Listed 4 sub titles with search on: Information about the place for wider area of: "VISSALTIA Ancient area SERRES" .
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Bisaltia (Bisaltia), a district in Macedonia, extending from the river Strymon and the lake Cercinitis, on the E., to Crestonica on the W. (Herod. vii. 115.) It is called Bisaltica by Livy (xlv. 29). The inhabitants, called Bisaltae (Bisaltai), were a Thracian people. At the time of the invasion of Xerxes, B.C. 480, Bisaltia and Crestonica were governed by a Thracian prince, who was independent of Macedonia (Herod. viii. 116); but before the commencement of the Peloponnesian war, Bisaltia had been annexed to the Macedonian kingdom. (Thuc. ii. 99.) Some of the Bisaltae settled in the peninsula of Mt. Athos. (Thuc. iv. 109.) The most important town in Bisaltia was the Greek city of Argilus. In this district there was a river Bisaltes (Bisaltes), which Leake conjectures to be the river which joins the Strymon a little below the bridge of Neokhorio, or Amphipolis; while Tafel supposes it to be the same as the Rechius of Procopius (de Aedif. iv. 3), which discharges into the sea the waters of the lake Bolbe. (Leake, Northern Greece, vol. iii. p. 228; Tafel, in Pauly's Realencycl. vol. i. p. 1115.) The annexed coin, which is one of great antiquity, bears en the obverse the legend Bisaltikon.
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
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