Δεν αναφέρει χώρα αλλά τους Φωκείς. Συμμετείχε με 40 πλοία (Ιλ. Β 524), ηγεμόνες ήσαν ο Σχεδίος και ο Επίστροφος (Ιλ. Β 517). Πόλεις: 1. Κυπάρισσος (Αντίκυρα), 2. Πυθών (Δελφοί), 3. Κρίσα, 4. Δαυλίς, 5. Πανοπεύς, 6. Ανεμώρεια, 7. Υάμπολις, 8. Λιλαία.
Ο Σχεδίος, γιος του Περιμήδους, ήταν άλλος αρχηγός των Φωκέων, ο οποίος φονεύθηκε από τον Εκτορα (Ο 515).
Father of Menoetius and grandfather of Patroclus (Il. 11.785).
Actor (Aktor). A son of Deion and Diomede, the daughter of Xuthus. He was thus a brother of Asteropeia, Acnetus, Phylacus, and Cephalus, and husband of Aegina, father of Menoetius, and grandfather of Patroclus. (Apollod. i. 9.4, 16, iii. 10.8; Pind. Ol. ix. 75; Hom. Il. xi. 785, xvi. 14)
Πατέρας του Σχεδίου (Ιλ. Ο 515).
Perimedes: Perseus Encyclopedia
Οι μεγαλύτερες πόλεις της Φωκίδας ήταν οι Δελφοί και η Ελάτεια.
Γιος του του Αιακού και της Ψαμάθης.
Από τον Φώκο, που ήταν γιος του Ορνυτίωνα ή του Ποσειδώνα (Παυσ. 2,4,3), πήρε το όνομά της η χώρα (Παυσ. 10,10,1). Σύζυγός του ήταν η Αντιόπη (Παυσ. 9,17,6, 10,32,11).
Phocus, Phokos: Perseus Project index
(2) Daughter of Phoroneus, king of Phocis, metamorphosed by Athene into a crow when pursued by Poseidon.
Ηταν γιος του Κασταλίου. Σύμφωνα με κάποια παράδοση είχε αφιερώσει το άγαλμα της Αρτέμιδος στην Καλυδώνα κι έτσι η Αρτεμις εκεί πήρε το προσωνύμιο Λαφρία (Παυσ. 7,18,9).
Γιος του Δελφού, πατέρας του Λαφρίου (Παυσ. 7,18,9).
Castalius: Perseus Project index
Ωραιότατος νέος που τον αγάπησε η Ημέρα και τον απήγαγε. Στη Βασίλειο Στοά του Κεραμεικού στην Αθήνα υπήρχε άγαλμα που παρίστανε τη στιγμή της απαγωγής (Παυσ. 1,3,1). (Βλ. Κεφαλληνία/Μυθολογία-Επώνυμοι Ιδρυτές/Οικιστές)
Cephalus, Kephalos: Perseus Project index
Ο Δηίων ήταν πατέρας του Κέφαλου, επώνυμου της Κεφαλληνίας (Παυσ. 1,37,6).
Deion. A son of Aeolus and Enarete, was king in Phocis and husband of Diomede, by whom he became the father of Asteropeia, Aenetus, Actor, Phylacus, and Cephalus. (Apollod. i. 7.3, 9.4.) After the death of his brother, Salmoneus, he took his daughter Tyro into his house, and gave her in marriage to Cretheus. His name occurs also in the form Deioneus. (Eustath. ad Hom.)
Evander, (Euandros), a Phocian, was the pupil and successor of Lacydes as the
head of the Academic School at Athens, about B. C. 215. Evander himself was succeeded
by his pupil Hegesinus. Concerning the opinions and writings of this philosopher
nothing is known. (Diog. Laert. iv. 60; Cic. Acad. ii. 6.)
Βρέθηκαν σε πόλεμο με τους Φλεγύες και τους Θεσσαλούς. Επίσης, πήραν μέρος στον Τρωικό Πόλεμο.
Phocians, Phocaeans, Phokaians, Phokians: Perseus Project index
A country in northern Greece, bounded on the north by the Locri
Epicnemidii and Opuntii, on the east by Boeotia, on the west by the Locri Ozolae
and Doris, and on the south by the Corinthian Gulf. At one time it possessed a
narrow strip of country on the Euboean Sea, with the seaport Daphnus, between
the territory of the Locri Epicnemidii and Locri Opuntii. It was a mountainous
and unproductive country, and owes its chief importance in history to the fact
of its possessing the Delphic oracle. Its chief mountain was Parnassus, situated
in the interior of the country, to which, however, Cnemis, on its northern frontier,
Cirphis, south of Delphi, and Helicon, on the southeastern frontier, all belonged.
