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Olynthus

Olynthus (Ancient Greek: Ὄλυνθος Olynthos, named for the ὄλυνθος olunthos, "the fruit of the wild fig tree"[1]) is an ancient city in present-day Chalcidice, Greece. It was built mostly on two flat-topped hills 30–40m in height, in a fertile plain at the head of the Gulf of Torone, near the neck of the peninsula of Pallene, about 2.5 kilometers from the sea, and about 60 stadia (c. 9–10 kilometers) from Poteidaea.[2][3] Artefacts found during the excavations of the site are exhibited in the Archaeological Museum of Olynthos.

Olynthus
Ὀλυνθος
Bouleuterion of ancient Olynthus
Shown within Greece
Olynthus (Mediterranean)
LocationOlynthus, Central Macedonia, Greece
Coordinates40°17′46″N 23°21′14″E / 40.296°N 23.354°E / 40.296; 23.354Coordinates: 40°17′46″N 23°21′14″E / 40.296°N 23.354°E / 40.296; 23.354
TypeSettlement
Part ofChalcidian League
Length1500
Width400
Area60 ha (150 acres)
History
Founded7th century BC
Abandoned318 BC
Site notes
ArchaeologistsDavid Moore Robinson, Mary Ross Ellingson
ConditionRuined
OwnershipPublic
Management16th Ephorate of Prehistoric and Classical Antiquities
Public accessYes
WebsiteHellenic Ministry of Culture and Tourism

History

Olynthus, son of Heracles, or the river god Strymon, was considered the mythological founder of the town. The South Hill bore a small Neolithic settlement; was abandoned during the Bronze Age; and was resettled in the 7th century BC. Subsequently, the town was captured by the Bottiaeans, a Thracian tribe ejected from Macedon by Alexander I.

Following the Persian defeat at Salamis in 480 BC, and with Xerxes having been escorted to the Hellespont by his general Artabazus, the Persian army spent the winter of the same year in Thessaly and Macedonia. The Persian authority in the Balkans must have significantly decreased at the time, which encouraged the inhabitants of the Pallene peninsula to break away. Suspecting that a revolt against the Great King was meditated, in order to control the situation, Artabazus captured Olynthus, which was thought to be disloyal, and killed its inhabitants.[4] The town had priorly been given to Kritovoulos from Toroni and to a fresh population consisting of Greeks from the neighboring region of Chalcidice, who had been exiled by the Macedonians (Herod. viii. 127). Though Herodotus reports that Artabazus slaughtered them, Boetiaeans continued to live in the area.

Olynthus became a Greek polis, but it remained insignificant (in the quota-lists of the Delian League it appears as paying on the average 2 talents, as compared with 6 to 15 paid by Scione, 6 to 15 by Mende, 6 to 12 by Toroni, and 3 to 6 by Sermylia from 454 to 432).

In 432 King Perdiccas II of Macedon encouraged several nearby coastal towns to disband and remove their population to Olynthus, preparatory to a revolt to be led by Potidaea against Athens (Thuc. 1.58). This synoecism (συνοικισμός) was effected, though against Perdiccas's wishes the contributing cities were preserved. This increase in population led to the settlement of the North Hill, which was developed on a Hippodamian grid plan. In 423 Olynthus became the head of a formal Chalkidian League, occasioned by the synoecism or by the beginning of the Peloponnesian War and fear of Athenian attack. During the Peloponnesian war it formed a base for Brasidas in his expedition of 424 and refuge for the citizens of Mende and Poteidaea that had rebelled against the Athenians (Thu. ii, 70).

After the end of the Peloponnesian War the development of the league was rapid and ended consisting of 32 cities. About 393 we find it concluding an important treaty with Amyntas III of Macedon (the father of Philip II), and by 382 it had absorbed most of the Greek cities west of the Strymon, and had even got possession of Pella, the chief city in Macedon. (Xenophon, Hell. V. 2, 12).

In this year Sparta was induced by an embassy from Acanthus and Apollonia, which anticipated conquest by the league, to send an expedition against Olynthus. After three years of indecisive warfare Olynthus consented to dissolve the confederacy (379). It is clear, however, that the dissolution was little more than formal, as the Chalcidians ("Χαλκιδῆς ἀπò Θρᾴκης") appear, only a year or two later, among the members of the Athenian naval confederacy of 378–377. Twenty years later, in the reign of Philip, the power of Olynthus is asserted by Demosthenes to have been much greater than before the Spartan expedition. The town itself at this period is spoken of as a city of the first rank (πóλις μuρἰανδρος), and the league included thirty-two cities.

