Aetolians and the Boeotians who either simply fought alongside the Dorians or else found themselves under their authority in that period. In the middle of the 12th century BCE, the Dorians attacked the Peloponnese, crossing Strait of Rion with their fleet. According to the tradition they crossed into the Peloponnese at the narrows of Rion-Antirion, and from that arrival (by naus, "ship"), the city of Naupactus (modern pronunciation Nafpaktos) took its name.[2]

After their crossing into the Peloponnese, the Dorians split into four divisions and each of these moved to capture one of the principal Achaean kingdoms. One group under the leadership of Cresphontes moved on Messenia and captured the kingdom of Pylos. A second group under the leadership of Aristodemus moved on Laconia and established itself in Sparta, while the third under the leadership of Temenos took Argos and Mycenae. It is calculated that the destruction of Mycenae by the invasion of the Dorians occurred around 1150 BCE. Finally, a fourth group under the leadership of Aletes, son of Hippotes moved on the isthmus of Corinth and took the area around Corinth.

The dominance of the Dorians in the Peloponnese brought further upheavals and changes in population. The Achaeans of Argolis moved northward and established themselves in the region of Achaea. From that region they displaced the Ionians who were administering it, and subsequently moved east from the region of Corinth. First establishing themselves in Euboea, displacing the previous inhabitants there, the Abantes and continued on to the Aegean and the coast of Asia Minor. The Ionians of Attica were able to repulse the invasion of the Dorians, as evidenced by the continuity of their kingship of Codrus morphing into the archonship (or kingship) of his son Medon.

The settlement of Asia Minor and the Aegean

Aeolian migration

 
Ancient Greece Map

In the same period that the Dorians moved on the Peloponnese, others carried out their own movements within Greece proper. The Thessalians, from their first appearance in the area of Thesprotia, moved into the area of Thessaly, displacing the earlier Aeolophone tribe who inhabited that area. [3] Among these tribes who lived in Thessaly before the establishment of the Thessalians were the Boeotians, who moved southward and established the area of Boeotia. Other populations of Thessaly and the previous inhabitants of Boeotia fled to the region of the Northeast Aegean after the loss of their territories and established themselves first in Lesbos and Tenedos and the Moschonesi (Fragrant Isles). These inhabitants were later called Aeolians from the name of a Thessalic tribe who had taken part in the migration. The Aeolians next colonised the opposite shore of Asia Minor, which was named Aeolis. Herodotus relates the founding of twelve cities in that section of Asia Minor. They were as follows:Aegae, Aegiroessa, Gryneion, Cilla, Cyme, Larissa, Myrina, Neonteichos, Notion, Pitane, Smyrna and Temnus.[4] In the 7th century BCE, the Aeolians also expanded into the Troad, founding the cities of Gargara Assos, Antandros, Cebre, Scepsis, Neandreia and Pitya. The Achaeans of the Peloponnese who followed the Aeolic speakers participated in the Aeolic resettlement. The received tradition records Orestes as an instigator of the relocation of the Aeolians, and the royal family of the Penthilides on Mytilene claimed descent from Orestes.

Ionian migration

 
Temple of Poseidon in Attica.

The Ionians, before the arrival of the Dorians, lived in the northern Peloponnese, in Megaris, and in Attica. After the loss of their territories to the Dorians and Achaeans of Argolis, they moved farther east and were situated at first in Euboea, displacing the earlier inhabitants, the Abantes. In the middle of the eleventh century BCE they settled the northern Cyclades and, together with the Ionians of Attica, settled the islands of Samos and Chios and the central section of the Asia Minor coast is named after them Ionia. The Ionians founded twelve cities which maintained tribal ties and remained united in one common polity, the Ionian League. The cities of the league were Miletus, Myus, Priene, Ephesus, Colophon, Lebedus, Teos, Clazomenae, Erythrae, Phocaea and the island states Chios and Samos.[5] A temple of Poseidon, in the area of Mycale, ended up being their religious centre. Other tribes such as the Achaeans of the Peloponnese, the Arcadians, the Abantai, the Minyes from Orchomenus, the Phocaeans and the Molossians established themselves apart from the Ionians, but in the area of Ionia. The Abantes established themselves in Chios and preceded the Ionians who established themselves there later. The settlement of the Achaeans from Pylia is related to that at Colophon, while Achaeans from Argolis were established in the area of Clazomenai. The further traditions of the Ionian cities are thought to be due to the leader of the migration being one of the descendants of Codrus, and their point of departure appears to have been Attica.