The principal river in Phocis was the Cephisus, the valley of which contained
almost the only fertile land in the country, with the exception of the celebrated
Crissaean Plain in the southwest, on the borders of the Locri Ozolae. Among the
earliest inhabitants of Phocis we find mentioned Leleges, Thracians, Abantes,
and Hyantes. Subsequently, but still in the ante-historical period, the Phlegyae,
an Achaean race, a branch of the Minyae at Orchomenos, took possession of the
country; and from this time the main bulk of the population continued to be Achaean,
although there were Dorian settlements at Delphi and Bulis. The Phocians are said
to have derived their name from an eponymous ancestor Phocus, and they are mentioned
under this name in the Iliad.
The Phocians played no conspicuous part in Greek history till
the time of Philip of Macedon; but at this period they became involved in a war,
called the Phocian or Sacred War, in which the principal states of Greece took
part. The Thebans had long been inveterate enemies of the Phocians; and as the
latter people had cultivated a portion of the Crissaean Plain, which the Amphictyons
had declared in B.C. 585 should lie waste forever, the Thebans availed themselves
of this pretext to persuade the Amphictyons to impose a fine upon the Phocians,
and upon their refusal to pay it, the Thebans further induced the council to declare
the Phocian land forfeited to the god of Delphi. Thus threatened by the Amphictyonic
Council, backed by the whole power of Thebes, the Phocians were persuaded by Philomelus,
one of their citizens, to seize Delphi, and to make use of the treasures of the
temple for the purpose of carrying on the war. They obtained possession of the
temple in B.C. 357. The war which ensued lasted ten years, and was carried on
with various success on each side. The Phocians were commanded first by Philomelus,
B.C. 357-353, afterward by his brother Onomarchus, 353-352, then by Phayllus,
the brother of the two preceding, 352-351, and finally by Phalaecus, the son of
Onomarchus, 351-346. The Phocians received some support from Athens, but their
chief dependence was upon their mercenary troops, which the treasures of the Delphic
temple enabled them to hire. The Amphictyons and the Thebans, finding at length
that they were unable with their own resources to subdue the Phocians, called
in the assistance of Philip of Macedon, who brought the war to a close in 346.
The conquerors inflicted the most signal punishment upon the Phocians, who were
regarded as guilty of sacrilege. All their towns were razed to the ground with
the exception of Abae, and the inhabitants distributed in villages containing
no more than fifty inhabitants. The two votes which they had in the Amphictyonic
Council were taken away and given to Philip.
This text is cited Sep 2002 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
Region of central Greece
north of the Gulf of Corinth,
around Mount Parnassus.
Phocis was the district in which the most famous sanctuary of Delphi
was located, a source of wealth which led the Phocidians to several wars with
nearby Thessalia. Phocis
owed its name to the mythological hero Phocus, son of Ornytus, himself a son of
Sisyphus, king of Corinth.
Ornytus earned himself a kingdom in a war with the Locrians but left it to his
son Phocus before returning to Corinth
with his second son Thoas. Phocus later healed and married Antiope, the mother
by Zeus of Amphion and Zethus, the Theban heroes, after she had been struk with
madness by Dionysus in punishment for the murder of Dirce and was wandering all
through Greece.
There exists another version of Phocus' story, in which he was said
to be the son of Aeacus, king of Salamis,
and of the Nereid Psamathe who, to try and escape Aeacus' attentions, had, to
no avail, taken the form of a seal (whose name in Greek is phocos, the Greek form
of the name Phocus, which explains the name of his son). Thus, Phocus was the
half-brother of Telamon and Peleus (king of Phthia
and father of Achilles). After growing up in Salamis
at the court of his father, Phocus left the island and conquered the region of
central Greece which took
his name. He married Asteria, a daughter of Diomede, herself a sister of Ion and
Achaeus and a daughter of Xouthus, a son of Deucalion. They had twins, Crisus
and Panopeus, who gave their names to two cities of Phocis, Crisa
and Panopeus. Later, Phocus
tried to return to Salamis,
but there, he was killed by his half-brothers Telamon and Peleus. To avenge him,
his mother Psamathe sent a monstruous wolf in the region of Thessalia
where Peleus had seeked refuge, which started destroying Peleus' herds, until
his wife Thetis, another Nereid, and thus one of Psamethe's sisters, convinced
her to turn the monster into stone.
Panopeus had a son named Epeius but, because he had perjured himself
when taking part with Amphitryon in his expedition against Taphians, pledging
that he wouldn't steal anything from the spoils but failing to hold to his word,
he was punished through his son, who turned out a bad warrior. Epeius took part
in the Trojan War. He had also scupted there a wondrous statue of Hermes, which,
taken away by a flood of the Scamandrus, had found its way to the Thracian city
of Ainos. Though the statue
was made of wood, the fishermen who dragged it in their nets and hoped to use
it as heating fuel couldn't cut it with an ax and it wouldn't burn when put in
a fire. And when they threw it back to the sea, it came back in their nets, so
that they finally understood that it was the statue of a god and built a temple
to host it.
