Listed 6 sub titles with search on: Information about the place for wider area of: "PATTI Town SICILY" .
Tyndaris (Tundaris, Strab.; Tundarion, Ptol.: Eth. Tundarites, Tyndaritanus:
Tindaro), a city on the N. coast of Sicily, between Mylae (Milazzo) and Agathyrna.
It was situated on a bold and lofty hill standing out as a promontory into the
spacious bay bounded by the Punta di Milazzo on the E., and the Capo Calavia on
the W., and was distant according to the Itineraries 36 miles from Messana. (It.
Ant. p. 90; Tab. Peut.) It was a Greek city, and one of the latest of all the
cities in Sicily that could claim a purely Greek origin, having been founded by
the elder Dionysius in B.C. 395. The original settlers were the remains of the
Messenian exiles, who had been driven from Naupactus, Zacynthus, and the Peloponnese
by the Spartans after the close of the Peloponnesian War. These had at first been
established by Dionysius at Messana, when he repeopled that city; but the Spartans
having taken umbrage at this, he transferred them to the site of Tyndaris, which
had previously been included in the territory of Abacaenum. The colonists themselves
gave to their new city the name of Tyndaris, from their native divinities, the
Tyndaridae or Dioscuri, and readily admitting fresh citizens from other quarters,
soon raised their whole population to the number of 5000 citizens. (Diod. xiv.
78.) The new city thus rose at once to be a place of considerable importance.
It is next mentioned in B.C. 344, when it was one of the first cities that declared
in favour of Timoleon after his landing in Sicily. (Id. xvi. 69.) At a later period
we find it mentioned as espousing the cause of Hieron, and supporting him during
his war against the Mamertines, B.C. 269. On that occasion he rested his position
upon Tyndaris on the left, and on Tauromenium on the right. (Diod. xxii. Exc.
H. p. 499.) Indeed the strong position of Tyndaris rendered it in a strategic
point of view as important a post upon the Tyrrhenian, as Tauromenium was upon
the Sicilian sea, and hence we find it frequently mentioned in subsequent wars.
In the First Punic War it was at first dependent upon Carthage; and though the
citizens, alarmed at the progress of the Roman arms, were at one time on the point
of revolting to Rome, they were restrained by the Carthaginians, who carried off
all the chief citizens as hostages. (Diod. xxiii. p. 502.) In B.C. 257, a sea-fight
took place off Tyndaris, between that city and the Liparaean islands, in which
a Roman fleet under C. Atilius obtained some advantage over the Carthaginian fleet,
but without any decisive result. (Poly. i. 25; Zonar. viii. 12.) The Roman fleet
is described on that occasion as touching at the promontory of Tyndaris, but the
city had not yet fallen into their hands, and it was not till after the fall of
Panormus, in B.C. 254, that Tyndaris expelled the Carthaginian garrison and joined
the Roman alliance. (Diod. xxiii. p. 505.) We hear but little of Tyndaris under
the Roman government, but it appears to have been a flourishing and considerable
city. Cicero calls it nobilissima civitas (Verr. iii. 43), and we learn from him
that the inhabitants had displayed their zeal and fidelity towards the Romans
upon many occasions. Among others they supplied naval forces to the armament of
Scipio Africanus the Younger, a service for which he requited them by restoring
them a statue of Mercury which had been carried off by the Carthaginians. and
which continued an object of great veneration in the city, till it was again carried
off by the rapacious Verres. (Cic. Verr. iv. 3. 9-42, v. 47.) Tyndaris was also
one of seventeen cities which had been selected by the Roman senate, apparently
as an honorary distinction, to contribute to certain offerings to the temple of
Venus at Eryx. (Ib. v. 47; Zumpt, ad loc.; Diod. iv. 83.) In other respects it
had no peculiar privileges, and was in the condition of an ordinary municipal
town, with its own magistrates, local senate, &c., but was certainly in the time
of Cicero one of the most considerable places in the island. It, however, suffered
severely from the exactions of Verres (Cic. Verr. ll. cc.), and the inhabitants,
to revenge themselves on their oppressor, publicly demolished his statue as soon
as he had quitted the island. (Ib. ii. 66.)
