- Abdera, Thrace
Abdera (Άβδηρα) was a town on the coast of
Thrace 17 km east-northeast of the mouth of theNestos , and almost oppositeThasos . At coordinates coord|40|57|N|24|59|E, the site now lies in theXanthi Prefecture of modernGreece . The current municipality of Abdera, or Avdira, has 3,917 inhabitants (2001).Its mythical foundation was attributed to
Heracles (on behalf of his fallen friendAbderus ), its historical one to a colony fromKlazomenai . This historical founding was traditionally dated to654 BC , which is unverified, although evidence in7th century BC Greek pottery tends to support it.cite encyclopedia
last = Hornblower
first = Simon
authorlink =
title = Abdera
encyclopedia = The Oxford Classical Dictionary
volume =
pages = 1
publisher = Oxford University Press
location = Oxford
date = 1996
url =
accessdate = ] But its prosperity dates from544 BC , when the majority of the people of Teos (including the poetAnacreon ) migrated to Abdera to escape the Persian yoke (Herodotus i.168). The chief coin type, a "griffon ", is identical with that of Teos; the rich silver coinage is noted for the beauty and variety of its reverse types.In
513 BC and512 BC , the Persians conquered Abdera. In492 BC , the Persians again conquered Abdera, this time underDarius I . It later became part of theDelian League and fought on the side of Athens in thePeloponnesian war .Abdera was a wealthy city, the third richest in the League, due to its production of corn and status as a prime port for trade with the interior of Thrace and the
Odrysian kingdom .A valuable prize, the city was repeatedly sacked: by the
Triballi in376 BC ,Philip II of Macedon in350 BC ; later by Lysimachos of Thrace, the Seleucids, the Ptolemies, and again by the Macedonians. In170 BC the Roman armies and those of Eumenes II of Pergamon besieged and sacked it.The town seems to have declined in importance after the middle of the
4th century BC . The air of Abdera was proverbial in Athens as causing stupidity, [Cicero. "Epistulae ad Atticum", 4.17.3, 7.7.4.] but it counted among its citizens the philosophersDemocritus andProtagoras , and historian and philosopherHecataeus of Abdera .The ruins of the town may still be seen on Cape Balastra; they cover seven small hills, and extend from an eastern to a western harbor; on the southwestern hills are the remains of the medieval settlement of Polystylon. Abdera is a
titular see of theRoman Catholic Church in the province ofRhodope on the southern coast of Thrace, now called Bouloustra.Landmarks
*
Abdera Archaeological Museum References
ources
*Grant, Michael. "A Guide to the Ancient World". Michael Grant Publications, 1986.
*1911
*CatholicExternal links
* [http://icarus.umkc.edu/sandbox/perseus/pecs/page.5.a.php Richard Stillwell, ed. "Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites", 1976:] "Abdera, Thrace, Greece"
* [http://odysseus.culture.gr/h/3/eh351.jsp?obj_id=2359 Hellenic Ministry of Culture on Abdera]
* [http://www.avdera.gr/ Avdera.gr] el icon
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