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Thurii

Thurii (/ˈθʊəri/; Greek: Θούριοι, translit. Thoúrioi), called also by some Latin writers Thurium (compare Greek: Θούριον in Ptolemy), and later in Roman times also Copia and Copiae, was an ancient Greek city situated on the Gulf of Taranto, near or on the site of the great renowned city of Sybaris, whose place it may be considered as having taken. The ruins of the city can be found in the Sybaris archaeological park near Sibari in the Province of Cosenza, Calabria, Italy.

Thurii
Θούριοι
Overview of excavated ruins, possibly from Thurii
Shown within Italy
Alternative nameThurium, Copia, Copiae
LocationSibari, Province of Cosenza, Calabria, Italy
RegionBruttium
Coordinates39°43′2″N 16°29′44″E / 39.71722°N 16.49556°E / 39.71722; 16.49556
TypeSettlement
Site notes
Website (in Italian)

History edit

 
main street of Thurii
 
Excavated remains of buildings, possibly from Thurii.
 
Excavated mosaic floor with swastikas, possibly from Thurii.

Foundation edit

Thurii was founded as a colony of Athens along with exiles from Sybaris in 443 BC.[1]Justin writes that people say that the city of Thurii was built by Philoctetes and his monument is seen there even to his days, as well as the arrows of Hercules which laid up in the temple of Apollo.[2] The site of that city had remained desolate for a period of 58 years after its destruction by the Crotoniats; when at length, in 452 BC, a number of the Sybarite exiles and their descendants made an attempt to establish themselves again on the spot, under the guidance of some leaders of Thessalian origin; and the new colony rose so rapidly to prosperity that it excited the jealousy of the Crotoniats, who, in consequence, expelled the new settlers a little more than 5 years after the establishment of the colony.[3] The fugitive Sybarites first appealed for support to Sparta, but without success: their application to the Athenians was more successful, and that people determined to send out a fresh colony, at the same time that they reinstated the settlers who had been lately expelled from thence. A body of Athenian colonists was accordingly sent out by Pericles, under the command of Lampon and Xenocritus. Pericles' expressed intent was for it to be a Panhellenic colony,[4] and the number of Athenian citizens was small, the greater part of those who took part in the colony being collected from various parts of Greece. Among them were two celebrated names: Herodotus the historian, and the orator Lysias, both of whom appear to have formed part of the original colony.[5] The laws of the new colony were established by the sophist Protagoras at the request of Pericles,[6] adopting the laws of Zaleucus of Locri.[4]

The new colonists at first established themselves on the site of the deserted Sybaris, but shortly afterwards removed (apparently in obedience to an oracle) to a spot at a short distance from thence, where there was a fountain named "Thuria", from whence the new city derived its name of Thurii.[7] The foundation of Thurii is assigned by Diodorus to the year 446 BC; but other authorities place it three years later, 443 BC, and this seems to be the best authenticated date.[8] The protection of the Athenian name probably secured the rising colony from the assaults of the Crotoniats, at least we hear nothing of any obstacles to its progress from that quarter; but it was early disturbed by dissensions between the descendants of the original Sybarite settlers and the new colonists, the former laying claim not only to honorary distinctions, but to the exclusive possession of important political privileges. These disputes at length ended in a revolution, and the Sybarites were finally expelled from the city. They established themselves for a short time in Sybaris on the Traeis but did not maintain their footing long, being dislodged and finally dispersed by the neighboring barbarians.[9] The Thurians meanwhile concluded a treaty of peace with Crotona, and the new city rose rapidly to prosperity. Fresh colonists poured in from all quarters, especially the Peloponnese; and though it continued to be generally regarded as an Athenian colony, the Athenians in fact formed but a small element of the population. The citizens were divided, as we learn from Diodorus, into ten tribes, the names of which sufficiently indicate their origin. They were: the Arcadian (from Arcadia), Achaean (from Achaea), Elean (from Elea), Boeotian (from Boeotia), Amphictyonic (from Amphictyonis), Dorian (from Doris), Ionian (from Ionia), Athenian (from Athens), Euboean (from Euboea), and Nesiotic (from the islands).[10] The form of government was democratic, and the city is said to have enjoyed the advantage of a well-ordered system of laws; but the statement of Diodorus, who represents this as owing to the legislation of Charondas, and that lawgiver himself as a citizen of Thurii, is certainly erroneous. The city itself was laid out with great regularity, being divided by four broad streets or plateae, each of which was crossed in like manner by three others.[11]

