Εμφανίζονται 6 τίτλοι με αναζήτηση: Πληροφορίες για τον τόπο για το τοπωνύμιο: "ΧΑΛΚΙΣ Αρχαία πόλη ΕΥΒΟΙΑ".
The chief city of the region, situated at the narrowest part of the Euripos, where the island lies closest to Boiotia. It was a flourishing trade center throughout antiquity, known especially for pottery and metalwork. Its citizens founded colonies in Sicily in the 8th c. B.C. and along the N Aegean coasts in the 7th. Eretria to the E was a long-standing rival for control of the rich Lelantine Plain which lay between them. Chalkis supported the Greek cities against Xerxes, but turned against Athens in 446, only to be defeated and remain a tributary until 411 B.C. It was then that the Euboians and Boiotians combined to block the Euripos with moles, leaving only a narrow channel spanned by a wooden bridge, the first of many built at various times in later history. Philip II of Macedon garrisoned the city in 338 B.C. as one of his chief control points; it remained an important center until it was partly destroyed for siding with the Achaian League against Rome in 146 B.C. Few remains of the ancient city have been uncovered, but quarrying activities N of the acropolis have revealed the walls of some Late Classical structures. Dikaiarchos (26f) described Chalkis as enclosed by a wall 70 stades in length; the trace is still clear on air photographs. Among many brackish springs, that of Arethusa alone provided sufficient healthful water for all the people. There were gymnasia, theaters, sanctuaries, including that of Apollo Delphinios, squares, and stoas; an inscription mentions the Temple of Zeus Olympios. The port on the Euripos was connected by a gate to the commercial agora, which had stoas on three sides. A mile S of the town, Leake saw the ruined arches of a Roman aqueduct.
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.
The modern Egripo or Negroponte; the principal town of Euboea, situated on the narrowest part of the Euripus, and united with the mainland by a bridge. It was a very ancient town, originally inhabited by Abantes or Curetes, and colonized by Attic Ionians. Its flourishing condition at an early period is attested by the numerous colonies which it planted in various parts of the Mediterranean. It founded so many cities in the peninsula in Macedonia, between the Strymonic and Thermaic gulfs, that the whole peninsula was called Chalcidice. In Italy it founded Cumae, and in Sicily, Naxos. Chalcis was usually subject to Athens during the greatness of the latter city. The orator Isaeus and the poet Lycophron were born at Chalcis, and Aristotle died there.
This text is cited Oct 2002 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
City on the western coast of the island of Euboea,
facing mainland Greece, north
of Athens.
Chalcis was the homeland of settlers who founded cities in several
parts of the Mediterranean during the VIIIth and VIIth centuries B. C., epecially
in Sicily and Italy
(Naxos, Cumae,
Zancle, ...).
This is the place where Aristotle died in 322, having fled Athens
some time earlier for fear of being tried as pro-Macedonian.
Bernard Suzanne (page last updated 1998), ed.
This text is cited July 2003 from the Plato and his dialogues URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks.
Chalkis: Eth. Chalkideus, Chalcidensis. (Egripo, Negropont). The chief
town of Euboea, separated from the opposite coast of Boeotia by the narrow strait
of the Euripus, which is at this spot only 40 yards across. The Euripus is here
divided into two channels by a rock in the middle of the strait. This rock is
at present occupied by a square castle; a stone bridge, 60 or 70 feet in length,
connects the Boeotian shore with this castle; and another wooden bridge, about
35 feet long, reaches from the castle to the Euboean coast. In antiquity also,
as we shall presently see, a bridge also connected Chalcis with the Boeotian coast.
The channel between the Boeotian coast and the rock is very shallow, being not
more than three feet in depth; but the channel between the rock and Chalcis is
about seven or eight feet in depth. It is in the latter channel that the extraordinary
tides take place, which are frequently mentioned by the ancient writers. According
to the common account the tide changed seven times in the day, and seven times
in the night; but Livy states that there was no regularity in the change, and
that the flux and reflux constantly varied,--a phaenomenon which he ascribes to
the sudden squalls of wind from the mountains. (Strab. x. p. 403; Mela, ii. 7;
Plin. ii. 97; Cic. de Nat. Deor. iii. 1. 0; Liv. xxviii. 6.)
