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KEVRIN (Ancient city) TURKEY
Cebrene (KebreWe or Cebren, a town of Mysia, in a district Cebrenia
(KebreWia). There was a river Cebren (KebreW). The Ethnic names are KebreWos,
KebreWeus, and KebreWios (Steph. s. v. KebreWia); but the Ethnic name is properly
KebreWieus, as Strabo has it. Cebrenia was below Dardania, and a plain country
for the most part. It was separated from the Scepsia or territory of Scepsis by
the river Scamander. The people of Scepsis and the Cebrenii were always quarrelling,
till Antigonus removed both of them to his new town of Antigonia, afterwards called
Alexandria Troas. The Cebrenii remained there; but the Scepsii obtained permission
from Lysimachus to go home again. Strabo speaks of a tribe in Thrace called Cebrenii,
near a river Arisbus; but we cannot conclude any thing from this as to the origin
of the Cebrenii. Ephorus, in the first book of his history (quoted by Harpocrat.
s. v. KebreWa), says that the Aeolians of Cumae sent a colony to Cebren. The city
Cebren surrendered to Dercyllidas the Lacedaemonian (Xen. Hell. iii. 1. 17), who
marched from thence against Scepsis and Gergitha. Geographers have differed as
to the position of Cebrenia. Palaescepsis was near the banks of the Aesepus, and
the Scepsis of Strabo's time was 40 stadia lower down than Old Scepsis. Now, Old
Scepsis was higher up than Cebrenia, near the highest part of Ida, and its territory
extended to the Scamander, where Cebrenia began. Again, the territory of the Assii
and the Gargareis was bounded by Antandria (on the east), and the territory of
the Cebrenii, the Neandrieis, and the Hamaxiteis. Thus Cebrenia is brought within
tolerably definite limits. Leake (Asia Minor, p. 274) supposes Cebrenia to have
occupied the higher region of Ida on the west, and its plain to be the fine valley
of - the Mendere as far down as Ene, probably Neandria. This seems to agree with
Strabo's description. Leake also supposes that the town Cebren may be a place
called Kushunlu Tepe, not far from Baramitsh. Dr. E. D. Clarke found considerable
remains at Kushunlu Tepe; but remains alone do not identify a site.
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
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