Dorian migration

 
Ruins of the Mausoleum at Halicarnassus, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World

The Dorians who took Argos and Corinth expanded gradually throughout the northeast Peloponnese. After the failure to capture Attica, they turned toward the sea. With the Doric states of Argolis as their departure point they settled Aegina, the southern Cyclades, Cyprus, Crete, the Dodecanese and the southwestern coast of Asia Minor. Composed of various groups of Dorians from Troezen, they settled Halicarnassus; from Epidaurus, Cos, and from Argos, Rhodes, Crete, and the islands of the Cyclades. In the following years Dorians from Laconia also set up in Crete, on Thera (modern Santorini), on Milos and on Cnidus. The Dorian settlers of the regions of the Dodecanese and southwest Asia Minor joined in one form of common government, the Hexapolis, which encompassed the cities of Halicarnassus, Cnidus, Lindos, Ialysos, Camerius and Cos. The centre of the Dorians of Asia Minor was the temple of Apollo on the promontory of Triopios in Cnidus. Eventually the Halicarnassians were forbidden to participate in the ceremonies there, due to the sacrilege of one Agasicles. [6]

Sources

  • Alexandropoulou, Ioanna. "Aeolian Colonization". Encyclopaedia of the Hellenic World, Asia Minor. Translated by Koutras, Nikolaos.
  • Deger-Jalkotzy, Segred. "Ionic Colonization". Encyclopaedia of the Hellenic World, Asia Minor.
  • Alexandropoulou, Ioanna. "Dorian Colonies in Asia Minor". Encyclopaedia of the Hellenic World, Asia Minor. Translated by Koutras, Nikolaos.