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.
Phocis (he Phokis: Eth. Phokeus, Phocensis), a small country in central
Greece, bounded on the N. by Doris, on the NE. and E. by the Locri Epicnemidii
and Opuntii, on the SE. by Boeotia, on the W. by the Ozolian Locrians, and on
the S. by the Corinthian gulf. The Phocians at one period of their history possessed
a sea-port, Daphnus, on the Euboean sea, intervening between the Locri Epicnemidii
and Opuntii (Strab. x. pp. 424, 425.) Phocis is a mountainous country. The greater
part of it is occupied by the lofty and rugged range of Parnassus, the lower portion
of which, named Cirphis, descends to the Corinthian gulf between Cirrha and Anticyra:
below Cirphis was the fertile valley of Crissa, extending to the Corinthian gulf.
On the NE. and E. were the Locrian mountains, lofty and difficult of access on
the side of the Epicnemidii, but less precipitous on the side of the Opuntii.
Between Mount Parnassus and the Locrian mountains flowed the river Cephissus,
which empties itself into the lake Copais in Boeotia. In the valley of the Cephissus
are some narrow but fertile plains. The only other rivers in Phocis, besides the
Cephissus and its tributaries, are the Pleistus, flowing by Delphi, and the He.
racleius, flowing into the Corinthian gulf near Bulis.
Phocis is said to have been originally inhabited by several of those
tribes who formed the population of Greece before the appearance of the Hellenes.
Among the earliest inhabitants we find mention of Leleges (Dicaearch. p. 5), Thracians
(Strab. ix. p. 401; Thuc. ii. 29; comp. Paus. i. 41. § 8), and Hyantes. (Strab.
l. c.) The aboriginal inhabitants were conquered by the Phlegyae from Orchomenus.
(Paus. viii. 4. § 4, x. 4. § 1.) The country around Tithorea and Delphi is said
to have been first called Phocis from Phocus, a son of Ornytion, and grandson
of Sisyphus of Corinth; and the name is said to have been afterwards extended
to the whole country from Phocus, a son of Aeacus, who arrived there not long
afterwards. (Paus. ii. 29. § 3, x. 1. § 1.) This statement would seem to show
that the Phocians were believed to be a mixed Aeolic and Achaean race, as Sisyphus
was one of the Aeolic heroes, and Aeacus one of the Achaean. In the Trojan War
the inhabitants appear under the name of Phocians, and were led against Troy by
Schedius and Epistrophus, the sons of Iphitus. (Hom. Il. ii. 517.)
Phocis owes its chief importance in history to the celebrated oracle
at Delphi, which originally belonged to the Phocians. But after the Dorians had
obtained possession of the temple, they disowned their connection with the Phocians
; and in historical times a violent antipathy existed between the Phocians and
Delphians.
The Phocians proper dwelt chiefly in small towns situated upon either
side of the Cephissus. They formed an ancient confederation, which assembled in
a building named Phocicum, near Daulis. (Paus. x. 5. § 1.) They maintained their
independence against the Thessalians, who made several attempts to subdue them
before the Persian War, and upon one occasion they inflicted a severe loss upon
the Thessalians near Hyampolis. (Herod. viii. 27, seq.; Paus. x. 1.) When Xerxes
invaded Greece, the Thessalians were able to wreak their vengeance upon their
ancient enemies. They conducted the Persian army into Phocis, and twelve of the
Phocian cities were destroyed by the invaders. The inhabitants had previously
escaped to the summits of Parnassus or across the mountains into the territory
of the Locri Ozolae. (Herod. viii. 32, seq.) Some of the Phocians were subsequently
compelled to serve in the army of Mardonius, but those who had taken refuge on
Mt. Parnassus sallied from their fastnesses and annoyed the Persian army. (Herod.
ix. 17, 31; Paus. x. 1. § 11.)
It has been already remarked that the oracle at Delphi originally belonged
to the Phocians. The latter, though dispossessed by the Delphians, had never relinquished
their claims to it. In B.C. 450 the oracle was again in their possession; the
Lacedaemonians sent an army to deprive them of it and restore it to the Delphians;
but upon the retreat of their forces, the Athenians marched into Phocis, and handed
over the temple to the Phocians. (Thuc. i. 112.) In the Peloponnesian War the
Phocians were zealous allies of the Athenians. (Comp. Thuc. iii. 95.) In the treaty
of Nicias (B.C. 421), however, it was expressly stipulated that the Delphians
should be independent of the Phocians (Thuc. v. 18); and from this time the temple
continued in the undisputed possession of the Delphians till the Sacred War. After
the battle of Leuctra (B.C. 371), the Phocians became subject to the Thebans.