War and conflict edit

Very shortly after its foundation, Thurii became involved in a war with Tarentum (modern Taranto). The subject of this was the possession of the fertile district of the Siritis, about 50 km north of Thurii, to which the Athenians had a claim of long standing, which was naturally taken up by their colonists. The Spartan general, Cleandridas, who had been banished from Greece some years before, and taken up his abode at Thurii, became the general of the Thurians in this war, which, after various successes, was at length terminated by a compromise, both parties agreeing to the foundation of the new colony of Heracleia in the disputed territory.[12]

Knowledge of the history of Thurii is very scanty and fragmentary. Fresh disputes arising between the Athenian citizens and the other colonists were at length allayed by the oracle of Delphi, which decided that the city had no other founder than Apollo.[13] But the same difference appears again on occasion of the great Athenian expedition to Sicily, when the city was divided into two parties, the one desirous of favoring and supporting the Athenians, the other opposed to them. The latter faction at first prevailed, so far that the Thurians observed the same neutrality towards the Athenian fleet under Nicias and Alcibiades as the other cities of Italy.[14] Thurii was, in fact, the city where Alcibiades escaped his Athenian captors who were taking him home for trial.

But two years afterwards (413 BC) the Athenian party had regained the ascendency; and when Demosthenes and Eurymedon touched at Thurii, the citizens afforded them every assistance, and even furnished an auxiliary force of 700 hoplites and 300 dartmen.[15] From this time we hear nothing of Thurii for a period of more than 20 years, though there is reason to believe that this was just the time of its greatest prosperity. In 390 BC we find that its territory was already beginning to suffer from the incursions of the Lucanians, a new and formidable enemy, for protection against whom all the cities of Magna Graecia had entered into a defensive league. But the Thurians were too impatient to wait for the support of their allies, and issued forth with an army of 14,000 foot and 1000 horse, with which they repulsed the attacks of the Lucanians; but having rashly followed them into their own territory, they were totally defeated, near Laüs, and above 10,000 of them cut to pieces.[16]

This defeat must have inflicted a severe blow on the prosperity of Thurii, while the continually increasing power of the Lucanians and Bruttians in their immediate neighbourhood would prevent them from quickly recovering from its effects. The city continued also to be on hostile, or at least unfriendly, terms with Dionysius of Syracuse, and was in consequence chosen as a place of retirement or exile by his brother Leptines and his friend Philistus.[17] The rise of the Bruttian people about 356 BC probably became the cause of the complete decline of Thurii, but the statement of Diodorus that the city was conquered by that people[18] must be received with considerable doubt.[why?]

It reappears in history at a later period, when Corinthian soldiers en route to join Timoleon on his expedition to Syracuse are blockaded there by Carthaginian ships. At this point it was still an independent Greek city, though much fallen from its former greatness. No mention of it is found during the wars of Alexander of Epirus in this part of Italy.

Later it was so hard pressed by the Lucanians that it had recourse to alliance with Rome and a Roman army was sent to its relief under Gaius Fabricius Luscinus in 282 BC. He defeated the Lucanians and Bruttians, who had laid siege to the city, in a pitched battle and several other successes broke their power, and thus relieved the Thurians from all immediate danger from that quarter.[19] But shortly after they were attacked on the other side by the Tarentines, who are said to have taken and plundered their city;[20] and this aggression was one of the immediate causes of the war declared by the Romans against Tarentum in 282 BC.

Roman dependency edit

Thurii became a dependent ally of Rome, and was protected by a Roman garrison.[citation needed]

It played a considerable part in the Second Punic War with Hannibal. It was one of the cities which defected to the Carthaginians after the battle of Cannae in 212 BC.[21] After the defection of Tarentum, they betrayed the Roman troops into the hands of the Carthaginian general Hanno.[22] A few years later (210 BC), Hannibal, finding himself unable to protect his allies in Campania, removed the inhabitants of Atella who had survived the fall of their city to Thurii;[23] but it was not long before he was compelled to abandon the latter city also to its fate. When he himself in 204 BC withdrew his forces into Bruttium, he removed to Crotona 3500 of the principal citizens of Thurii, while he gave up the city itself to the plunder of his troops.[24]