References

  1. ^ Herodotus (1920). "43.1". Histories. Vol. 8 (Ourania). Translated by A. D. Godley. ... ἐόντες οὗτοι πλὴν Ἑρμιονέων Δωρικόν τε καὶ Μακεδνὸν ἔθνος, ἐξ Ἐρινεοῦ τε καὶ Πίνδου καὶ τῆς Δρυοπίδος ὕστατα ὁρμηθέντες. οἱ δὲ Ἑρμιονέες εἰσὶ Δρύοπες, ὑπὸ Ἡρακλέος τε καὶ Μηλιέων ἐκ τῆς νῦν Δωρίδος καλεομένης χώρης ἐξαναστάντες. (...All of these except the Hermioneans are Dorian and Macedonian and had last come from Erineus and Pindus and the Dryopian region. The Hermioneans are Dryopians, driven out of the country now called Doris by Herakles and the Malians.)
  2. ^ Pausanias (1920) [1903]. "38.10". In Teubner (ed.). Ἑλλάδος περιήγησις (Pausaniae Graeciae Descriptio, Description of Greece). Vol. 10 (Phocis and Ozolian Locri ). Translated by W.H.S. Jones; H.A. Ormerod. ...ἐπεὶ ἐπὶ Ναυπάκτῳ γε οἶδα εἰρημένον ὡς Δωριεῖς οἱ ὁμοῦ τοῖς Ἀριστομάχου παισὶ τὰ πλοῖα αὐτόθι ἐποιήσαντο, οἷς ἐς Πελοπόννησον ἐπεραιώθησαν: καὶ ἀντὶ τούτου γενέσθαι τὸ ὄνομα τῷ χωρίῳ φασί. τὰ δέ μοι Ναυπακτίων, ὡς τοῖς ἐς Ἰθώμην ἀποστᾶσιν ὁμοῦ τῷ σεισμῷ τῷ ἐν Λακεδαίμονι Ἀθηναῖοι Ναύπακτον... (..while as for Naupactus, I have heard it said that the Dorians under the sons of Aristomachus built here the vessels in which they crossed to the Peloponnesus, thus, it is said, giving to the place its name...1. Naupactus means "the city of ship-building.") N.b. A more literal translation of this passage would add that the Lacedaemonians call the land Naupaktioi, while the Athenians call it Naupaktos.
  3. ^ Herodotus (1920). "176.4". Histories. Vol. 7 (Terpsichore). Translated by A. D. Godley. ... ἐπεὶ Θεσσαλοὶ ἦλθον ἐκ Θεσπρωτῶν οἰκήσοντες γῆν τὴν Αἰολίδα τήν νῦν ἐκτέαται...(...Athe Thessalians when these came from Thesprotia to dwell in the Aeolian land, the region which they now possess...)
  4. ^ Herodotus (1920). "149.1-2". Histories. Vol. 1 (Clio). Translated by A. D. Godley. αὗται μὲν αἱ Ἰάδες πόλιες εἰσί, αἵδε δὲ αἱ Αἰολίδες, Κύμη ἡ Φρικωνὶς καλεομένη, Λήρισαι, Νέον τεῖχος, Τῆμνος, Κίλλα, Νότιον, Αἰγιρόεσσα, Πιτάνη, Αἰγαῖαι, Μύρινα, Γρύνεια. αὗται ἕνδεκα Αἰολέων πόλιες αἱ ἀρχαῖαι: μία γὰρ σφέων παρελύθη Σμύρνη ὑπὸ Ἰώνων: ἦσαν γὰρ καὶ αὗται δυώδεκα αἱ ἐν τῆ ἠπείρῳ. [2] οὗτοι δὲ οἱ Αἰολέες χώρην μὲν ἔτυχον κτίσαντες ἀμείνω Ἰώνων, ὡρέων δὲ ἥκουσαν οὐκ ὁμοίως. (Those are the Ionian cities, and these are the Aeolian: Cyme (called "Phriconian"),1 Lerisae, Neon Teichos, Temnos, Cilla, Notion, Aegiroessa, Pitane, Aegaeae, Myrina, Gryneia.2 These are the ancient Aeolian cities, eleven in number; but one of them, Smyrna, was taken away by the Ionians; for these too were once twelve, on the mainland. [2] These Aeolians had settled where the land was better than the Ionian territory, but the climate was not so good. 1 Perhaps so called from a mountain in Aeolis, Phricion, near which the Aeolians had been settled before their migration to Asia. 2 These places lie between Smyrna and Pergamum, on or near the coast. But Aegiroessa has not been exactly identified.)