An intelligent modern traveller observes that at times the water runs
as much as eight miles an hour, with a fall under the bridge of about 1 1/2 feet;
but what is most singular is the fact, that vessels lying 150 yards from the bridge
are not in the least affected by this rapid. It remains but a short time in a
quiescent state, changing its direction in a few minutes, and almost immediately
resuming its velocity, which is generally from four to five miles an hour either
way, its greatest rapidity being however always to the southward. The results
of three months' observation, in which the above phaenomena were noted, afforded
no sufficient data for reducing them to any regularity. (Penny Cyclopaedia, vol.
x. p. 59.)
Chalcis was a city of great antiquity, and continued to be an important
place from the earliest to the latest times. It is said to have been founded before
the Trojan war by an Ionic colony from Athens, under the conduct of Pandorus,
the son of Erechtheus. (Strab. x. p. 447; Scymn. Ch. 573.) It is mentioned by
Homer. (Il. ii. 537.) After the Trojan war Cothus settled in the city another
Ionic colony from Athens. (Strab. l. c.) Chalcis soon became one of the greatest
of the Ionic cities, and at an early period carried on an extensive commerce with
almost all parts of the Hellenic world. Its greatness at this early period is
attested by the numerous colonies which it planted upon the coasts of Macedonia,
Italy, Sicily, and in the islands of the Aegaean. It gave its name to the peninsula
of Chalcidice between the Thermaic and Singitic gulfs, in consequence of the large
number of cities which it founded in this district. Its first colony, and the
earliest of the Greek settlements in the west, was Cumae in Campania, which it
is said to have founded as early as B.C. 1050, in conjunction with the Aeolians
of Cume and the Eretrians. Rhegium in Italy, and Naxos, Zancle, Tauromenium and
other cities in Sicily, are also mentioned as Chalcidian colonies.
During the early period of its history, the government of Chalcis
was in the hands of an aristocracy, called Hippobotae (Hippobotai, i. e. the feeders
of horses), who corresponded to the Hippeis in other Grecian states. (Herod. v.
77, vi. 100; Strab. x. p. 447 ; Plut. Pericl. 23; Aelian, V. H. vi. 1.) These
Hippobotae were probably proprietors of the fertile plain of Lelantum, which lay
between Chalcis and Eretria. The possession of this plain was a frequent subject
of dispute between these two cities (Strab. x. p. 448), and probably occasioned
the war between them at an early period, in which some of the most powerful states
of Greece, such as Samos and Miletus, took part. (Thuc. i. 15; Herod. v. 99)
Soon after the expulsion of the Peisistratidae from Athens, the Chalcidians
joined the Boeotians in making war upon the Athenians; but the latter crossed
over into Euboea with a great force, defeated the Chalcidians in a decisive battle,
and divided the lands of the wealthy Hippobotae among 4000 Athenian citizens as
clernchs B.C. 506. (Her. v. 77.) These settlers, however, abandoned their possessions
when the Persians, under Datis and Artaphernes, landed at Eretria. (Herod. vi.
100.) After the Persian wars, Chalcis, with the rest of Euboea, became a tributary
of Athens, and continued under her rule, with the exception of a few months, till
the downfal of the Athenian empire at the close of the Peloponnesian war. In B.C.
445, Chalcis joined the other Euboeans in their revolt from Athens; but the whole
island was speedily reconquered by Pericles, who altered the government of Chalcis
by the expulsion of the Hippobotae from the city. (Plut. Per. 23.)
In the 21st year of the Peloponnesian war, B.C. 411, Euboea revolted
from Athens (Thuc. viii. 95), and on this occasion we first read of the construction
of a bridge across the Euripus. Anxious to secure an uninterrupted communication
with the Boeotians, the Chalcidians built a mole from either shore, leaving a
passage in the centre for only a single ship: and fortifying by towers each side
of the opening in the mole. (Diod. xiii. 47.) Chalcis was now independent for
a short time; but when the Athenians had recovered a portion of their former power,
it again came under their supremacy, together with the other cities in the island.