It is evident that Thurii was now sunk to the lowest state of decay, but the great fertility of its territory rendered it desirable to preserve it from utter desolation. Hence in 194 BC, it was one of the places selected for the establishment of a Roman colony with Latin rights.[25] The number of colonists was small in proportion to the extent of land to be divided among them, but they amounted to 3000 foot and 300 knights.[26] Livy says merely that the colony was sent in Thurinum agrum, but Strabo tells us that the Romans gave the new colony the name of Copiae, as confirmed both by Stephanus of Byzantium and by the evidence of coins, on which, however, the name is written "COPIA".[27] But this new name did not continue long in use, and Thurii still continued to be known by its ancient appellation. It is mentioned as a municipal town on several occasions during the latter ages of the Roman Republic. In 72 BC it was taken by Spartacus and subjected to heavy contributions but not otherwise injured.[28] According to Suetonius, the Octavian family held some renown there, and Gaius Octavius (father of the future Caesar Augustus) defeated a Spartacist army near there. As a result, the future emperor was granted the surname Thurinus shortly after birth. At the outbreak of the Civil Wars, it was deemed by Julius Caesar of sufficient importance to be secured with a garrison of Gaulish and Spanish horse, and it was there that M. Caelius Rufus was put to death, after a vain attempt to excite an insurrection in this part of Italy.[29] In 40 BC also it was attacked by Sextus Pompeius, who laid waste its territory, but he was repulsed from the walls of the city.[30]

Thurii was at this time still a place of some importance, and it is mentioned as an existing town by Pliny and Ptolemy, as well as Strabo.[31] It was probably, indeed, the only place of any consideration remaining on the coast of the Tarentine gulf between Crotona and Tarentum; both Metapontum and Heracleia having already fallen into almost complete decay. Its name is still found in the Itineraries,[32] and it is noticed by Procopius as still existing in the 6th century.[33]

Abandonment edit

Over time the sediment accretion of the Crathis river caused its river delta to shift towards the sea at a long term rate of one metre a year. As a consequence the successive sites of Sybaris, Thurii, and Copia became landlocked and lost their importance because they no longer had easy access to the sea for trade.[34] It seems to have been abandoned during the Middle Ages when the inhabitants took refuge at a place called Terranova (Terranova da Sibari), about 15 km inland, on a hill on the left bank of the Crathis.[citation needed]

The exact location of Greek Thurii is not known but that of the Roman town, which probably occupied the same site, is fixed by several ruins as being about 6 km to the east of Terranova da Sibari and as occupying an area some 6 km in circuit. It is clear from the statements of Diodorus and Strabo that Thurii occupied a site near to, but distinct from, that of Sybaris.[35] It is more likely that the true site is north of the Coscile (the ancient Sybaris), a few km from the sea, where ruins still exist. Roman ruins on the peninsula formed by the rivers Crathis and Sybaris may also perhaps be those of Thurii.[36]

The site edit

 
Domus of Thurii in final phase (3rd c. AD)

One house stands out by size and decoration: the large domus located behind the Theatre, undoubtedly one of the most sumptuous private buildings in the Roman city. It was built in the late Republican era (1st century BC) and survived until the 5th century AD through a series of expansions and transformations that gradually modified the layout. The monumentality and the splendour of the house reached their peak between the 1st and 3rd centuries AD while from the 4th are tangible signs of a decline.

Coinage edit

 
O: helmeted head of Athena left, wearing Attic helmet decorated with Skylla holding a rudder, neck guard decorated with a palmette. TIMO R: bull butting right; above, Nike flying right, crowning bull. ΘΟΥΡΙΩΝ
AR Stater (7.98 g, 6h) Lucania, Thourioi ~350-300 BC

Thurii had an active mint in antiquity. The coins of Thurii are of great beauty; their number and variety indeed gives us a higher idea of the opulence and prosperity of the city than we should gather from the statements of ancient writers.

