Listed 3 sub titles with search on: Information about the place for wider area of: "KIREAS Municipality CHALKIDA" .
KIRINTHOS (Village) CHALKIDA
Cerinthus (Kerinthos: Eth. Kerinthios), a town upon the north-eastern
coast of Euboea, and near the small river Budorus, said to have been founded by
the Athenian Cothus. It is mentioned by Homer, and was still extant in the time
of Strabo, who speaks of it as a small place. (Hom. Il. ii. 538 ; Scymn.
Ch. 576; Strab. x. p. 446; Apoll. Rhod. i. 79; Ptol. iii. 1,5. § 25; Plin. iv.
12. s. 21.)
KIRYNTHOS (Ancient city) CHALKIDA
Kerinthos: Eth. Kerinthios. A town upon the north-eastern coast of Euboea, and
near the small river Budorus, said to have been founded by the Athenian Cothus.
It is mentioned by Homer, and was still extant in the time of Strabo, who speaks
of it as a small place.
Listed in Homer's catalogue of ships, the city was known to Ptolemy and Strabo, though it was no longer of any importance, having early lost its independence to Histiaia. The site has been identified with a hill N of modern Mantudi, near the Bay of Peleki, at the mouth of the Boudoros river. The acropolis drops abruptly to the sea in a 30 m cliff. The fortification wall on the N side is of irregular polygonal blocks roughly dressed, and probably belongs to the 6th c. city, the destruction of which Theognis attributed to the Kypselids. The wall on the S side is double-faced, of trapezoidal blocks in courses, with a square tower of regular isodomic masonry: these sections are probably Hellenistic. Pernier reported the remains of a large rectangular building on the highest ground, with other buildings of rough limestone blocks, along streets laid out according to the cardinal points of the compass. No finds have been reported from the Roman period.
M. H. Mc Allister, ed.
This text is from: The Princeton encyclopedia of classical sites,
Princeton University Press 1976. Cited Nov 2002 from
Perseus Project URL below, which contains bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.
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