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SINOPI (Ancient city) TURKEY
Sinope (Sinope: Eth. Sinopeus), the most important of all the Greek
colonies on the coast of the Euxine, was situated on a peninsula on the coast
of Paphlagonia, at a distance of 700 stadia to the east of Cape Carambis (Strab.
xii. p. 546; Marcian, p. 73; Eustath. ad Dion. Per. 775.) It was a very ancient
place, its origin being referred to the Argonauts and to Sinope, the daughter
of Asopus. (Apollon. Rhod. ii. 947; Val. Flacc. v. 108.) But the Sinopians themselves
referred the foundation of their city to Autolycus, a companion of Heracles, and
one of the Argonauts, to whom they paid heroic honours (Strabo). But this ancient
town was small and powerless, until it received colonists from Miletus. The Milesians
were in their turn dispossessed by the Cimmerians, to whom Herodotus (iv. 12)
seems to assign the foundation of the city; but when the Cimmerians were driven
from Asia Minor, the Ephesians (in B.C. 632) recovered possession of their colony.
(Scymn. 204, foll.; Anonym. Peripl. P. E. p. 8.) The leader of the first Milesian
colony is called Ambron, and the leaders of the second Cous and Critines; though
this latter statement seems to be a mistake, as Eustathius and Stephanus B. (s.
v.) call the founder Critius, a native of Cos. After this time Sinope soon rose
to great power and prosperity. About the commencement of the Peloponnesian War
the Sinopians, who were then governed by a tyrant, Timesileon, received assistance
from the Athenians; and after the expulsion of the tyrant, 600 Athenian colonists
were sent to Sinope (Plut. Pericl. 20). At the time of the retreat of the Ten
Thousand under Xenophon, Sinope was a wealthy and flourishing city, whose dominion
extended to the river Halys, and which exercised great influence over the tribes
of Paphlagonia and Cappadocia, independently of its colonies of Cerasus, Cotyora,
and Trapezus. It was mainly owing to the assistance of the Sinopians, that the
returning Greeks were enabled to procure ships to convey them to Heracleia (Xenoph.
Anab. v. 5. § 3; Arrian, Peripl. P. E. p. 17; Diod. Sic. xiv. 30, 32; Amm. Marc.
xxii. 8). Strabo also acknowledges that the fleet of the Sinopians held a distinguished
position among the naval powers of the Greeks; it was mistress of the Euxine as
far as the entrance of the Bosporus, and divided with Byzantium the lucrative
tunny fisheries in that sea. In the time of Ptolemy Soter, Sinope was governed
by a prince, Scydrothemis, to whom the Egyptian king sent an embassy. (Tac. Hist.
iv. 82, foll.) Its great wealth, and above all its excellent situation, excited
the cupidity of the kings of Pontus. It was first assailed in B.C. 220, by Mithridates
IV., the great-grandfather of Mithridates the Great. Polybius (iv. 56), who is
our principal authority for this event, describes the situation of Sinope in the
following manner: It is built on a peninsula, which advances out into the sea.
The isthmus which connects the peninsula with the mainland is not more than 2
stadia in breadth, and is entirely barred by the city, which comes up close to
it, but the remainder of the peninsula stretches out towards the sea. It is quite
flat and of easy access from the town; but on the side of the sea it is precipitous
all around, and dangerous for vessels, and presents very few spots fit for effecting
a landing. This description is confirmed by Strabo (xii. p. 545), for he says
that the city was built on the neck of the peninsula; but he adds, that the latter
was girt all around with rocks hollowed out in the form of basins. At high water
these basins were filled, and rendered the shore inaccessible, especially as the
rocks were everywhere so pointed that it was impossible to walk on them with bare
feet. The Sinopians defended themselves bravely against Mithridates, and the timely
aid of the Rhodians in the end enabled them to compel the agressor to raise the
siege. Pharnaces, the successor of Mithridates IV., was more successful. He attacked
the city unexpectedly, and finding its inhabitants unprepared, easily overpowered
it, B.C. 183. From this time Sinope became the chief town, and the residence of
the kings of Pontus. (Strab. l. c.; Polyb. xxiv. 10.) Mithridates, surnamed Euergetes
the successor of Pharnaces, was assassinated at Sinope in B.C. 120 (Strab. x.
p. 477). His son, Mithridates the Great, was born and educated at Sinope, and
did much to embellish and strengthen his birthplace: he formed a harbour on each
side of the isthmus, built naval arsenals, and constructed admirable reservoirs
for the tunny fisheries. After his disaster at Cyzicus, the king intrusted the
command of the garrison of Sinope to Bacchides, who acted as a cruel tyrant; and
Sinope, pressed both from within and from without, was at last taken by Lucullus,
after a brave resistance. (Strab. l. c.; Plut. Lucull. 18; Appian, Bell. Mithr.
83; Memnon, in Phot. Cod. p. 238, ed. Bekker.) Lucullus treated the Sinopians
themselves mildly, having put the Pontian garrison to the sword; and he left them
in possession of all their works of art, which embellished the city, with the
exception of the statue of Autolycus, a work of Sthenis, and the sphere of Billarus.
(Strab. Plut. ll. cc.; Cic. pro Leg. Man. 8) Lucullus restored the city to its
ancient freedom and independence. But when Pharnaces, the son of Mithridates,
had been routed at Zela, Caesar took Sinope under his protection, and established
Roman colonies there, as we must infer from coins bearing the inscription Col.