Famous people edit

  • Alexis (ancient comic poet)
  • Herodotus, who migrated to Thurii from Athens after 443 BC.
  • Lysias, who migrated to Thurii from Athens c. 430 BC.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ The Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites-THURII
  2. ^ Justin, History of the World, 20.1
  3. ^ Diod. xi. 90, xii. 10.
  4. ^ a b Pomeroy, Sarah; Burstein, Stanley; Donlan, Walter; Roberts, Jennifer (2008). Ancient Greece: A Political, Social, and Cultural History (second ed.). New York, Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 275. ISBN 978-0-19-530800-6.
  5. ^ Diod. xii. 10; Strabo vi. p. 263; Dionys. Lys. p. 453; Vit. X. Orat. p. 835; Plutarch Peric. 11, Nic. 5.
  6. ^ Barrett, Harold. The Sophists (Novato, California: Chandler & Sharp Publishers, INC, 1987), 10.
  7. ^ Diod. l. c.; Strabo l. c.
  8. ^ H. F. Clinton, Fasti Hellenici. Vol. ii. p. 54.
  9. ^ Diod. xii. 11, 22; Arist. Pol. v. 3.
  10. ^ Diod. xii. 11.
  11. ^ Diod. xii. 10.
  12. ^ Diod. xii. 23, 36, xiii. 106; Strabo vi. p. 264; Polyaen. Strat. ii. 10.
  13. ^ Diod. xii. 35.
  14. ^ Thucydides vi. 44.
  15. ^ Id. vii. 33, 35.
  16. ^ Diodorus xiv. 101.
  17. ^ Diod. xv. 7.
  18. ^ xvi. 15.
  19. ^ Livy Epit. xi.; Pliny xxxiv. 6. s. 15; Valerius Maximus 1. 8. § 6
  20. ^ Appian, Samn. 7. § 1.
  21. ^ Liv. xxii. 61, xxv. 1.
  22. ^ Id. xxv. 15; Appian, Hann. 34.
  23. ^ Appian, Hann. 49.
  24. ^ Appian, l. c., 57.
  25. ^ Liv. xxxiv. 53; Strabo vi. p. 263.
  26. ^ Liv. xxxv. 9.
  27. ^ Strabo l. c.; Steph. Byz. s. v. Θούριοι; Eckhel, vol. i. p. 164.
  28. ^ Appian, B.C. i. 117.
  29. ^ Julius Caesar Commentarii de Bello Civili iii. 21, 22.
  30. ^ Appian, B.C. v. 56, 58.
  31. ^ Strabo vi. p. 263; Plin. iii. 11. s. 15; Ptol. iii. 1. § 12.
  32. ^ Antonine Itinerary p. 114, where it is written Turios; Tabula Peutingeriana.
  33. ^ Procop. B. G. i. 15.
  34. ^ Stanley, Jean-Daniel; Bernasconi, Maria Pia (2009). "Sybaris-Thuri-Copia trilogy: three delta coastal sites become land-locked". Méditerranée (112): 75–86. doi:10.4000/mediterranee.3190.
  35. ^ Diod. xii. 10; Strab. l. c.
  36. ^ Henry Swinburne, Travels, vol. i. pp. 291, 292; Romanelli, vol. i. p. 236.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Thurii at Wikimedia Commons