  5. ^ Herodotus (1920). "142.3". Histories. Vol. 1 (Clio). Translated by A. D. Godley. Μίλητος μὲν αὐτέων πρώτη κέεται πόλις πρὸς μεσαμβρίην, μετὰ δὲ Μυοῦς τε καὶ Πριήνη. 4 αὗται μὲν ἐν τῇ Καρίῃ κατοίκηνται κατὰ ταὐτὰ διαλεγόμεναι σφίσι, αἵδε δὲ ἐν τῇ Λυδίῃ, Ἔφεσος Κολοφὼν Λέβεδος Τέως Κλαζομεναὶ Φώκαια· αὗται δὲ αἱ πόλιες τῇσι πρότερον λεχθείσῃσι ὁμολογέουσι κατὰ γλῶσσαν οὐδέν, σφισι δὲ ὁμοφωνέουσι. ἔτι δὲ τρεῖς ὑπόλοιποι Ἰάδες πόλιες, τῶν αἱ δύο μὲν νήσους οἰκέαται, Σάμον τε καὶ Χίον, ἡ δὲ μία ἐν τῇ ἠπείρῳ ἵδρυται, Ἐρυθραί. Χῖοι μέν νυν καὶ Ἐρυθραῖοι κατὰ τὠυτὸ διαλέγονται, Σάμιοι δὲ ἐπ᾽ ἑωυτῶν μοῦνοι. οὗτοι χαρακτῆρες γλώσσης τέσσερες γίνονται. (Miletus lies farthest south among them, and next to it come Myus and Priene; these are settlements in Caria, and they have a common language; Ephesus, Colophon, Lebedos, Teos, Clazomenae, Phocaea, all of them in Lydia, )
  6. ^ Herodotus (1920). "144". Histories. Vol. 1 (Clio). Translated by A. D. Godley. κατά περ οἱ ἐκ τῆς πενταπόλιος νῦν χώρης Δωριέες, πρότερον δὲ ἑξαπόλιος τῆς αὐτῆς ταύτης καλεομένης, φυλάσσονται ὦν μηδαμοὺς ἐσδέξασθαι τῶν προσοίκων Δωριέων ἐς τὸ Τριοπικὸν ἱρόν, ἀλλὰ καὶ σφέων αὐτῶν τοὺς περὶ τὸ ἱρόν ἀνομήσαντας ἐξεκλήισαν τῆς μετοχῆς, [2] ἐν γὰρ τῷ ἀγῶνι τοῦ Τριοπίου Ἀπόλλωνος ἐτίθεσαν τὸ πάλαι τρίποδας χαλκέους τοῖσι νικῶσι, καὶ τούτους χρῆν τοὺς λαμβάνοντας ἐκ τοῦ ἱροῦ μὴ ἐκφέρειν ἀλλ᾽ αὐτοῦ ἀνατιθέναι τῷ θεῷ. [3] ἀνὴρ ὦν Ἁλικαρνησσεύς, τῷ οὔνομα ἦν Ἀγασικλέης, νικήσας τὸν νόμον κατηλόγησε, φέρων δὲ πρὸς τὰ ἑωυτοῦ οἰκία προσεπασσάλευσε τὸν τρίποδα. διὰ ταύτην τὴν αἰτίην αἱ πέντε πόλιες, Λίνδος καὶ Ἰήλυσός τε καὶ Κάμειρος καὶ Κῶς τε καὶ Κνίδος ἐξεκλήισαν τῆς μετοχῆς τὴν ἕκτην πόλιν Ἁλικαρνησσόν. τούτοισι μέν νυν οὗτοι ταύτην τὴν ζημίην ἐπέθηκαν. (Just as the Dorians of what is now the country of the "Five Cities"—formerly the country of the "Six Cities"—forbid admitting any of the neighboring Dorians to the Triopian temple, and even barred from using it those of their own group who had broken the temple law. [2] For long ago, in the games in honor of Triopian Apollo, they offered certain bronze tripods to the victors; and those who won these were not to carry them away from the temple but dedicate them there to the god. [3] Now when a man of Halicarnassus called Agasicles won, he disregarded this law, and, carrying the tripod away, nailed it to the wall of his own house. For this offense the five cities—Lindus, Ialysus, Camirus, Cos, and Cnidus—forbade the sixth city—Halicarnassus—to share in the use of the temple. Such was the penalty imposed on the Halicarnassians.)

