- Psophis
Psophis (
Ancient Greek : polytonic|Ψωφίς, "Eth." polytonic|Ψωφίδιος) was an ancient Greek city in the northwest end ofArcadia , bounded on the north by Arcadia, and on the west byElis .Citation | last = Smith | first = William | author-link = William Smith (lexicographer) | contribution = Psophis | editor-last = Smith | editor-first = William | title =Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography | volume = 2 | pages = 675-676 | publisher = Walton & Maberly | place = London | year = 1857 | contribution-url = http://books.google.com/books?id=tJIfAAAAMAAJ ]City name and mythology
Psophis was said to have been originally called Erymanthus, and its territory to have been ravaged by the
Erymanthian Boar .Pausanias, "Description of Greece" viii. 24. § 2-10] [Hecat. "onStephanus of Byzantium s.v." polytonic|Ψωφίς] [Apollodorus , ii. 5. § 4] It afterwards received the name of Phegia or Phegeia (polytonic|Φηγία or polytonic|Φήγεια), apparently from the oaks (Gr. "phegoi", polytonic|φηγοί) which at least up until the 19th century could still be found upon the site of the town. The ancients, as usual, derived the name from aneponym ous founder,Phegeus . [Stephanus of Byzantium , "s.v." polytonic|Φήγεια, polytonic|Ψωφίς]The city was said to have been renamed "Psophis" by
Echephron andPromachus , two sons ofHeracles , who are said to have come fromSicily , and who named the town after their mother, Psophis.The city, while still called "Phegia", was celebrated as the residence of Alcmaeon, who fled here from
Argos after murdering his mother. Here Alcmaeon married Arsinoe (namedAlphesiboea in some versions), daughter of Phegeus. In consequence of their connection with Alcmaeon, the Psophidians took part in the second expedition against Thebes, and refused to join the other Greeks in theTrojan War .History
Psophis is rarely mentioned in history. In 219 BC, it was in the possession of the
Eleians , and was taken byPhilip V of Macedon , who was then in alliance with theAchaea ns. In narrating this event,Polybius gives a detailed description of the town:About 300 feet below the junction of the two rivers the united stream is joined by a third, smaller river, called the "
Lopesi ", or "Skupi", which rises on the frontiers ofCleitor near Seirae.cite book | last = Leake | first = William Martin | authorlink = William Martin Leake | coauthors = | title = Travels in the Morea | publisher = John Murray | date = 1830 | location = London | pages = 240, 242, 250 | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=7FQMAAAAYAAJ | doi = | id = | isbn = ] From these three rivers the place is now calledTripotamo . The banks of the Erymanthus are precipitous, but not very high; and between them and the steep summit of the hill upon which the town stood there is a small space of level or gently-rising ground. The summit is a sharp ridge, sending forth two roots, one of which descends nearly to the angle of junction of the two streams, the other almost to the bank of the Erymanthus at the eastern extremity of the city.Philip, in his attack on Psophis, crossed the bridge over the Erymanthus, and then drew up his men in the narrow space between the river and the walls. While the
Macedonia ns were attempting to scale the walls in three separate parties, the Eleians made a sally from the gate in the upper part of the town.Euripidas and the garrison then retreated into the Citadel of Zakynthos, and shortly afterwards surrendered to Philip.Ruins
In the 2nd century, Pausanias saw at Psophis a ruined temple of
Aphrodite Erycina , heroa ofEchephron andPromachus , the tomb of Alcmaeon, and near the Erymanthus a temple sacred to that stream. In the early 19th century,William Martin Leake also noticed a part of a theatre unmentioned by Pausanias, on the side of a hill. Nine hundred feet upstream from the junction of the two rivers, and near the walls on the bank of the Erymanthus, Leake also found some remains of a public building, 96 feet in length, below which there is a source of water in the bank. He conjectured that they may be the remains of the temple of Erymanthus.Psophis was about two miles in circumference. The town walls followed the crest of the ridge to the north, and the bank above the two rivers on the opposite side; and at least up through the 19th century they were traceable nearly throughout the entire circuit of the place. On the north-eastern side of the town, which is the only part not protected by the two rivers or by the precipices at the back of the hill, there was a double enclosure surrounding the citadel, although this has since entirely disappeared.
At a distance of 30 stadia (roughly 3.4 miles) from Psophis was the Seirai (polytonic|Σείραι), which Pausanias describes as the boundary of the Psophians and the
Cleitor ians. [Pausanias, "Description of Greece" viii. 23. § 9, 24. § 3] On the road from Psophis toThelpusa layTropaea , upon the left bank of theLadon River , near which was the grove Aphrodisium, after which came a column with an ancient inscription upon it, marking the boundaries of Psophis and Thelpusa. [Ernst Curtius , "Peloponnesos" (1851) vol. i. p. 384, seq.]References
ources
*SmithDGRG
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.