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LAMPOUSA (Ancient city) CYPRUS
Lapathus, Lapethus (Lapathos, Strab. xiv. p. 682; Lapethos, Ptol.
v. 14. § 4; Plin. v. 31; Lepethis, Scyl. p.41; ,Lapithos Hierocl.: Eth. Lapetheus,
Lapethios: Lapitho, Lapta), a town of Cyprus, the foundation of which was assigned
to the Phoenicians (Steph. B. s. v.), and which, according to Nonnus (Dionys.
xiii. 447), owed its name to the legendary Lapathus, a follower of Dionysus. Strabo
says that it received a Spartan colony, headed by Praxander. He adds, that it
was situated opposite to the town of Nagidus, in Cilicia, and possessed a harbour
and docks. It was situated in the N. of the island, on a river of the same name,
with a district called Lapethia. (Lapethia, Ptol. v. 14. § 5). In the war between
Ptolemy and Antigonus, Lapathus, with its king Praxippus, sided with the latter.
(Diod. xix. 59.) The name of this place was synonymous with stupidity. (Suid.
s. v. Lapathioi.) Pococke (Trav. in the East, vol. ii. pt. l. p. 223) saw at Lapitho
several walls that were cut out of the rock, and one entire room, over the sea:
there were also remains of some towers and walls. (Mariti, Viaggi, vol. i. p.
125; Engel, Kypros, vol. i. pp. 37, 78, 174, 224, 364, 507.)
This text is from: Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) (ed. William Smith, LLD). Cited August 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
A town on the northern coast of Cyprus on a river of the same name.
On the N coast, E of the Monastery of Acheiropoietos and 10 km W of
Keryneia. The ruins cover a large area along the seashore. Substantial remains
of a harbor with its breakwaters still survive and the city wall can be traced
for most of its course. The necropolis extends E.
The site extends mainly along the shore for a considerable distance,
but also inland. Part of it may lie under the cultivated land. The rest of the
site is now a field of ruins overgrown with scrub. A rocky hill near the center
of the city may have been its acropolis. The site has been badly damaged by looters
in search of stone and treasure. Lampousa is well known for its Early Byzantine
silver treasure, most of which is now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New
York.
It appears that there was originally a rocky ridge running E-W a little
farther back from the sea. It began at the rock-cut chapel, probably a tomb, at
Acheiropoietos on the W, included the acropolis about halfway, and extended E
to the Troulli hill. In this mass of rock there were tombs dating probably from
the 6th and 5th c. B.C., an indication that the earlier city was still nearer
the coast and that when it expanded in later Classical and Hellenistic times this
part was also inhabited so that most of the tombs were then quarried and destroyed.
Lapethos, one of the ancient kingdoms of Cyprus, was, according to
tradition, founded by Praxandros from Lakonia in the Peloponnese. Excavations
on the acropolis have shown that the city was inhabited during the Late Bronze
Age, which accords well with its traditional origin. A Late Bronze Age settlement
has also been located higher up within the modern village of Lapethos while Early
Geometric tombs surround the village.
Little is known of the history. The name appears for the first time
in 312 B.C. when its king Praxippos, who was suspected of being on the side of
Antigonos, was arrested by Ptolemy. From coins, however, we know the names of
some of its kings of the 5th and 4th c. B.C., and the name is mentioned by Skylax
the geographer (mid 4th c. B.C.). After that it is frequently mentioned by other
ancient authors. Lapethos seems to have flourished mainly from archaic down to
Early Byzantine times, when it became a bishopric. The city was gradually abandoned
after the first Arab raids of A.D. 647.
To Lapethos are attributed coins of the mid 5th c. B.C. with Phoenician
legends and heads of Athena. Some of them name a king Sidqmelek, thus indicating
a temporary Phoenician rule. Earlier coins show Athena and Aphrodite. To the later
king Praxippos are attributed coins with the head of Apollo on the obverse and
a krater on the reverse. The temporary Phoenician rule, however, does not prove
the existence of Phoenician settlers in Lapethos.
From inscriptions we learn that there was a gymnasium, and it is possible
that there was a theater, but nothing is known of the location of either. It seems
strange that no evidence has been forthcoming so far of the existence at Lapethos
of sanctuaries nor do we know anything of the worship there of any deity. Lapethos
is one of the Cypriot cities mentioned in the list of the theodorokoi from Delphi
(early 2d c. B.C.). According to epigraphical evidence quinquennial games were
held at Lapethos. These were known as the Aktaion games, held in celebration of
the victory at Aktion.
Very little survives in the way of monuments and only minor excavations
were carried out on the city site. Part of the acropolis was investigated in 1913;
and in 1915 a small excavation was carried out at Troulli hill; the results in
both cases, however, were disappointing.
The upper part of the acropolis was of solid rock deeply dissected
by house basements with rock-cut doors and staircases; there were chamber tombs
on the E face and deep quarries on the N.
The results of the excavations at Troulli hill were much the same.
Again chambers had been cut in the solid rock and rubble walls. One such chamber
had a long and thick wall resting on solid rock. Opposite this wall, the rock,
11 m high, had its side cut straight so as to form the other parallel wall of
a long and narrow chamber, 4 m wide, with the door at the broader side opening
to a small antechamber.
Probably the best preserved remains are those of the harbor, where
both the ancient breakwaters still survive for a considerable distance. The W
arm measures about 155 m; the N one is shorter, measuring about 40 m. In this
way was created a small but safe harbor protected from the N winds. This is undoubtedly
the anchorage for small craft mentioned by Strabo. The breakwaters were recently
reinforced with new blocks of stone in order to make a safer fishing shelter.
To the E of the city lie a group of ancient fish tanks right on the
rocky coast, all cut in the solid rock. They communicate directly with the sea
or with one another by canals. The largest one 30 x 13.25 m and ca. 1 m deep,
is fairly well preserved. It communicates directly with the sea by three side
oblique canals and by a front (sea side) system of openings and sluices of complicated
mechanism.
K. Nicolaou, 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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