Listed 22 sub titles with search on: Information about the place for wider area of: "KARPATHOS Island DODEKANISSOS" .
Carpathus (Karpathos; Carpathum, Plin.; in Hom. Il. ii. 676, Krapathos:
Eth. Karpathios: Skarpanto), an island in the sea between Crete and Rhodes, which
was named after it the Carpathian sea. (Karpathion pelagos, Strab. x. p. 488 Carpathium
mare, Hor. Carm. i. 35. 8.) Carpathus is described by the ancient authorities
as 100 stadia in length (Scylax, p. 56), and 200 stadia in circuit (Strab. p.
489); but according to Bondelmonte, the old Italian traveller, it is 70 Italian
miles in circumference. The island consists for the most part of lofty and bare
mountains, full of ravines and hollows; and the coast is generally steep and inaccessible.
The principal mountain, which is in the centre of the island, and is called Lastos,
appears to be 4000 feet in height.
Carpathus is said to have been subject to Minos and to have been afterwards
colonized by Argive Dorians. (Diod. v. 54.) It always remained a Doric country.
At the time of the Trojan war it is mentioned along with Nisyrus, Casus and Cos
(Hom. Il. ii. 676); but at a later period it was under the rule of the Rhodians.
It would seem never to have possessed complete independence, as no autonomous
coins of Carpathus have been discovered; while Rhodian coins are commonly found
in the island.
Carpathus appears to have been well peopled in antiquity. According
to Scylax, it contained three towns; according to Strabo, four. The only name
which Strabo gives is Nisyrus (Nisuros). Ptolemy (v. 2. § 33) mentions another
town, called Poseidium (Poseidion). The name of a third, Arcesine (Arkesine),
is only preserved in an inscription containing the tribute of the Athenian allies.
The site of Arcesine has been determined by Ross. It is now called Arkassa, and
is situated upon a promontory in the middle of the west coast of the southern
part of the island. Poseidium was situated upon a corresponding cape upon the
eastern side of the island, and is now called Pigadin or Posin.
There are ruins of an ancient town upon a rock, Sokastron, off the
western coast, and of another town upon the island Saria, which is ten miles in
circuit, and is separated by a narrow strait from the northern extremity of Carpathus.
The ruins in Saria, which are called Palatia, may possibly be those of Nisyrus.
(Comp. the names Saria, Nismria.
Ptolemy mentions two promontories, one called Thoanteium (Thoanteion),
probably the southern extremity of the island, the modern Akroteri, and the other
Ephialtium (Ephialtion), which Ross conjectures to be a promontory S. of Poseidium,
of which the modern name Aphiartis is perhaps a corruption. The accompanying map
of Carpathus is taken from Ross, who is the only modern traveller that has given
an account of the island. (Comp. Herod. iii. 45; Dionys. Per. 500; Plin. iv. 12.
s. 23, v. 31. s. 36; Pomp. Mel. ii. 7; Steph. B. s. v.; Ross, Reisen auf den Griech.
Inseln, vol. iii. p. 50.)
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
APERI (Village) KARPATHOS
(Following URL information in Greek only)
KARPATHOS (Municipality) DODEKANISSOS
(Following URL information in Greek only)
KARPATHOS (Small town) DODEKANISSOS
(Following URL information only in Greek)
OLYMPOS (Community) KARPATHOS
(Following URL information in Greek only)
PYLES (Village) KARPATHOS
(Following URL information only in Greek)
SPOA (Village) KARPATHOS
(Following URL information only in Greek)
VOLADA (Village) KARPATHOS
(Following URL information only in Greek)
KARPATHOS (Island) DODEKANISSOS
Karpathos. An island in the S Aegean. According to Diodorus (5.54.4) it was a
Minoan domain, later colonized by the Argives. We know the names of three cities
from the Classical age: Karpathos, Arkaseia, and Brikous; and the locality of
the Eteokarpathioi. The cities paid tribute to the Delio-Attic League, and at
the end of the 5th c. B.C. came under Rhodian domination. Potidaion, the port
of Karpathos, is identified with modern Pighadia on the SE coast, where tombs
have been found containing Minoan (MM IIIB and LM IA) and Mycenaean (LH IIIA-B)
ceramics. The site of Karpathos is uncertain; at Arkaseia, on the SW coast, the
Cyclopean walls of the acropolis are visible, and at Brykous, on the NW coast,
sections of the enclosing walls of the 4th-3d c. B.C.
M. G. Picozzi, 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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