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Location information

Listed 35 sub titles with search on: Information about the place  for wider area of: "KILKIS Prefecture GREECE" .


Information about the place (35)

Miscellaneous

Ancient authors' reports

Atalanti

ATALANTI (Ancient city) KILKIS
A city near the Axios (Thouk. 2,100)

Fyska

FYSKA (Ancient city) KILKIS
It was beyond the river of Axios, near Kisso (Thouk. 2,99).

Boundaries

Kristonia

KRISTONIA (Ancient area) KILKIS
The ancient country of Kristonia occupied a great part of the modern prefecture of Kilkis, to the E of the Axius river, near the sources of the Gallikos river.

Commercial WebPages

Commercial WebSites

General

Doirani

DOIRANI (Village) KILKIS
In the village, there is a small marina, where the visitor may rent a boat. There are also facilities for swimming in the homonymous lake during summer time and for fishing during the whole year.

Kastaneri

KASTANERI (Village) KILKIS
It is a beautiful village within woods of chestnut-trees. Kastaneri was built in the 18th century by fugitives from justice during the turkish occupation.

Greek & Roman Geography (ed. William Smith)

Amphaxitis

AMFAXITIS (Ancient area) KILKIS
Amphaxitis (Amphaxitis), the maritime part of Mygdonia in Macedonia, on the left bank of the Axius, which, according to Strabo, separated Bottiaea from Amphaxitis. The name first occurs in Polybius. No town of this name is mentioned by ancient writers, though the Amphaxii are found on coins. (Pol. v. 97; Strab. p. 330; Ptol. iii. 13. § § 10,14; Leake, Northern Greece, vol. iii. p. 449.)

Amydon

AMYDON (Ancient city) KILKIS
  (Amudon). A town in Macedonia on the Axius, from which Pyraechmes led the Paeonians to the assistance of Troy. The place is called Abydon by Suidas and Stephanus B.

Doberus

DOVIROS (Ancient city) KILKIS
  Doberus (Doberos, Steph. B.; Deboros, Diaboros, Douberos), a Paeonian town or district, which Sitalces reached after crossing Cercine, and where many troops and additional volunteers reached him, making up his full total. (Thuc. ii. 98, 100.) Hierocles names Diaboros next to Idomene among the towns of the Consular Macedonia under the Byzantine empire; this, coupled with the statement of Ptolemy (iii. 13. 8. § 28) that it belonged to the Aestraei, would seem to show that Doberus was near the modern Doghiran.
  The Doberes (Doberes, Doberi, Plin. iv. 10) are described by Herodotus (vii. 113) as inhabiting, with the Paeoplae, the country to the N. of Mt. Pangaeum, these being precisely the tribes whom he had before associated with the inhabitants of the Lake Prasias (v. 16). Their position must, therefore, be sought to the E. of the Strymon: they shared Mt. Pangaeum with the Paeonians and Pierians, and dwelt probably on the N. side, where, in the time of the Roman empire, there was a mutatio, or place for changing horses, on the Via Egnatia, called Domeros, between Amphipolis and Philippi, 13 M. P. from the former and 19 M. P. from the latter. (Itin. Hierosol.; comp. Tafel, de Via Egnat. p. 10.) (Leake, Northern Greece, vol. iii. pp. 212, 444, 467.)

This text is from: Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) (ed. William Smith, LLD). Cited September 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


Europus

EVROPOS (Ancient city) KILKIS
  Europus (Strab. vii.) A town of Emathia (Ptol. iii. 13. § 39), between Idomene and the plains of Cyrrhus and Pella, probably situated on the right bank of the Axius below Idomene. Not far above the entrance of the great maritime plain, the site of Europus may perhaps hereafter be recognised by that strength of position which enabled it to resist Sitalces and the Thracians. (Thuc. ii. 100.) We have the concurring testimony of Ptolemy (iii. 13. § 24) and Pliny (iv. 10) that this town of Emathia was different from Europus of Almopia, which latter town seems from Hierocles-who names Europus as well as Almopia among the towns of the Consular Macedonia (a provincial division containing both Thessalonica and Pella)-to have been known in his time by the name of Almopia only; and hence we may infer that it was the chief town of the ancient district Almopia.

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


Gortynia

GORTYNIA (Ancient city) KILKIS
  Gortynia (Gortunia, Gordonia: Eth. Gorduniates, Steph. B.; Gordenia, Gordounia, Ptol. iii. 13. § 39), a place in Macedonia which the host of Sitalces passed in their march between Idomene and the plains of Cyrrhus and Pella (Thuc. ii. 100). Hence its position must be looked for in the upper valley of the river Axius. (Leake, Northern Greece, vol. iii. p. 444.)

Idomene

IDOMENI (Ancient city) KILKIS
  A town of Macedonia which the Tabular Itinerary places at 12 M. P. from Stena, the pass now called Demirkapi, or Iron Gate, on the river Vardhari. Sitalces, on his route from Thrace to Macedonia, crossed Mt. Cercine, leaving the Paeones on his right, and the Sinti and Maedi on his left, and descended upon the Axius at Idomene. (Thuc. ii. 98.) It probably stood upon the right bank of the Axius, as it is included by Ptolemy in Emathia, and was near Doberus, next to which it is named by Hierocles among the towns of Consular Macedonia,. under the Byzantine empire.