(Xen. Hell. vi. 5 § 23.) After the death of Epaminondas they deserted the Theban
alliance; and the Thebans, in revenge, induced the Amphictyonic Council to sentence
the Phocians to pay a heavy fine on the pretext of their having cultivated the
Cirrhaean plain, B.C. 357. Upon their refusal to pay this fine, the Amphictyonic
Council consecrated the Phocian territory to Apollo, as Cirrha had been treated
two centuries before. Thereupon the Phocians prepared for resistance, and were
persuaded by Philomelus, one of their chief citizens, to seize the temple at Delphi,
and appropriate its treasures to their own defence. Hence arose the celebrated
Sacred or Phocian War, which is narrated in all histories of Greece. When the
war was at length brought to a conclusion by the aid of Philip, the Amphictyonic
Council wreaked its vengeance upon the wretched Phocians. It was decreed that
all the towns of Phocis, twenty-two in number, with the exception of Abae, should
be destroyed, and the inhabitants scattered into villages, containing not more
than fifty houses each ; and that they should replace by yearly instalments of
fifty talents the treasures they had taken from the temple. The two votes, which
they had had in the Amphictyonic Council, were taken away from them and given
to Philip. (Diod. xvi. 60; Paus. x. 3; Dem. de Fals. Leg. p. 385.) The Phocians
subsequently rebuilt several of their cities with the assistance of the Athenians
and their old enemies the Thebans, who had joined the Athenians in their opposition
to Philip. The Phocians fought on the side of Grecian independence at the battle
of Chaeroneia and in the Lamiac war; and at a later period they resisted the Gauls,
when they attempted to plunder the temple at Delphi. (Paus. x. 3. § 3.)
The chief town in Phocis, excepting Delphi was Elateia situated upon
the left bank of the Cephissus, on the highroad from Locris to Boeotia, in the
natural march of an army from Thermopylae into central Greece. Next in importance
was Abae, also to the left of the Cephissus, upon the Boeotian frontier, celebrated
for its ancient oracle of Apollo. The other towns of Phocis may be enumerated
in the following order. Left of the Cephissus from N. to S. Drymaea, Erochus,
Tithronium, Tritaea, Hyampolis. Right of the Cephissus, and between this river
and Mount Parnassus, Lilaea, Charadra, Amphicaea, Ledon, Neon, which was supplanted
by Tithorea, Parapotamii. Between Parnassus and the Boeotian frontier, Daulis,
Panopeus, Trachis. On Mount Parnassus, Lycoreia, Delphi, Crissa, Anemoreia, Cyparissus.
West of Parnassus, and in the neighbourhood of the Corinthian gulf from N. to
S., Cirrha the port-town of Crissa and Delphi, Cirrhis, Medeon, Echedameia, Anticyra,
Ambrysus, Marathus, Stiris, Phlygonium, Bulis with its port Mychus (Dodwell, Classical
Tour, vol. i. p. 155, seq.; Leake, Northern Greece, vol. ii. p. 69, seq.)
This text is from: Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) (ed. William Smith, LLD). Cited October 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
Perseus Coin Catalog
Πληροφορίες Σύνταξης:
Το(α) ηλεκτρονικό(ά) κείμενο(α) των "Φωκικών" της "Ελλάδος Περιήγησης" του Παυσανία παρατίθε(ν)ται στην Ελλάδα (αρχαία χώρα) στην κατηγορία Αρχαία Ελληνική Γραμματεία.
The Thessalians and their allies had invaded Phocis with their whole army but had been worsted and roughly handled by the Phocians. When the Phocians were besieged on Parnassus, they had with them the diviner Tellias of Elis; Tellias devised a stratagem for them: he covered six hundred of the bravest Phocians with gypsum, themselves and their armor, and led them to attack the Thessalians by night, bidding them slay whomever they should see not whitened. The Thessalian sentinels were the first to see these men and to flee for fear, supposing falsely that it was something supernatural, and after the sentinels the whole army fled as well. The Phocians made themselves masters of four thousand dead, and their shields, of which they dedicated half at Abae and the rest at Delphi. A tithe of what they won in that fight went to the making of the great statues that stand around the tripod in front of the shrine at Delphi, and there are others like them dedicated at Abae.
This extract is from: Herodotus, The Histories, ed. A. D. Godley, Cambridge. Harvard University Press
Cited Sept. 2002 from Perseus Project URL below, which contains comments & interesting hyperlinks.
Cachales (Kalales), a river of Phocis, rising in Mt. Parnassus, and
flowing by Tithorea into the Cephissus. (Paus. x. 32. § 11; Leake, Northern Greece,
vol. ii. pp. 78, 81.)
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