(Diod. xv. 30.) In later times it was successively occupied by the Macedonians,
Antiochus, Mithridates, and the Romans. It was a place of great military importance,
commanding, as it did, the navigation between the north and south of Greece, and
hence was often taken and retaken by the different parties contending. for the
supremacy of Greece. Chalcis, Corinth, and Demetrias in Thessaly, were called
by the last Philip of Macedon the fetters of Greece, which could not possibly
be free, as long as these fortresses were in the possession of a foreign power.
(Pol. xvii. 11; Liv. xxxii. 37.)
Dicaearchus, a contemporary of Alexander the Great, describes Chalcis
as 70 stadia (nearly 9 miles) in circumference, situated upon the slope of a hill,
and abounding in gymnasia, temples, theatres, and other public buildings. It was
well supplied with water from the fountain Arethusa. The surrounding country was
planted with olives. (Dicaearch. Bios tes Hellados, p. 146, ed. Fuhr.) When Alexander
crossed over into Asia, the Chalcidians strengthened the fortifications of their
city by inclosing within their walls a hill on the Boeotian side, called Canethus,
which thus formed a fortified bridge-head. At the same time they fortified the
bridge with towers, a wall, and gates. (Strab. x. p. 447.) Canethus, which is
also mentioned by Apollonius Rhodius (i. 77), is probably the hill of Karababa,
which rises to the height of 130 feet immediately above the modern bridge, and
is the citadel of the present town.
In the second Punic war, B.C. 207, the Romans, under Sulpicius and
Attains, made an unsuccessful attack upon Chalcis, which was then subject to Philip.
(Liv. xxviii. 6.) A few years afterwards, B.C. 192, when the war was resumed with
Philip, the Romans surprised Chalcis and slew the inhabitants, but they had not
a sufficient force with them to occupy it permanently. (Liv. xxxi. 23.) In the
war between the Romans and Aetolians, Chalcis was in alliance with the former
(Liv. xxxv. 37--39); but when Antiochus passed over into Greece, at the invitation
of the Aetolians, the Chalcidians deserted the Romans, and received this king
into their city. During his residence at Chalcis, Antiochus became enamoured of
the daughter of one of the principal citizens of the place, and made her his queen.
(Liv. xxxv. 50, 51, xxxvi. 11; Pol. xx. 3, 8; Dion Cass. Fragm. ex libr. xxxiv.
p. 29, ed. Reimar.) Chalcis joined the Achaeans in their last war against the
Romans; and their town was in consequence destroyed by Mummius. (Liv. Epit. lii.;
comp. Pol. xl. 11.)
In the time of Strabo Chalcis was still the principal town of Euboea,
and must therefore have been rebuilt after its destruction by Mummius. (Strab.
x. p. 448.) Strabo describes the bridge across the Euripus as two plethra, or
200 Greek feet in length, with a tower at either end; and a canal (surinx) constructed
through the Euripus. (Strab. x. p. 403.) Strabo appears never to have visited
the Euripus himself; and it is not improbable that his description refers to the
same bridge, or rather mole, of which an account has been preserved by Diodorus
(xiii. 47). In this case the surinx would be the narrow channel between the mole.
Chalcis was one of the towns restored by Justinian. (Procop. de Aedif. iv. 3.)
The orator Isaeus and the poet Lycophron were natives of Chalcis,
and Aristotle died here. In the middle ages Chalcis was called Euripus, whence
its modern name Egripo. It was for some time in the hands of the Venetians, who
called it Negropont, probably a corruption of Egripo and ponte, a bridge. It was
taken by the Turks in 1470. It is now the principal, and indeed the only place
of importance in the island. There are no remains of the ancient city, with the
exception of some fragments of white marble in the walls of houses.
This text is from: Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) (ed. William Smith, LLD). Cited May 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
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