This text is from: Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) (ed. William Smith, LLD). Cited June 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


Crestonia

KRISTONIA (Ancient area) KILKIS
  Crestonia (Krestonike: Eth. Krestonaios, Krestonietes: Adj. Krestonikos), a district of Macedonia, which adjoined Mygdonia to the N.; for the Echidorus, which flowed through Mygdonia into the gulf near the marsh of the Axius, had its sources in Crestonia. (Herod. vii. 127.) It was chiefly occupied by a remnant of Pelasgi, who spoke a different language from their neighbours. (Herod. i. 57; comp. Thuc. iv. 109.) In Thucydides (ii. 99) the name should not be written Grestonia, but Krestonia. Crestonia contained the town of Creston or Crestone (Kreston, Krestone, Steph. B.), and Gallicum (Kilkitj), a place situated 16 M. P. from Thessalonica, on the Roman road to Stobi (Pent. Tab.). (Leake, North. Greece. vol. iii. p. 440.)

Stobi

STOVI (Ancient city) MACEDONIA
  Stoboi. A town in the NW. of Paeonia in Macedonia, which appears to have been a place of some importance under the Macedonian kings, although probably it had been greatly reduced by the incursions of the Dardani, when Philip had an intention of founding a new city near it in memory of a victory over these troublesome neighbours, and which he proposed to call Perseis, in honour of his son. At the Roman conquest, Stobi was made the place of deposit of salt, for the supply of the Dardani, the monopoly of which was given to the Third Macedonia. In the time of Pliny (iv. 17) Stobi was a municipal town, but probably as late as the time of Heliogabalus it was made a colonia. When about A.D. 400 Macedonia was under a consular, Stobi became the chief town of Macedonia II or Salutaris (Marquardt, in Becker's Rom. Alter. vol. iii. pt. i. p. 118). According to the Tabular Itinerary it stood 47 M.P. from Heracleia of Lyncus, which was in the Via Egnatia, and 55 M. P. from Tauriana, and was therefore probably in the direct road from Heracleia to Serdica. The position must have been therefore on the Erigon, 10 or 12 miles above the junction of that river with the Axins, a situation which agrees with that of Livy, who describes it as belonging to Deuriopus of Paeonia, which was watered by the Erigon. Stobi was a point from which four roads issued. (Peut. Tab.) One proceeded NW. to Scupi, and from thence to Naissus on the great SE. route from Viminacium on the Danube to Byzantium; the second NE. to Serdica, 1000 M. P. SE. of Naissus on the same route; the third SE. to Thessalonica; and the fourth SW. to Heracleia, the last forming a communication with that central point on the Via Egnatia leading through Stobi from all the places on the three former routes. In A.D. 479 Stobi was captured by Theodoric the Ostrogoth (Malch. Philadelph. Exc. de Leg. Rom. pp. 78 - 86, ap. Muller, Fragm. Hist. Graec. vol. iv. p. 125); and in the Bulgarian campaign of A.D. 1014, it was occupied by Basil II. and the Byzantine army (Stopeion, Cedren. p. 709). The geography of the basin of the Erigon in which Stobi was situated is so imperfectly known that there is a difficulty in identifying its site: in Kiepert's map (Europaische Turkei) the ruins of Stobi are marked to the W. of Demirkapi, or the pass of the Iron Gate. (Leake, Northern Greece, vol. iii. pp. 306, 440.)

This text is from: Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) (ed. William Smith, LLD). Cited June 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities

Dysorum

DYSSORON (Mountain) KILKIS
(Dusoron). A gold-producing mountain in Macedonia between Chalcidice and Odomantice.

Links

Local government Web-Sites

Municipality of Axioupoli

AXIOUPOLI (Municipality) KILKIS

Municipality of Evropos

EVROPOS (Municipality) KILKIS

Prefecture of Kilkis

KILKIS (Prefecture) GREECE

Municipality of Kilkis

KILKIS (Municipality) GREECE

Municipality of Polykastro

POLYKASTRO (Municipality) KILKIS

Local government WebPages

Kilkis Province

KILKIS (Province) GREECE
(Following URL information in Greek only)

Kilkis

KILKIS (Town) MAKEDONIA CENTRAL

Maps

KILKIS (Prefecture) GREECE

Ministry of Culture WebPages

Prefecture of Kilkis

KILKIS (Prefecture) GREECE
In the following WebPages you can find an interactive map with all the monuments and museums of the Prefecture, with relevant information and photos.

Names of the place

Kriva

GRIVA (Village) KILKIS
It is assumed that this settlement was founded around 817 B.C. and that its name, Kriva, which means "lame", "lop-sided" village, describes its shape.

Perseus Project index

Amydon

AMYDON (Ancient city) KILKIS
Total results on 27/8/2001: 4 for Abydon, 8 for Amydon.

Physca

FYSKA (Ancient city) KILKIS
Total results on 29/8/2001: 2 for Physca, 1 or Physka.

Creston

KRISTON (Ancient city) KILKIS
Creston is a town in Thrace, north of Chalcidice, on the high ground between the Axius and the Strymon

Crestonia

KRISTONIA (Ancient area) KILKIS
Total results on 28/8/2001: 4

Present location

Amphaxits

AMFAXITIS (Ancient area) KILKIS
Amphaxits was in the region of the Axius valley in Kilkis prefecture.

AMYDON (Ancient city) KILKIS
The ancient city is located near the village of Aspros (former Amatovo).

You are able to search for more information in greater and/or surrounding areas by choosing one of the titles below and clicking on "more".

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