When the Social War broke out between Athens and its allies (357), Olynthus was at first in alliance with Philip. Subsequently, in alarm at the growth of his power, it concluded an alliance with Athens. Olynthus made three embassies to Athens, the occasions of Demosthenes's three Olynthiac Orations. On the third, the Athenians sent soldiers from among its citizens. After Philip had deprived Olynthus of the rest of the League, by force and by the treachery of sympathetic factions, he besieged Olynthus in 348. The siege was short; he bought Olynthus's two principal citizens, Euthycrates and Lasthenes,[5] who betrayed the city to him. He then looted and razed the city and sold its population—including the Athenian garrison—into slavery. According to the latest researches only a small area of the North Hill was ever re-occupied, up to 318, before Cassander forced the population to move in his new city of Cassandreia.

Though the city was extinguished, through subsequent centuries there would be men scattered through the Hellenistic world who were called Olynthians.

Topography and archaeology

 
Olynthian floor mosaic
 
Mosiac close-up; depicts the mythical hero Bellerophon on Pegasus fighting the Chimera

Due to its proximity to the ancient city of Potidaea and the presence of some inscriptions, the British adventurer William Leake reasoned that the site of Olynthus was at the village of Agios Mamas, seven kilometers south of the actual location.[6] This viewpoint was shared by a number of scholars, including Esprit-Marie Cousinéry, but was challenged in the early twentieth century by Adolf Struck and English archaeologist Alan Wace, among others. Wace in particular found no evidence of an ancient settlement at Agios Mamas, Leake had evidently not visited there himself, and that the inscriptions were taken from stones found at Potidaea by local residents. Utilizing descriptions provided by Thucydides and Xenophon, he reasoned that Olynthus must actually lie further north near the village of Myriophyton.[7] In 1915, Wace conducted a preliminary survey of the area in hopes that the British School of Athens might pursue an excavation, but nothing came of it.[8]

On February 17, 1928, David Moore Robinson and a large team of archaeologists and workmen began excavations at Olynthus in collaboration with the American School of Classical Studies in Athens.[9] They found that the ancient city extends over two hills that detach from a small coulee and possess an area ca. 1500 m long and 400 m in width. Robinson conducted three additional excavations in 1931, 1934, and 1938, publishing the results in fourteen volumes.[10] Some of his writing was later found to have been plagiarized from another excavator, Mary Ross Ellingson.[11] The excavation had uncovered more than five hectares of Olynthus and a portion of Mecyberna (the harbor of Olynthus). On the North Hill this hurried pace proved relatively harmless due to the simple stratigraphy of an area of the city occupied only for 84 years and subjected to a sudden, final destruction; but the data from the South Hill was badly muddled. Nonetheless, the work was excellent for its time, and remains supremely valuable. Much of the stratigraphy of the North Hill has been reconstructed by Nicholas Cahill (University of Wisconsin).[12] The site is now in the charge of Julia Vokotopoulou, and the XVI Ephorate of Classical Antiquities.

The Neolithic settlement is located in the edge of the southern hill and was dated in the 3rd millennium BC.[13] The houses were built by stone blocks and had one or two rooms. The pottery that was found was the typical of that period comprising monochrome ceramic vases. The end of this rural settlement was abrupt and is placed around the 1st millennium.

The archaic city was built under a provincially urban plan and extended throughout the whole south hill. Two avenues were revealed along the eastern and western edges of the hill that intersected with crossing streets. Along the south avenue shops and small houses were found while the administrative part was located in the north part of the hill, where the agora and a deanery were found.

 
Tombstone in Olynthus

The classical city was established on the much larger north hill and to its eastern slope. The excavations, which cover only 1/10 of the city's total area, have revealed a Hippodamian grid plan. Two large avenues were discovered, with an amplitude of 7 meters, along with vertical and horizontal streets that divided the urban area into city blocks. Each one had ten houses with two floors and a paved yard. Very important for the archaeological research are considered the rich villas that were excavated in the aristocratic suburb of the city located in the eastern part of the north hill since there was found some of the earliest floor mosaics in Greek art.

