Atalanta (Bottiaea)

Atalanta (Ancient Greek: Ἀταλάντη, romanized: Atalante) or Allante (Ἀλλάντη) or Allantium was an ancient city of Bottiaea, ancient Macedon, between Gortynia and Europos, in the upper part of the valley of the Axius river, which may have been built by the Bottiaeans before their expulsion by Macedonians to Bottike. Axioupoli of today's Kilkis regional unit claims to be the ancient location. N. G. L. Hammond places it between Athyra, Pella regional unit and Koufalia, Thessaloniki regional unit[1]

Thucydides mentions Atalante, south of Gortynia.[2] Stephanus of Byzantium, Allante (Ἀλλάντη), a city of Arcadia and Macedonia.[3] Allantenses are reported among the list of peoples by Plinius (HN 4.53). In the lists of Delphian theorodokoi (230-220 BC),[4] after Ichnae and before Thessalonica, the inscription reads: ἐν Ἀλλ[α]ντείωι Ἀνδρόνικος Δίκαιος Χιωνίδου, In Allanteion, Andronikos and Dikaios sons of Chionides. In a Roman-era inscription[5] found east of Pella, ἡ πόλις Ἀλλανταίων ("the city of Allanteans"), honours deified Roman emperors.

[Ἀταλα]νταῖοι, Atalantaioi, are also mentioned near to Edessaioi and Europaioi in a dedicatory inscription from Argos.[6]

Notes

  1. A History of Macedonia: Historical geography and prehistory By Nicholas Geoffrey Lemprière Hammond, Guy Thompson Griffith Page 171 ISBN 0-19-814294-3 (1972)
  2. Thucydides. History of the Peloponnesian War. 2.100.3.
  3. Stephanus of Byzantium. Ethnica. s.v. Ἀλλάντη.
  4. BCH 1921:1 col III.1 64
  5. SEG 35:753 col I.12
  6. IG IV 617 line 18

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Smith, William, ed. (1854–1857). "Atalanta". Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography. London: John Murray.

gollark: I do not think this is permitted by the privacy policy.
gollark: The only people who actually use IRC are random open source software people, so they're very biased to that.
gollark: I have some public IRC logs for training better chatbots stored somewhere, but they're not very big.
gollark: * thing
gollark: And the usual LM things of lack of long term memory.

References

  • The Classical Gazetteer


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.