thurii, thurium, redirects, here, city, ancient, acarnania, greece, thurium, acarnania, ʊər, greek, Θούριοι, translit, thoúrioi, called, also, some, latin, writers, thurium, compare, greek, Θούριον, ptolemy, later, roman, times, also, copia, copiae, ancient, g. Thurium redirects here For the city of ancient Acarnania Greece see Thurium Acarnania Thurii ˈ 8 ʊer i aɪ Greek 8oyrioi translit Thourioi called also by some Latin writers Thurium compare Greek 8oyrion in Ptolemy and later in Roman times also Copia and Copiae was an ancient Greek city situated on the Gulf of Taranto near or on the site of the great renowned city of Sybaris whose place it may be considered as having taken The ruins of the city can be found in the Sybaris archaeological park near Sibari in the Province of Cosenza Calabria Italy Thurii8oyrioiOverview of excavated ruins possibly from ThuriiShown within ItalyAlternative nameThurium Copia CopiaeLocationSibari Province of Cosenza Calabria ItalyRegionBruttiumCoordinates39 43 2 N 16 29 44 E 39 71722 N 16 49556 E 39 71722 16 49556TypeSettlementSite notesWebsiteArcheoCalabriaVirtual in Italian Contents 1 History 1 1 Foundation 1 2 War and conflict 1 3 Roman dependency 1 4 Abandonment 2 The site 3 Coinage 4 Famous people 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory edit nbsp main street of Thurii nbsp Excavated remains of buildings possibly from Thurii nbsp Excavated mosaic floor with swastikas possibly from Thurii Foundation edit Thurii was founded as a colony of Athens along with exiles from Sybaris in 443 BC 1 Justin writes that people say that the city of Thurii was built by Philoctetes and his monument is seen there even to his days as well as the arrows of Hercules which laid up in the temple of Apollo 2 The site of that city had remained desolate for a period of 58 years after its destruction by the Crotoniats when at length in 452 BC a number of the Sybarite exiles and their descendants made an attempt to establish themselves again on the spot under the guidance of some leaders of Thessalian origin and the new colony rose so rapidly to prosperity that it excited the jealousy of the Crotoniats who in consequence expelled the new settlers a little more than 5 years after the establishment of the colony 3 The fugitive Sybarites first appealed for support to Sparta but without success their application to the Athenians was more successful and that people determined to send out a fresh colony at the same time that they reinstated the settlers who had been lately expelled from thence A body of Athenian colonists was accordingly sent out by Pericles under the command of Lampon and Xenocritus Pericles expressed intent was for it to be a Panhellenic colony 4 and the number of Athenian citizens was small the greater part of those who took part in the colony being collected from various parts of Greece Among them were two celebrated names Herodotus the historian and the orator Lysias both of whom appear to have formed part of the original colony 5 The laws of the new colony were established by the sophist Protagoras at the request of Pericles 6 adopting the laws of Zaleucus of Locri 4 The new colonists at first established themselves on the site of the deserted Sybaris but shortly afterwards removed apparently in obedience to an oracle to a spot at a short distance from thence where there was a fountain named Thuria from whence the new city derived its name of Thurii 7 The foundation of Thurii is assigned by Diodorus to the year 446 BC but other authorities place it three years later 443 BC and this seems to be the best authenticated date 8 The protection of the Athenian name probably secured the rising colony from the assaults of the Crotoniats at least we hear nothing of any obstacles to its progress from that quarter but it was early disturbed by dissensions between the descendants of the original Sybarite settlers and the new colonists the former laying claim not only to honorary distinctions but to the exclusive possession of important political privileges These disputes at length ended in a revolution and the Sybarites were finally expelled from the city They established themselves for a short time in Sybaris on the Traeis but did not maintain their footing long being dislodged and finally dispersed by the neighboring barbarians 9 The Thurians meanwhile concluded a treaty of peace with Crotona and the new city rose rapidly to prosperity Fresh colonists poured in from all quarters especially the Peloponnese and though it continued to be generally regarded as an Athenian colony the Athenians in fact formed but a small element of the population The citizens were divided as we learn from Diodorus into ten tribes the names of which sufficiently indicate their origin They were the Arcadian from Arcadia Achaean from Achaea Elean from Elea Boeotian from Boeotia Amphictyonic from Amphictyonis Dorian from Doris Ionian from Ionia Athenian from Athens Euboean from Euboea and Nesiotic from the islands 10 The form of government was democratic and the city is said to have enjoyed the advantage of a well ordered system of laws but the statement of Diodorus who represents this as owing to the legislation of Charondas and that lawgiver himself as a citizen of Thurii is certainly erroneous The city itself was laid out with great regularity being divided by four broad streets or plateae each of which was crossed in like manner by three others 11 War and conflict edit Very shortly after its foundation Thurii became involved in a war with Tarentum modern Taranto The subject of this was the possession of the fertile district of the Siritis about 