Both the archaic and classical city were protected by an extended land wall. Parts of the foundations of the wall were revealed in the north hill and elsewhere, but they are not enlightening on which method was followed for their construction. Archaeologists suppose that it was built with sun-dried bricks with a stone base, but it is difficult to tell, since the city was literally leveled by Phillip.

As it concerns the public buildings, the agora is placed in the south edge of the north hill, near the eastern gate, along with a public fountain, an arsenal and the city's parliament building (Βουλευτήριον). There is a small museum featuring artifacts recovered from Olynthus, and the whole archaeological site is open to public tours during daylight hours.

Notable people

  • Callisthenes (c. 360-328 BC), historian
  • Ephippus (4th century BC), historian
  • Euphantus (4th century BC), philosopher
  • Sthennis (4th century BC), sculptor
  • Stratis, an ancient Greek historian[14]
  • Jesse Papargiris (1985), accountant

Modern Olynthos

The modern city, formerly Myriophyton, now called Olynthos or Nea Olynthos, sits on a small plateau on the western side of the river Olynthios or Resetenikia (in ancient times known as Sandanus), across from the ruins of the ancient city.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Liddell-Scott-Jones s.v. ὄλονθος.
  2. ^ Borza, E., M. Willoughby, R. Talbert, J. Åhlfeldt, J. Becker, A. Rabinowitz, T. Elliott, DARMC, J. Bartlett, S. Gillies (22 December 2021). "Places: 491678 (Olynthos)". Pleiades. Retrieved September 13, 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ W. Smith. 1854. "Olynthus." Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0064%3Aalphabetic+letter%3DO%3Aentry+group%3D3%3Aentry%3Dolynthus-geo
  4. ^ Sprawski, Sławomir (2010). "The Early Temenid Kings to Alexander I". In Roisman, Joseph; Worthington, Ian (eds.). A Companion to Ancient Macedonia. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 139.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-06-07. Retrieved 2008-10-28.
  6. ^ Leake, Martin (1835). Travels in Northern Greece. Vol. III. Gilbert & Rivington. p. 154.
  7. ^ Wace, Alan (November 1916). "The Site of Olynthus". The Annual of the British School at Athens. 21: 11–15. doi:10.1017/S006824540000959X. S2CID 128992107 – via JSTOR.
  8. ^ Borza, Eugene (1990). In the Shadow of Olympus: The Emergence of Macedon. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. p. 15. ISBN 0-691-05549-1
  9. ^ Robinson, David M. (January–March 1929). "A Preliminary Report on the Excavations at Olynthos". Archaeological Institute of America. 33 (1): 53–76 – via JSTOR.
  10. ^ Robinson, David M. (December 1952). "OLYNTHUS: — The Greek Pompeii". Archaeological Institute of America. 5 (4): 228–235 – via JSTOR.
  11. ^ Johns Hopkins University; George Emmanuel Mylonas (1952). Excavations at Olynthus: The Neolithic settlement, by G.E. Mylonas. Johns Hopkins Press.
  12. ^ Nicholas Cahill (1 October 2008). Household and City Organization at Olynthus. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-13300-4.
  13. ^ The Johns Hopkins University Press -.; Milford, H. -. (1929). Excavations at Olynthus: Part 1; the Neolithic Settlement. Johns Hopkins University Press.
  14. ^ Suda, Sigma, 1179

References

  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainEdward Mewburn Walker (1911). "Olynthus". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  • Liddell & Scott, Greek-English Lexicon. (1889/1996). Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • George Grote, A History of Greece, London, 1862. 74–108.
  • Charles Rollin, Ancient History. (1844) Philadelphia: John B. Perry.
  • Nicholas Cahill, ; Olynthus at Perseus
  • Raymond Dessy, Exile from Olynthus.
  • 1929–1952. David M Robinson; George E Mylonas. Excavations at Olynthus. (Johns Hopkins University studies in archaeology, no. 6, 9, 11–12, 18–20, 25–26, 31–32, 36, 38–39.) 14 v. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. WorldCat

Sources

  • Roisman, Joseph; Worthington, Ian (2011). A Companion to Ancient Macedonia. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1444351637.
  • The chief passages in ancient literature are the Olynthiac Orations of Demosthenes, and Xenophon, Hell. v. 2.