Tyndaris again bore a considerable part in the war between Sextus
Pompeius and Octavian (B.C. 36). It was one of the points occupied and fortified
by the former, when preparing for the defence of the Sicilian straits, but was
taken by Agrippa after his naval victory at Mylae, and became one of his chief
posts, from which he carried on offensive warfare against Pompey. (Appian, B.C.
v. 105, 109, 116.) Subsequently to this we hear nothing more of Tyndaris in history;
but there is no doubt of its having continued to subsist throughout the period
of the Roman Empire. Strabo speaks of it as one of the places on the N. coast
of Sicily which, in his time, still deserved the name of cities; and Pliny gives
it the title of a Colonia. It is probable that it received a colony under Augustus,
as we find it bearing in an inscription the titles of Colonia Augusta Tyndaritanorum.
(Strab. vi. p. 272; Plin. iii. 8. s. 14; Ptol. iii. 4. § 2; Orell. Inscr. 955.)
Pliny indeed mentions a great calamity which the city had sustained, when (he
tells us) half of it was swallowed up by the sea, probably from an earthquake
having caused the fall of part of the hill on which it stands, but we have no
clue to the date of this event; (Plin. ii. 92. s. 94.) The Itineraries attest
the existence of Tyndaris, apparently still as a considerable place, in the fourth
century. (Itin. Ant. pp. 90, 93; Tab. Peat.)
The site of Tyndaris is now wholly deserted, but the name is retained
by a church, which crowns the most elevated point of the hill on which the city
formerly stood, and is still called the Madonna di Tindaro. It is 650 feet above
the sea-level, and forms a conspicuous landmark to sailors. Considerable ruins
of the ancient city, are also visible. It occupied the whole plateau or summit
of the hill, and the remains of the ancient walls may be traced, at intervals,
all round the brow of the cliffs, except in one part, facing the sea, where the
cliff is now quite precipitous. It is not improbable that it is here that a part
of the cliff fell in, in the manner recorded by Pliny (ii. 92. s. 94). Two gates
of the city are also still distinctly to be traced. The chief monuments, of which
the ruins are still extant within the circuit of the walls, are: the theatre,
of which the remains are in imperfect condition, but sufficient to show that it
was not of large size, and apparently of Roman construction, or at least, like
that of Tauromenium, rebuilt in Roman times upon the Greek foundations; a large
edifice with two handsome stone arches, commonly called a Gymnasium, but the real
purpose of which is very difficult to determine; several other edifices of Roman
times, but of wholly uncertain character, a mosaic pavement, and some Roman tombs.
(Serra di Falco, Antichita della Sicilia, vol. v. part vi.; Smyth's Sicily, p.
101; Hoare's Classical Tour, vol. ii. p. 217, &c.) Numerous inscriptions, fragments
of sculpture, and architectural decorations, as well as coins, vases, &c. have
also been discovered on the site.
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
Tyndarium (Tundarion). Now Tindaro; a town on the northern coast of Sicily, a little west of Messana, founded by the elder Dionysius, B.C. 396.
The modern village, built upon the ancient site, is between Cape Calava
and the Cape of Milazzo on the Gulf of Patti, 10 km E of the town of Patti on
the main highway that encircles the island.
Tyndaris began as a colony of Dionysios I in 396 B.C. It remained
faithful to Rome during the Punic wars and prospered under the Empire. Pliny (2.206)
records a landslide of the 1st c. A.D., in which part of the town fell away into
the sea 280 m below the steep cliffs. Tyndaris became a diocese, and its role
in Gnaeco-Roman events ended with the advent of the Arabs.
The site extends ca. 1 km SE-NW. The Greek acropolis is covered by
the modern sanctuary of the black Madonna, and the agora by the village; tests,
however, have been carried out. The ashlar circuit wall with its later accretions
is the most imposing monument datable to the colony's beginnings. The single-nave
Republican basilica marks the SE boundary of the excavations open to the public.
Its restoration is in progress. A walk to the upper decumanus, which leads NW
from its start at the basilica, reveals the museum on the left, and the insulae
of Graeco-Roman houses and a public bath on the right. The two peristyle houses
and the baths nearby show signs of later embellishment. Poor huts of the 4th-5th
c. A.D. lie over the baths. At the end of the decumanus is the Greek theater (remodeled
by the Romans).
H. L. Allen, 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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