50 km north of Thurii to which the Athenians had a claim of long standing which was naturally taken up by their colonists The Spartan general Cleandridas who had been banished from Greece some years before and taken up his abode at Thurii became the general of the Thurians in this war which after various successes was at length terminated by a compromise both parties agreeing to the foundation of the new colony of Heracleia in the disputed territory 12 Knowledge of the history of Thurii is very scanty and fragmentary Fresh disputes arising between the Athenian citizens and the other colonists were at length allayed by the oracle of Delphi which decided that the city had no other founder than Apollo 13 But the same difference appears again on occasion of the great Athenian expedition to Sicily when the city was divided into two parties the one desirous of favoring and supporting the Athenians the other opposed to them The latter faction at first prevailed so far that the Thurians observed the same neutrality towards the Athenian fleet under Nicias and Alcibiades as the other cities of Italy 14 Thurii was in fact the city where Alcibiades escaped his Athenian captors who were taking him home for trial But two years afterwards 413 BC the Athenian party had regained the ascendency and when Demosthenes and Eurymedon touched at Thurii the citizens afforded them every assistance and even furnished an auxiliary force of 700 hoplites and 300 dartmen 15 From this time we hear nothing of Thurii for a period of more than 20 years though there is reason to believe that this was just the time of its greatest prosperity In 390 BC we find that its territory was already beginning to suffer from the incursions of the Lucanians a new and formidable enemy for protection against whom all the cities of Magna Graecia had entered into a defensive league But the Thurians were too impatient to wait for the support of their allies and issued forth with an army of 14 000 foot and 1000 horse with which they repulsed the attacks of the Lucanians but having rashly followed them into their own territory they were totally defeated near Laus and above 10 000 of them cut to pieces 16 This defeat must have inflicted a severe blow on the prosperity of Thurii while the continually increasing power of the Lucanians and Bruttians in their immediate neighbourhood would prevent them from quickly recovering from its effects The city continued also to be on hostile or at least unfriendly terms with Dionysius of Syracuse and was in consequence chosen as a place of retirement or exile by his brother Leptines and his friend Philistus 17 The rise of the Bruttian people about 356 BC probably became the cause of the complete decline of Thurii but the statement of Diodorus that the city was conquered by that people 18 must be received with considerable doubt why It reappears in history at a later period when Corinthian soldiers en route to join Timoleon on his expedition to Syracuse are blockaded there by Carthaginian ships At this point it was still an independent Greek city though much fallen from its former greatness No mention of it is found during the wars of Alexander of Epirus in this part of Italy Later it was so hard pressed by the Lucanians that it had recourse to alliance with Rome and a Roman army was sent to its relief under Gaius Fabricius Luscinus in 282 BC He defeated the Lucanians and Bruttians who had laid siege to the city in a pitched battle and several other successes broke their power and thus relieved the Thurians from all immediate danger from that quarter 19 But shortly after they were attacked on the other side by the Tarentines who are said to have taken and plundered their city 20 and this aggression was one of the immediate causes of the war declared by the Romans against Tarentum in 282 BC Roman dependency edit Thurii became a dependent ally of Rome and was protected by a Roman garrison citation needed It played a considerable part in the Second Punic War with Hannibal It was one of the cities which defected to the Carthaginians after the battle of Cannae in 212 BC 21 After the defection of Tarentum they betrayed the Roman troops into the hands of the Carthaginian general Hanno 22 A few years later 210 BC Hannibal finding himself unable to protect his allies in Campania removed the inhabitants of Atella who had survived the fall of their city to Thurii 23 but it was not long before he was compelled to abandon the latter city also to its fate When he himself in 204 BC withdrew his forces into Bruttium he removed to Crotona 3500 of the principal citizens of Thurii while he gave up the city itself to the plunder of his troops 24 It is evident that Thurii was now sunk to the lowest state of decay but the great fertility of its territory rendered it desirable to preserve it from utter desolation Hence in 194 BC it was one of the places selected for the establishment of a Roman colony with Latin rights 25 The number of colonists was small in proportion to the extent of land to be divided among them but they amounted to 3000 foot and 300 knights 26 Livy says merely that the colony was sent in Thurinum agrum but Strabo tells us that the Romans gave the new colony the name of Copiae as confirmed both by Stephanus of Byzantium and by the evidence of coins on which however the name is written COPIA 27 But this new name did not continue long in use and Thurii still continued to be known by its ancient appellation It is mentioned as a municipal town on several occasions during the latter ages of the Roman Republic In 72 BC it was taken by Spartacus and subjected to heavy contributions