External links

  • Official website

olynthus, genus, butterflies, butterfly, genus, sponges, sponge, greek, myth, figure, mythology, ancient, greek, Ὄλυνθος, olynthos, named, ὄλυνθος, olunthos, fruit, wild, tree, ancient, city, present, chalcidice, greece, built, mostly, flat, topped, hills, hei. For the genus butterflies see Olynthus butterfly For the genus sponges see Olynthus sponge For greek myth figure see Olynthus mythology Olynthus Ancient Greek Ὄlyn8os Olynthos named for the ὄlyn8os olunthos the fruit of the wild fig tree 1 is an ancient city in present day Chalcidice Greece It was built mostly on two flat topped hills 30 40m in height in a fertile plain at the head of the Gulf of Torone near the neck of the peninsula of Pallene about 2 5 kilometers from the sea and about 60 stadia c 9 10 kilometers from Poteidaea 2 3 Artefacts found during the excavations of the site are exhibited in the Archaeological Museum of Olynthos OlynthusὈlyn8osBouleuterion of ancient OlynthusShown within GreeceShow map of GreeceOlynthus Mediterranean Show map of MediterraneanLocationOlynthus Central Macedonia GreeceCoordinates40 17 46 N 23 21 14 E 40 296 N 23 354 E 40 296 23 354 Coordinates 40 17 46 N 23 21 14 E 40 296 N 23 354 E 40 296 23 354TypeSettlementPart ofChalcidian LeagueLength1500Width400Area60 ha 150 acres HistoryFounded7th century BCAbandoned318 BCSite notesArchaeologistsDavid Moore Robinson Mary Ross EllingsonConditionRuinedOwnershipPublicManagement16th Ephorate of Prehistoric and Classical AntiquitiesPublic accessYesWebsiteHellenic Ministry of Culture and Tourism Contents 1 History 2 Topography and archaeology 3 Notable people 4 Modern Olynthos 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Sources 9 External linksHistory EditOlynthus son of Heracles or the river god Strymon was considered the mythological founder of the town The South Hill bore a small Neolithic settlement was abandoned during the Bronze Age and was resettled in the 7th century BC Subsequently the town was captured by the Bottiaeans a Thracian tribe ejected from Macedon by Alexander I Following the Persian defeat at Salamis in 480 BC and with Xerxes having been escorted to the Hellespont by his general Artabazus the Persian army spent the winter of the same year in Thessaly and Macedonia The Persian authority in the Balkans must have significantly decreased at the time which encouraged the inhabitants of the Pallene peninsula to break away Suspecting that a revolt against the Great King was meditated in order to control the situation Artabazus captured Olynthus which was thought to be disloyal and killed its inhabitants 4 The town had priorly been given to Kritovoulos from Toroni and to a fresh population consisting of Greeks from the neighboring region of Chalcidice who had been exiled by the Macedonians Herod viii 127 Though Herodotus reports that Artabazus slaughtered them Boetiaeans continued to live in the area Olynthus became a Greek polis but it remained insignificant in the quota lists of the Delian League it appears as paying on the average 2 talents as compared with 6 to 15 paid by Scione 6 to 15 by Mende 6 to 12 by Toroni and 3 to 6 by Sermylia from 454 to 432 In 432 King Perdiccas II of Macedon encouraged several nearby coastal towns to disband and remove their population to Olynthus preparatory to a revolt to be led by Potidaea against Athens Thuc 1 58 This synoecism synoikismos was effected though against Perdiccas s wishes the contributing cities were preserved This increase in population led to the settlement of the North Hill which was developed on a Hippodamian grid plan In 423 Olynthus became the head of a formal Chalkidian League occasioned by the synoecism or by the beginning of the Peloponnesian War and fear of Athenian attack During the Peloponnesian war it formed a base for Brasidas in his expedition of 424 and refuge for the citizens of Mende and Poteidaea that had rebelled against the Athenians Thu ii 70 After the end of the Peloponnesian War the development of the league was rapid and ended consisting of 32 cities About 393 we find it concluding an important treaty with Amyntas III of Macedon the father of Philip II and by 382 it had absorbed most of the Greek cities west of the Strymon and had even got possession of Pella the chief city in Macedon Xenophon Hell V 2 12 In this year Sparta was induced by an embassy from Acanthus and Apollonia which anticipated conquest by the league to send an expedition against Olynthus After three years of indecisive warfare Olynthus consented to dissolve the confederacy 379 It is clear however that the dissolution was little more than formal as the Chalcidians Xalkidῆs ἀpo 8rᾴkhs appear only a year or two later among