iron, greek, migrations, also, greek, dark, ages, archaic, greece, were, effected, population, émigrés, from, amidst, displacements, reconstruction, that, occurred, greece, proper, from, middle, 11th, century, century, greek, dark, ages, movements, resulted, s. See also Greek Dark Ages and Archaic Greece The Iron Age Greek migrations were effected by a population of emigres from amidst the displacements and reconstruction that occurred in Greece proper from the middle of the 11th century to the end of the 9th century BCE the Greek Dark Ages The movements resulted in the settlement of the Aegean islands Cyprus Crete and the western coast of Asia Minor and the founding of new cities which afterwards became centers of the Greek civilization The migrations by various tribal groups were effected in consecutive waves known as the Aeolic Ionian Doric and Achaean Arcadian migrations The movements differed from the Greek colonisation of the Archaic period in that they were more ad hoc affairs rather than being the result of a planned process of colonisation on the part of the mother city They are also less well documented historically and in folk histories are often said to have been led by a mythologized or semi legendary leader such as Hercules or Orestes The geographical distribution of Greek dialects at the close of the migration period Contents 1 Movements within mainland Greece 1 1 The establishment of the Dorians within Central Greece 1 2 The Dorian Invasion of the Peloponnese 2 The settlement of Asia Minor and the Aegean 2 1 Aeolian migration 2 2 Ionian migration 2 3 Dorian migration 3 Sources 4 ReferencesMovements within mainland Greece EditThis section only references primary sources Please help improve this by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Iron Age Greek migrations news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message The establishment of the Dorians within Central Greece Edit Within the span of the 13th century BCE the Dorians in all probability transplanted from the regions of Epirus and southern Macedonia were moving farther south and exerting strong rule in the area of Central Greece with its centre of power in Doris The Dorians who displaced the previous inhabitants of Southern Greece knew ironworking and there grew rapidly a great power in the hill country of Central Greece out of which afterwards the Dorians which will have of necessity expanded southward into the regions which were inhabited in historical times by the Aetolians and the Locrians In acquiring the region they displaced the previous inhabitants the Dryopes who fled to Euboea to the islands of the Cyclades and to southern Argolis In Euboea they set up a state with its seat in Carystus while in southern Argolis they founded the cities of Hermione Asine Heiones and Mases This movement of the Drupones was the first meaningful one in the region of Southern Greece in the shift from the Bronze Age to the Iron Age 1 The Dorian Invasion of the Peloponnese Edit Main article Dorian invasion Hypothetical diagram of population movements within Greece After their consolidation in the area of Stereas the Dorians organized a campaign against the wealthy and powerful kings of Achaea in the Peloponnese They were joined in their campaign by two neighboring tribes the Aetolians and the Boeotians who either simply fought alongside the Dorians or else found themselves under their authority in that period In the middle of the 12th century BCE the Dorians attacked the Peloponnese crossing Strait of Rion with their fleet According to the tradition they crossed into the Peloponnese at the narrows of Rion Antirion and from that arrival by naus ship the city of Naupactus modern pronunciation Nafpaktos took its name 2 After their crossing into the Peloponnese