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Listed 10 sub titles with search on: Information about the place  for wider area of: "MARATHONAS Town ATTICA, EAST" .


Information about the place (10)

General

Fygous

FYGOUS (Ancient demos) MARATHONAS
The ancient deme was located near Marathon. It belonged to Erecthiis tribe.

Greek & Roman Geography (ed. William Smith)

Phegaea

Phegaea (Phegaia), the name of two demi of uncertain site. (Steph.; Harpocr.; Suid.; Etym. M.; Phot.; Hesych.) It is probable, however, that Stephanus speaks of one of these demi, under the name of PHEGEUS, when he describes Halae Araphenides as lying between Phegeus near Marathon and Brauron. (Steph. s. v. Halai.)

INOI (Ancient city) MARATHONAS
Marathon, Probalinthus (Probalinthos), Tricorythus (Trikoruthos), and Oenoe (Oinoe), four demi situated in the small plain open to the sea between Mt. Parnes and Mt. Pentelicus, originally formed the Tetrapolis, one of the twelve ancient divisions of Attica. The whole district was generally known under the name of Marathon

Marathon

MARATHON (Ancient demos) ATTICA, EAST

TRIKORYTHOS (Ancient demos) MARATHONAS
Marathon, Probalinthus (Probalinthos), Tricorythus (Trikoruthos), and Oenoe (Oinoe), four demi situated in the small plain open to the sea between Mt. Parnes and Mt. Pentelicus, originally formed the Tetrapolis, one of the twelve ancient divisions of Attica. The whole district was generally known under the name of Marathon

Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities

Oenoe

INOI (Ancient city) MARATHONAS
A deme of Attica, near Marathon, belonging to the tribe Aeantis.

Marathon

MARATHON (Ancient demos) ATTICA, EAST
Marathon. A deme of Attica, belonging to the tribe Leontis, was situated near a bay on the east coast of Attica, twenty-two miles from Athens by one road, and twenty-six miles by another. It originally belonged to the Attic tetrapolis, and is said to have derived its name from the hero Marathon. This hero, according to one account, was the son of Epopeus, king of Sicyon, who having been expelled from Peloponnesus by the violence of his father, settled in Attica; while, according to another account, he was an Arcadian who took part in the expedition of the Tyndaridae against Attica, and devoted himself to death before the battle.
    The site of the ancient town of Marathon was probably not at the modern village of Marathon, but at a place called Vrana, a little to the south of Marathon. Marathon was situated in a plain, which extends along the sea-shore, about six miles in length, and from three miles to one mile and a half in breadth. It is surrounded on the other three sides by rocky hills and rugged mountains. Two marshes bound the extremity of the plain; the northern is more than a square mile in extent, but the southern is much smaller, and is almost dry at the conclusion of the great heats. Through the centre of the plain runs a small brook. In this plain was fought the celebrated battle between the Persians and Athenians, August 12th, B.C. 490. The Persians, numbering some 100,000 men, were drawn up on the plain, and the Athenians, 10,000 strong, under Miltiades, on some portion of the high ground above the plain; but the exact ground occupied by the two armies cannot be identified, notwithstanding the investigations of modern travellers. The Athenians lost 192 men, the Persians 6400. The tumulus or mound, raised over the Athenians who fell in the battle, is still to be seen. It is an isolated knoll in the plain, about 40 feet in height and 600 feet in circumference. Excavations made by Schliemann and others yielded nothing until 1890, when, under the direction of the Greek Archaeological Society, a number of vases of the fifth century B.C. and burned bones were found, undoubtedly those of the Athenians slain in the battle. The mound is now called the Soros.

This text is cited Oct 2002 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


Perseus Project

Marathon, Marathonian, Marathonians

Marathon & Tetrapolis

This part of Attica, the four cities being Oenoe, Marathon, Probalinthos, Tricorythos

The Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites

Marathon

  A coastal plain inhabited from very earliest times down to the end of antiquity. Home of the Marathonian Tetrapolis (Philochorus FGH 328 F 94, 109), it is best known as the site of the famous battle of 490 B.C. (Hdt. 6.102-16), though Peisistratos also landed there ca. 545 (Hdt. 1.62). Pausanias described the area in the 2d c. A.D.
  The remains date from the following periods: Neolithic (cave of Pan, Nea Makri), Early Helladic (Tsepi), Middle Helladic (Vrana), Late Helladic (tholos tomb), archaic and Classical down to Roman (Plasi) at the presumed site of the ancient deme. Many of the landmarks of the great battle have been securely located, the most conspicuous of which is the soros, the tomb of the Athenians; also, the Herakleion, the trophy, the tomb of the Plataians in Vrana (?), the charadra, the great marsh, the Makaria spring. The estate of Herodes Atticus, or better of Regilla, has also been found.

W. F. Wyatt Jr., 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 26 image(s), bibliography & interesting hyperlinks.


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