Phylace (Pieria)
Phylace or Phylake (Ancient Greek: Φυλακή or Φμλάκη, Phylakē), or Phylaces or Phylakes (Φυλακές, Phylakēs), or Phylacae or Phylakai (Φυλακαὶ, Phylakaí), was a city in mountainous ancient Pieria, Macedon,[1] on the Haliacmon river, north of Balla. Parmenion, son of Glaucias, Phylacean (Greek: Παρμενίων Γλαυκίου Φυλακαῖος) was a dolichos runner and winner in the Alexandrian games at Beroea in 3rd or 2nd century BCE (dedicated to Alexander the Great).[2] Pliny mentions the inhabitants under the name Phylacaei.[3]
Its site is unlocated.[4]
Notes
- Ptolemy. The Geography. 3.13.40.
- Epigraphical Database- EKM 1. Beroia 140.5
- Pliny. Naturalis Historia. 4.10.17.
- Richard Talbert, ed. (2000). Barrington Atlas of the Greek and Roman World. Princeton University Press. p. 50, and directory notes accompanying.
gollark: It's not hard to ensure you get a breeding pair without that.
gollark: Why pinks?
gollark: What do you need for holidays? Incubates?
gollark: Extrapolating from 1 month or so for 50 dragons, and November being, what, 4 months away, I ought to be able to reach silver in time by doing the same stuff.
gollark: The codes are just long enough for `7ate9`, actually.
References
- Hazlitt, The Classical Gazetteer > page 274
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