the Dorians split into four divisions and each of these moved to capture one of the principal Achaean kingdoms One group under the leadership of Cresphontes moved on Messenia and captured the kingdom of Pylos A second group under the leadership of Aristodemus moved on Laconia and established itself in Sparta while the third under the leadership of Temenos took Argos and Mycenae It is calculated that the destruction of Mycenae by the invasion of the Dorians occurred around 1150 BCE Finally a fourth group under the leadership of Aletes son of Hippotes moved on the isthmus of Corinth and took the area around Corinth The dominance of the Dorians in the Peloponnese brought further upheavals and changes in population The Achaeans of Argolis moved northward and established themselves in the region of Achaea From that region they displaced the Ionians who were administering it and subsequently moved east from the region of Corinth First establishing themselves in Euboea displacing the previous inhabitants there the Abantes and continued on to the Aegean and the coast of Asia Minor The Ionians of Attica were able to repulse the invasion of the Dorians as evidenced by the continuity of their kingship of Codrus morphing into the archonship or kingship of his son Medon The settlement of Asia Minor and the Aegean EditAeolian migration Edit Ancient Greece Map In the same period that the Dorians moved on the Peloponnese others carried out their own movements within Greece proper The Thessalians from their first appearance in the area of Thesprotia moved into the area of Thessaly displacing the earlier Aeolophone tribe who inhabited that area 3 Among these tribes who lived in Thessaly before the establishment of the Thessalians were the Boeotians who moved southward and established the area of Boeotia Other populations of Thessaly and the previous inhabitants of Boeotia fled to the region of the Northeast Aegean after the loss of their territories and established themselves first in Lesbos and Tenedos and the Moschonesi Fragrant Isles These inhabitants were later called Aeolians from the name of a Thessalic tribe who had taken part in the migration The Aeolians next colonised the opposite shore of Asia Minor which was named Aeolis Herodotus relates the founding of twelve cities in that section of Asia Minor They were as follows Aegae Aegiroessa Gryneion Cilla Cyme Larissa Myrina Neonteichos Notion Pitane Smyrna and Temnus 4 In the 7th century BCE the Aeolians also expanded into the Troad founding the cities of Gargara Assos Antandros Cebre Scepsis Neandreia and Pitya The Achaeans of the Peloponnese who followed the Aeolic speakers participated in the Aeolic resettlement The received tradition records Orestes as an instigator of the relocation of the Aeolians and the royal family of the Penthilides on Mytilene claimed descent from Orestes Ionian migration Edit Temple of Poseidon in Attica The Ionians before the arrival of the Dorians lived in the northern Peloponnese in Megaris and in Attica After the loss of their territories to the Dorians and Achaeans of Argolis they moved farther east and were situated at first in Euboea displacing the earlier inhabitants the Abantes In the middle of the eleventh century BCE they settled the northern Cyclades and together with the Ionians of Attica settled the islands of Samos and Chios and the central section of the Asia Minor coast is named after them Ionia The Ionians founded twelve cities which maintained tribal ties and remained united in one common polity the Ionian League The cities of the league were Miletus Myus Priene Ephesus Colophon Lebedus Teos Clazomenae Erythrae Phocaea and the island states Chios and Samos 5 A temple of Poseidon in the area of Mycale ended up being their religious centre Other