the members of the Athenian naval confederacy of 378 377 Twenty years later in the reign of Philip the power of Olynthus is asserted by Demosthenes to have been much greater than before the Spartan expedition The town itself at this period is spoken of as a city of the first rank polis murἰandros and the league included thirty two cities When the Social War broke out between Athens and its allies 357 Olynthus was at first in alliance with Philip Subsequently in alarm at the growth of his power it concluded an alliance with Athens Olynthus made three embassies to Athens the occasions of Demosthenes s three Olynthiac Orations On the third the Athenians sent soldiers from among its citizens After Philip had deprived Olynthus of the rest of the League by force and by the treachery of sympathetic factions he besieged Olynthus in 348 The siege was short he bought Olynthus s two principal citizens Euthycrates and Lasthenes 5 who betrayed the city to him He then looted and razed the city and sold its population including the Athenian garrison into slavery According to the latest researches only a small area of the North Hill was ever re occupied up to 318 before Cassander forced the population to move in his new city of Cassandreia Though the city was extinguished through subsequent centuries there would be men scattered through the Hellenistic world who were called Olynthians Topography and archaeology Edit Olynthian floor mosaic Mosiac close up depicts the mythical hero Bellerophon on Pegasus fighting the Chimera Due to its proximity to the ancient city of Potidaea and the presence of some inscriptions the British adventurer William Leake reasoned that the site of Olynthus was at the village of Agios Mamas seven kilometers south of the actual location 6 This viewpoint was shared by a number of scholars including Esprit Marie Cousinery but was challenged in the early twentieth century by Adolf Struck and English archaeologist Alan Wace among others Wace in particular found no evidence of an ancient settlement at Agios Mamas Leake had evidently not visited there himself and that the inscriptions were taken from stones found at Potidaea by local residents Utilizing descriptions provided by Thucydides and Xenophon he reasoned that Olynthus must actually lie further north near the village of Myriophyton 7 In 1915 Wace conducted a preliminary survey of the area in hopes that the British School of Athens might pursue an excavation but nothing came of it 8 On February 17 1928 David Moore Robinson and a large team of archaeologists and workmen began excavations at Olynthus in collaboration with the American School of Classical Studies in Athens 9 They found that the ancient city extends over two hills that detach from a small coulee and possess an area ca 1500 m long and 400 m in width Robinson conducted three additional excavations in 1931 1934 and 1938 publishing the results in fourteen volumes 10 Some of his writing was later found to have been plagiarized from another excavator Mary Ross Ellingson 11 The excavation had uncovered more than five hectares of Olynthus and a portion of Mecyberna the harbor of Olynthus On the North Hill this hurried pace proved relatively harmless due to the simple stratigraphy of an area of the city occupied only for 84 years and subjected to a sudden final destruction but the data from the South Hill was badly muddled Nonetheless the work was excellent for its time and remains supremely valuable Much of the stratigraphy of the North Hill has been reconstructed by Nicholas Cahill University of Wisconsin 12 The site is now in the charge of Julia Vokotopoulou and the XVI Ephorate of Classical Antiquities The Neolithic settlement is located in the edge of the southern hill and was dated in the 3rd millennium BC 13 The houses were built by stone blocks and had one or two rooms The pottery that was found was the typical of that period comprising monochrome ceramic vases The end of this rural settlement was abrupt and is placed around the 1st millennium The archaic city was built under a provincially urban plan and extended throughout the whole south hill Two avenues were revealed along the eastern and western edges of the hill that intersected with crossing streets Along the south avenue shops and small houses were found while the administrative part was located in the north part of the hill where the agora and a deanery were found Tombstone in Olynthus The classical city was established on the much larger north hill and to its eastern slope The excavations which cover only 1 10 of the city s total area have revealed a Hippodamian grid plan Two large avenues were discovered with an amplitude of 7 meters along with vertical and horizontal streets