Jul. Caes. Felix Sinope. In the time of Strabo Sinope was still a large, splendid,
and well fortified city; for he describes it as surrounded by strong walls, and
adorned with fine porticoes, squares, gymnasia, and other public edifices. Its
commerce indeed declined, yet the tunny fisheries formed an inexhaustible source
of revenue, which maintained the city in a tolerable state of prosperity. It possessed
extensive suburbs, and numerous villas in its vicinity (Strab. l. c.; Plin. vi.
2). From Pliny's letter's (x. 91), it appears that the Sinopians suffered some
inconvenience from the want of a good supply of water, which Pliny endeavoured
to remedy by a grant from the emperor Trajan to build an aqueduct conveying water
from a distance of 16 miles. In the time of Arrian and Marcian, Sinope still continued
te be a flourishing town. In the middle ages it belonged to the empire of Trebizond,
and fell into the hands of the Turks in A.D. 1470, in the reign of Mohammed II.
Sinope is also remarkable as the birthplace of several men of eminence, such as
Diogenes the Cynic, Baton, the historian of Persia, and Diphilus, the comic poet.
Near Sinope was a small island, called Scopelus, around which large
vessels were obliged to sail, before they could enter the harbour; but small craft
might pass between it and the land, by which means a circuit of 40 stadia was
avoided (Marcian, p. 72, &c.) The celebrated Sinopian cinnabar (Sinopike miltos,
Sinopis or Sinopike ge) was not a product of the district of Sinope, but was designated
by this name only because it formed one of the chief articles of trade at Sinope.
(Groskurd on Strabo, vol. ii. p. 457, foil.) The imperial coins of Sinope that
are known, extend from Augustus to Gallienus. (Sestini, Num. Vet. p. 63; Rasche,
Lex. Num. iv. 2. p. 1105, foil.)
Sinope, now called Sinab, is still a town of some importance, but
it contains only few remains of its former magnificence. The wall across the isthmus
has been built up with fragments of ancient architecture, such as columns, architraves,
&c., and the same is found in several other parts of the modern town; but no distinct
ruins of its temples, porticoes, or even of the great aqueduct, are to be seen.
(Hamilton, Researches, vol. i. p. 306, &c.)
This text is from: Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) (ed. William Smith, LLD). Cited July 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
Now Sinope, Sinoub; the most important of all the Greek colonies on the shores of the Euxine, stood on the northern coast of Asia Minor, on the western headland of the great bay of which the delta of the river Halys forms the eastern headland, and a little east of the northernmost promontory of Asia Minor. It appears in history as a very early colony of the Milesians. Having been destroyed in the invasion of Asia by the Cimmerians, it was restored by a new colony from Miletus in B.C. 632, and soon became the greatest commercial city on the Euxine. Its territory, called Sinopis, extended to the banks of the Halys. It was the birthplace and residence of Mithridates the Great, who enlarged and beautified it. Shortly before the murder of Iulius Caesar it was colonized by the name of Iulia Caesarea Felix Sinope, and remained a flourishing city, though it never recovered its former importance. At the time of Constantine it had declined so much as to be ranked second to Amasia. It was the native city of the renowned cynic philosopher Diogenes, of the comic poet Diphilus, and of the historian Baton.
This text is cited Oct 2002 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
City on the isthmus of a peninsula in the middle of the S coast of
the Black Sea, W of the mouth of the Halys, the earliest colony that Miletos founded
in the Pontos (Xen., An. 6.1.15; Diod. 14.31.2; Strab. 12.545). Eusebios (Chron.
2.88-89) records that Sinope was twice colonized, in 756 and 630 B.C., but 8th
c. Greek colonization in the Pontos is unlikely. The oldest find is an aryballos
of Middle Corinthian type of the beginning of the 6th c. or ca. 600 B.C. at the
earliest, suggesting that the second date, 630 B.C., may be accepted. Excavations
in other Greek cities of the Pontos, such as Olbia (Borysthenes), Istria, and
Apollonia Pontica, have yielded nothing earlier than the last quarter of the 7th
c., and it has also been pointed out that the Greeks were first in a position
to colonize the Black Sea about 700, when they began to build triremes.
The excavations also yielded Phrygian vases of the late type, dating
from the second quarter of the 6th c., indicating that when the Greeks came to
Sinope they found native peoples (Paphlagonians?) at least partly mixed with Phrygians.
There is, however, no evidence of Assyrian colonization (Ps. Skymnos 94ff) or
Kimmerian occupation (Hdt. 4.12).
A large number of 6th-4th c. Greek vases from the necropolis are now
in the museums of Ankara, Kastamonu, and Sinop, and much of the Achaemenid metalwork
on the black market seems to have come from there. Late archaic gravestones have
also been found, and the remains of a Hellenistic temple with altar and surrounding
colonnades.
Sinope flourished as the port of a caravan route (Hdt. 1.72; 2.34)
between the Euphrates and the Black Sea from the 6th to the 4th c., and issued
its own coinage as early as the 6th c. Kotyora, Kerasos, and Trapezos were its
colonies, and among its exports was red sulfate of arsenic from Cappadocia, called
Sinopic red earth (Miltos Sinopike). It escaped Persian domination until the early
4th c., and in 183 B.C. it was captured by Pharnakes I and became capital of the
Pontic kingdom. It was conquered by Lucullus in 70 B.C., and Julius Caesar established
a Roman colony, Colonia Julia Felix, in 47. Mithradates Eupator was born and buried
here, and it was the birthplace of Diogenes, of Diphilos, poet and actor of the
New Attic comedy, and of the historian Baton.
E. Akurgal, 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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