tribes such as the Achaeans of the Peloponnese the Arcadians the Abantai the Minyes from Orchomenus the Phocaeans and the Molossians established themselves apart from the Ionians but in the area of Ionia The Abantes established themselves in Chios and preceded the Ionians who established themselves there later The settlement of the Achaeans from Pylia is related to that at Colophon while Achaeans from Argolis were established in the area of Clazomenai The further traditions of the Ionian cities are thought to be due to the leader of the migration being one of the descendants of Codrus and their point of departure appears to have been Attica Dorian migration Edit Ruins of the Mausoleum at Halicarnassus one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World The Dorians who took Argos and Corinth expanded gradually throughout the northeast Peloponnese After the failure to capture Attica they turned toward the sea With the Doric states of Argolis as their departure point they settled Aegina the southern Cyclades Cyprus Crete the Dodecanese and the southwestern coast of Asia Minor Composed of various groups of Dorians from Troezen they settled Halicarnassus from Epidaurus Cos and from Argos Rhodes Crete and the islands of the Cyclades In the following years Dorians from Laconia also set up in Crete on Thera modern Santorini on Milos and on Cnidus The Dorian settlers of the regions of the Dodecanese and southwest Asia Minor joined in one form of common government the Hexapolis which encompassed the cities of Halicarnassus Cnidus Lindos Ialysos Camerius and Cos The centre of the Dorians of Asia Minor was the temple of Apollo on the promontory of Triopios in Cnidus Eventually the Halicarnassians were forbidden to participate in the ceremonies there due to the sacrilege of one Agasicles 6 Sources EditAlexandropoulou Ioanna Aeolian Colonization Encyclopaedia of the Hellenic World Asia Minor Translated by Koutras Nikolaos Deger Jalkotzy Segred Ionic Colonization Encyclopaedia of the Hellenic World Asia Minor Alexandropoulou Ioanna Dorian Colonies in Asia Minor Encyclopaedia of the Hellenic World Asia Minor Translated by Koutras Nikolaos References Edit Herodotus 1920 43 1 Histories Vol 8 Ourania Translated by A D Godley ἐontes oὗtoi plὴn Ἑrmionewn Dwrikon te kaὶ Makednὸn ἔ8nos ἐ3 Ἐrineoῦ te kaὶ Pindoy kaὶ tῆs Dryopidos ὕstata ὁrmh8entes oἱ dὲ Ἑrmionees eἰsὶ Dryopes ὑpὸ Ἡrakleos te kaὶ Mhliewn ἐk tῆs nῦn Dwridos kaleomenhs xwrhs ἐ3anastantes All of these except the Hermioneans are Dorian and Macedonian and had last come from Erineus and Pindus and the Dryopian region The Hermioneans are Dryopians driven out of the country now called Doris by Herakles and the Malians Pausanias 1920 1903 38 10 In Teubner ed Ἑllados perihghsis Pausaniae Graeciae Descriptio Description of Greece Vol 10 Phocis and Ozolian Locri Translated by W H S Jones H A Ormerod ἐpeὶ ἐpὶ Naypaktῳ ge oἶda eἰrhmenon ὡs Dwrieῖs oἱ ὁmoῦ toῖs Ἀristomaxoy paisὶ tὰ ploῖa aὐto8i ἐpoihsanto oἷs ἐs Peloponnhson ἐperaiw8hsan kaὶ ἀntὶ toytoy genes8ai tὸ ὄnoma tῷ xwriῳ fasi tὰ de moi Naypaktiwn ὡs toῖs ἐs Ἰ8wmhn ἀpostᾶsin ὁmoῦ tῷ seismῷ tῷ ἐn Lakedaimoni Ἀ8hnaῖoi Naypakton while as for Naupactus I have heard it said that the Dorians under the sons of Aristomachus built here the vessels in which they crossed to the Peloponnesus thus it is said giving to the place its name 1 Naupactus means the city of ship building N b A more literal translation of this passage would add that the Lacedaemonians call the land Naupaktioi while the Athenians call it Naupaktos Herodotus 1920 176 4 Histories Vol 7 Terpsichore Translated by A D Godley ἐpeὶ 8essaloὶ ἦl8on ἐk 8esprwtῶn oἰkhsontes gῆn tὴn Aἰolida thn nῦn ἐkteatai Athe Thessalians when these came from Thesprotia to dwell in the Aeolian land the region