but not otherwise injured 28 According to Suetonius the Octavian family held some renown there and Gaius Octavius father of the future Caesar Augustus defeated a Spartacist army near there As a result the future emperor was granted the surname Thurinus shortly after birth At the outbreak of the Civil Wars it was deemed by Julius Caesar of sufficient importance to be secured with a garrison of Gaulish and Spanish horse and it was there that M Caelius Rufus was put to death after a vain attempt to excite an insurrection in this part of Italy 29 In 40 BC also it was attacked by Sextus Pompeius who laid waste its territory but he was repulsed from the walls of the city 30 Thurii was at this time still a place of some importance and it is mentioned as an existing town by Pliny and Ptolemy as well as Strabo 31 It was probably indeed the only place of any consideration remaining on the coast of the Tarentine gulf between Crotona and Tarentum both Metapontum and Heracleia having already fallen into almost complete decay Its name is still found in the Itineraries 32 and it is noticed by Procopius as still existing in the 6th century 33 Abandonment edit Over time the sediment accretion of the Crathis river caused its river delta to shift towards the sea at a long term rate of one metre a year As a consequence the successive sites of Sybaris Thurii and Copia became landlocked and lost their importance because they no longer had easy access to the sea for trade 34 It seems to have been abandoned during the Middle Ages when the inhabitants took refuge at a place called Terranova Terranova da Sibari about 15 km inland on a hill on the left bank of the Crathis citation needed The exact location of Greek Thurii is not known but that of the Roman town which probably occupied the same site is fixed by several ruins as being about 6 km to the east of Terranova da Sibari and as occupying an area some 6 km in circuit It is clear from the statements of Diodorus and Strabo that Thurii occupied a site near to but distinct from that of Sybaris 35 It is more likely that the true site is north of the Coscile the ancient Sybaris a few km from the sea where ruins still exist Roman ruins on the peninsula formed by the rivers Crathis and Sybaris may also perhaps be those of Thurii 36 The site edit nbsp Domus of Thurii in final phase 3rd c AD One house stands out by size and decoration the large domus located behind the Theatre undoubtedly one of the most sumptuous private buildings in the Roman city It was built in the late Republican era 1st century BC and survived until the 5th century AD through a series of expansions and transformations that gradually modified the layout The monumentality and the splendour of the house reached their peak between the 1st and 3rd centuries AD while from the 4th are tangible signs of a decline Coinage edit nbsp O helmeted head of Athena left wearing Attic helmet decorated with Skylla holding a rudder neck guard decorated with a palmette TIMO R bull butting right above Nike flying right crowning bull 8OYRIWNAR Stater 7 98 g 6h Lucania Thourioi 350 300 BCThurii had an active mint in antiquity The coins of Thurii are of great beauty their number and variety indeed gives us a higher idea of the opulence and prosperity of the city than we should gather from the statements of ancient writers Famous people editAlexis ancient comic poet Herodotus who migrated to Thurii from Athens after 443 BC Lysias who migrated to Thurii from Athens c 430 BC See also editList of ancient Greek citiesReferences edit The Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites THURII Justin History of the World 20 1 Diod xi 90 xii 10 a b Pomeroy Sarah Burstein Stanley Donlan Walter Roberts Jennifer 2008 Ancient Greece A Political Social and Cultural History second ed New York Oxford Oxford University Press p 275 ISBN 978 0 19 530800 6 Diod xii 10 Strabo vi p 263 Dionys Lys p 453 Vit X Orat p 835 Plutarch Peric 11 Nic 5 Barrett Harold The Sophists Novato California Chandler amp Sharp Publishers INC 1987 10 Diod l c Strabo l c H F Clinton Fasti Hellenici Vol ii p 54 Diod xii 11 22 Arist Pol v 3 Diod xii 11 Diod xii 10 Diod xii 23 36 xiii 106 Strabo vi p 264 Polyaen Strat ii 10 Diod xii 35 Thucydides vi 44 Id vii 33 35 Diodorus xiv 101 Diod xv 7 xvi 15 Livy Epit xi Pliny xxxiv 6 s 15 Valerius Maximus 1 8 6 Appian Samn 7 1 Liv xxii 61 xxv 1 Id xxv 15 Appian Hann 34 Appian Hann 49 Appian l c 57 Liv xxxiv 53 Strabo vi p 263 Liv xxxv 9 Strabo l c Steph Byz s v 8oyrioi Eckhel vol i p 164 Appian B C i 117 Julius Caesar Commentarii de Bello Civili iii 21 22 Appian B C v 56 58 Strabo vi p 263 Plin iii 11 s 15 Ptol iii 1 12 Antonine Itinerary p 114 where it is written Turios Tabula Peutingeriana Procop B G i 15 Stanley Jean Daniel Bernasconi Maria Pia 2009 Sybaris Thuri Copia trilogy three delta coastal sites become land locked Mediterranee 112 75 86 doi 10 4000 mediterranee 3190 Diod xii 10 Strab l c Henry Swinburne Travels vol i pp 291 292 Romanelli vol i p 236 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Smith William ed 1854 1857 Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography London John Murray a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a Missing or empty title help Ashby Thomas 1911 Thurii In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 26 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 901 External links edit nbsp Media related to Thurii at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thurii amp oldid 1188901064, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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