that divided the urban area into city blocks Each one had ten houses with two floors and a paved yard Very important for the archaeological research are considered the rich villas that were excavated in the aristocratic suburb of the city located in the eastern part of the north hill since there was found some of the earliest floor mosaics in Greek art Both the archaic and classical city were protected by an extended land wall Parts of the foundations of the wall were revealed in the north hill and elsewhere but they are not enlightening on which method was followed for their construction Archaeologists suppose that it was built with sun dried bricks with a stone base but it is difficult to tell since the city was literally leveled by Phillip As it concerns the public buildings the agora is placed in the south edge of the north hill near the eastern gate along with a public fountain an arsenal and the city s parliament building Boyleythrion There is a small museum featuring artifacts recovered from Olynthus and the whole archaeological site is open to public tours during daylight hours Notable people EditCallisthenes c 360 328 BC historian Ephippus 4th century BC historian Euphantus 4th century BC philosopher Sthennis 4th century BC sculptor Stratis an ancient Greek historian 14 Jesse Papargiris 1985 accountantModern Olynthos EditThe modern city formerly Myriophyton now called Olynthos or Nea Olynthos sits on a small plateau on the western side of the river Olynthios or Resetenikia in ancient times known as Sandanus across from the ruins of the ancient city See also EditList of ancient Greek citiesNotes Edit Liddell Scott Jones s v ὄlon8os Borza E M Willoughby R Talbert J Ahlfeldt J Becker A Rabinowitz T Elliott DARMC J Bartlett S Gillies 22 December 2021 Places 491678 Olynthos Pleiades Retrieved September 13 2014 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link W Smith 1854 Olynthus Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography http www perseus tufts edu hopper text doc Perseus 3Atext 3A1999 04 0064 3Aalphabetic letter 3DO 3Aentry group 3D3 3Aentry 3Dolynthus geo Sprawski Slawomir 2010 The Early Temenid Kings to Alexander I In Roisman Joseph Worthington Ian eds A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Wiley Blackwell pp 139 Nicholas Cahill Philip s Destruction of Olynthus Archived from the original on 2011 06 07 Retrieved 2008 10 28 Leake Martin 1835 Travels in Northern Greece Vol III Gilbert amp Rivington p 154 Wace Alan November 1916 The Site of Olynthus The Annual of the British School at Athens 21 11 15 doi 10 1017 S006824540000959X S2CID 128992107 via JSTOR Borza Eugene 1990 In the Shadow of Olympus The Emergence of Macedon Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press p 15 ISBN 0 691 05549 1 Robinson David M January March 1929 A Preliminary Report on the Excavations at Olynthos Archaeological Institute of America 33 1 53 76 via JSTOR Robinson David M December 1952 OLYNTHUS The Greek Pompeii Archaeological Institute of America 5 4 228 235 via JSTOR Johns Hopkins University George Emmanuel Mylonas 1952 Excavations at Olynthus The Neolithic settlement by G E Mylonas Johns Hopkins Press Nicholas Cahill 1 October 2008 Household and City Organization at Olynthus Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 13300 4 The Johns Hopkins University Press Milford H 1929 Excavations at Olynthus Part 1 the Neolithic Settlement Johns Hopkins University Press Suda Sigma 1179References Edit This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Edward Mewburn Walker 1911 Olynthus In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Liddell amp Scott Greek English Lexicon 1889 1996 Oxford Clarendon Press George Grote A History of Greece London 1862 74 108 Charles Rollin Ancient History 1844 Philadelphia John B Perry Nicholas Cahill Household and City Organization at Olynthus Olynthus at Perseus Raymond Dessy Exile from Olynthus 1929 1952 David M Robinson George E Mylonas Excavations at Olynthus Johns Hopkins University studies in archaeology no 6 9 11 12 18 20 25 26 31 32 36 38 39 14 v Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press WorldCatSources EditRoisman Joseph Worthington Ian 2011 A Companion to Ancient Macedonia John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1444351637 The chief passages in ancient literature are the Olynthiac Orations of Demosthenes and Xenophon Hell v 2 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Olynthos Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Olynthos Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Olynthus amp oldid 1152704550, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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