which they now possess Herodotus 1920 149 1 2 Histories Vol 1 Clio Translated by A D Godley aὗtai mὲn aἱ Ἰades polies eἰsi aἵde dὲ aἱ Aἰolides Kymh ἡ Frikwnὶs kaleomenh Lhrisai Neon teῖxos Tῆmnos Killa Notion Aἰgiroessa Pitanh Aἰgaῖai Myrina Gryneia aὗtai ἕndeka Aἰolewn polies aἱ ἀrxaῖai mia gὰr sfewn parely8h Smyrnh ὑpὸ Ἰwnwn ἦsan gὰr kaὶ aὗtai dywdeka aἱ ἐn tῆ ἠpeirῳ 2 oὗtoi dὲ oἱ Aἰolees xwrhn mὲn ἔtyxon ktisantes ἀmeinw Ἰwnwn ὡrewn dὲ ἥkoysan oὐk ὁmoiws Those are the Ionian cities and these are the Aeolian Cyme called Phriconian 1 Lerisae Neon Teichos Temnos Cilla Notion Aegiroessa Pitane Aegaeae Myrina Gryneia 2 These are the ancient Aeolian cities eleven in number but one of them Smyrna was taken away by the Ionians for these too were once twelve on the mainland 2 These Aeolians had settled where the land was better than the Ionian territory but the climate was not so good 1 Perhaps so called from a mountain in Aeolis Phricion near which the Aeolians had been settled before their migration to Asia 2 These places lie between Smyrna and Pergamum on or near the coast But Aegiroessa has not been exactly identified Herodotus 1920 142 3 Histories Vol 1 Clio Translated by A D Godley Milhtos mὲn aὐtewn prwth keetai polis prὸs mesambrihn metὰ dὲ Myoῦs te kaὶ Prihnh 4 aὗtai mὲn ἐn tῇ Kariῃ katoikhntai katὰ taὐtὰ dialegomenai sfisi aἵde dὲ ἐn tῇ Lydiῃ Ἔfesos Kolofὼn Lebedos Tews Klazomenaὶ Fwkaia aὗtai dὲ aἱ polies tῇsi proteron lex8eisῃsi ὁmologeoysi katὰ glῶssan oὐden sfisi dὲ ὁmofwneoysi ἔti dὲ treῖs ὑpoloipoi Ἰades polies tῶn aἱ dyo mὲn nhsoys oἰkeatai Samon te kaὶ Xion ἡ dὲ mia ἐn tῇ ἠpeirῳ ἵdrytai Ἐry8rai Xῖoi men nyn kaὶ Ἐry8raῖoi katὰ tὠytὸ dialegontai Samioi dὲ ἐp ἑwytῶn moῦnoi oὗtoi xaraktῆres glwsshs tesseres ginontai Miletus lies farthest south among them and next to it come Myus and Priene these are settlements in Caria and they have a common language Ephesus Colophon Lebedos Teos Clazomenae Phocaea all of them in Lydia Herodotus 1920 144 Histories Vol 1 Clio Translated by A D Godley kata per oἱ ἐk tῆs pentapolios nῦn xwrhs Dwriees proteron dὲ ἑ3apolios tῆs aὐtῆs tayths kaleomenhs fylassontai ὦn mhdamoὺs ἐsde3as8ai tῶn prosoikwn Dwriewn ἐs tὸ Triopikὸn ἱron ἀllὰ kaὶ sfewn aὐtῶn toὺs perὶ tὸ ἱron ἀnomhsantas ἐ3eklhisan tῆs metoxῆs 2 ἐn gὰr tῷ ἀgῶni toῦ Triopioy Ἀpollwnos ἐti8esan tὸ palai tripodas xalkeoys toῖsi nikῶsi kaὶ toytoys xrῆn toὺs lambanontas ἐk toῦ ἱroῦ mὴ ἐkferein ἀll aὐtoῦ ἀnati8enai tῷ 8eῷ 3 ἀnὴr ὦn Ἁlikarnhsseys tῷ oὔnoma ἦn Ἀgasiklehs nikhsas tὸn nomon kathloghse ferwn dὲ prὸs tὰ ἑwytoῦ oἰkia prosepassaleyse tὸn tripoda diὰ taythn tὴn aἰtihn aἱ pente polies Lindos kaὶ Ἰhlysos te kaὶ Kameiros kaὶ Kῶs te kaὶ Knidos ἐ3eklhisan tῆs metoxῆs tὴn ἕkthn polin Ἁlikarnhsson toytoisi men nyn oὗtoi taythn tὴn zhmihn ἐpe8hkan Just as the Dorians of what is now the country of the Five Cities formerly the country of the Six Cities forbid admitting any of the neighboring Dorians to the Triopian temple and even barred from using it those of their own group who had broken the temple law 2 For long ago in the games in honor of Triopian Apollo they offered certain bronze tripods to the victors and those who won these were not to carry them away from the temple but dedicate them there to the god 3 Now when a man of Halicarnassus called Agasicles won he disregarded this law and carrying the tripod away nailed it to the wall of his own house For this offense the five cities Lindus Ialysus Camirus Cos and Cnidus forbade the sixth city Halicarnassus to share in the use of the temple Such was the penalty imposed on the Halicarnassians Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Iron Age Greek migrations amp oldid 1133406547, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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