Listed 17 sub titles with search on: Various locations for wider area of: "NORTH AEGEAN Region GREECE" .
CHIOS (Island) NORTH AEGEAN
The northwestern promontory of the island of Chios.
A promontory of Chios.
Ariusia (Ariousia). A district on the north coast of Chios, famous for its wine.
IKARIA (Island) NORTH AEGEAN
(Korassiai). A group of small islands in the Icarian Sea, south west of Icaria. They must not be confounded, as they often are, with the islands Corseae or Corsiae, off the Ionian coast, and opposite the promontory Ampelos, in Samos.
LEMNOS (LIMNOS) (Island) NORTH AEGEAN
Mosychlus. A mountain in Lemnos regarded by the ancients as a volcano.
Neae (Neai), a small island near Lemnos, in which Philoctetes, according to some
authorities, was bitten by a water-snake. (Steph. B. s. v.; comp. Antig. Caryst.
Mirab. c. 9.) Pliny places it between Lemnos and the Hellespont (ii. 87. s. 89).
It is called in the charts Stratia, and by the modern Greeks Hagios strategos,
the holy warrior, that is, St. Michael. (Walpole, Travels, &c. p. 55.)
LESVOS (Island) NORTH AEGEAN
The Cillaeum in Lesbos is named after Cilla, a place near Thebe where is a temple of the Cillaean Apollo.
Arginusae (hai Arginousai), three small islands near the mainland
of Aeolis, and near Canae on the mainland. (Strab. p. 617.) They lay between Canae
and Mytilene in Lesbos, and 120 stadia from Mytilene. Thucydides (viii. 101) speaks
of Arginusae of the mainland, as if there were a place on the mainland so called.
Off these islands the ten generals of the Athenians gained a naval victory over
the Spartans, B.C. 406. (Xen. Hell. i. 6)
Stephanus (s. v. Argennousa) describes Argennusa as an island on the
coast of Troas, near a promontory Argennon. This description, given on the authority
of Androtion, does not suit the Arginusae; but Stephanus does not mention them
elsewhere. Pliny (v. 31) places the Arginusae iv. M. P. from Aege. The modern
name of the islands is said to be Janot.
This text is from: Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) (ed. William Smith, LLD). Cited October 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
Malea (Malea, Thucyd. iii. 4, 6; Xen. Hell. i. 6. §§ 26, 27; Malia, Strab. xiii. p. 617; Mania, Ptol. v. 2; see Schol. ad Aristoph. Ran. p. 33), the southernmost point of the island of Lesbos reckoned by Strabo to be 70 stadia distant from Mytilene, 560 stadia from Cape Sigrium, and 340 from Methymna. Immediately opposite, on the mainland, were the point of Cane and the islands of Arginusae. The modern name of Males is Zeitoun Bouroun, or Cape St. Mary, and it is a high and conspicuous point at sea. Xenophon says (l. c.) that the fleet of Callicratidas occupied this station before the sea-fight off Arginusae. There is some obscurity in Xenophon's topography in reference to this place; and the Malea of Thucydides (l. c.) can hardly have been C. St. Mary, unless there is some error in his relation. He says distinctly (c. 4.), that Malea lay to the north of Mytilene, and (c. 6.) that the Athenians had their market there, while besieging the city. The first statement is inconsistent with the position of Cape St. Mary, and the second with its distance from Mytilene. Possibly the Malea of Thucydides had some connection with the sanctuary of Apollo Maloeis.
This text is from: Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) (ed. William Smith, LLD). Cited September 2004 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
SAMOS (Island) NORTH AEGEAN
Now in Samos there is a promontory approximately facing Drepanum in Icaria which is called Ampelus, but the entire mountain which makes the whole of the island mountainous is called by the same name. (Strabo 14.1.15)
The town of Samos lay on the south slopes of 'the hill' Ampelus, which is some 700 feet high (H. says 900, c. 60. 1), and which stretched away to the west above the plain; at the south-west extremity lay the Heraeum.
(Strabo 14.1.19)
Some say that the sanctuary of Hera in Samos was established by those who sailed in the Argo, and that these brought the image from Argos. But the Samians themselves hold that the goddess was born in the island by the side of the river Imbrasus under the withy that even in my time grew in the Heraeum.(Paus. 7.4.4)
Imbrasus, Imbrasos: Perseus Project Index.
A fountain in the island of Samos
Receive our daily Newsletter with all the latest updates on the Greek Travel industry.
Subscribe now!