Haliartos (Boeotia) 145 Aliartos - Αλίαρτος

Ἁλίαρτος - Haliartos, Archaic to Late Antique polis near Aliartos in Viotia Central Greece
Hits: 145
Works: 33
Latitude: 38.378700
Longitude: 23.088000
Confidence: High (20130000)

Greek name: Ἁλίαρτος
Place ID: 384231PHal
Time period: ACHRL
Region: Central Greece
Country: Greece
Department: Viotia
Mod: Aliartos

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Read summary reports on the recent excavations at Haliartos in Chronique des fouilles en ligne – Archaeology in Greece Online.
Search for inscriptions mentioning Haliartos (Αλιαρτ...) in the PHI Epigraphy database.
Leaflet | Map data © OpenStreetMap contributors, CC-BY-SA, Imagery © Mapbox

Modern Description: A city in the central part of the region, near modern Haliartos, 20 km W of Thebes on the Levadhia road, at the edge of ancient Lake Kopais.
Founded before the Mycenaean period and contemporary with Orchomenos, the city very soon passed under the control of Thebes; it was one of the first to mint silver coins bearing the Boiotian shield, the emblem of the Confederacy (6th c. B.C.). Spared by the Persians in 480, it became one of the 11 Boiotian districts, with Koronea and Lebadeia, from 447 to 387 and then from 371 to 338. At the beginning of the Corinthian War (395) Lysander and the Spartan army joined battle with the Boiotians under the walls of Haliartos, and he was killed there. During the Third Macedonian War Haliartos joined forces with Perseus against Rome: the praetor C. Lucretius razed the town, destroyed the garrison, and sold 2,500 citizens as slaves. Its territory was given to Athens, which administered it through an epimeletes and sent colonists there. The city was never rebuilt.
The acropolis is on a low hill to the W of the modern town between the highway and the railroad; it controlled traffic between N and S Greece. The Mycenaean acropolis (ca. 250 x 150 m) is situated at the highest point of the hill; its rampart is well preserved to the S and W. On the W side of the hill is a second type of wall composed of large quadrangular blocks laid in more or less horizontal courses; it dates from the 7th c. B.C. On the S slope and at the SE corner are remains of two towers; the masonry here is polygonal and very workmanlike, the stones being laid on one or two courses of wide, flat rectangular blocks. It possibly dates from the end of the 6th or beginning of the 5th c. A fourth type of wall, of which only the foundations remain, was made of blocks of crumbly red or yellow limestone (tower near the SW corner). To the W, 100 m from the NW corner, was a gate 3.50 m wide. Built in the 4th c., this rampart was razed by the Romans in 171 B.C. On its surface can be seen significant traces of an Imperial or Byzantine wall made of small rocks bonded with mortar.
At the very top of the acropolis, excavations have uncovered (1926-30) a Temple of Athena surrounded by a peribolos wall, a large building, and the passageway that served both; everything had been razed, no doubt in 171 B.C. The temple, which was built in the 6th c., was distyle in antis; it was of the archaic elongated shape (7.10 x 18 m) and open to the E. Several regular courses of limestone have been preserved, on poros foundations. Fragments of poros columns and some architectural terracottas were found to the E. Along the N wall are the foundations of an earlier temple (7th c.?). The peribolos wall, which is rectilinear to the S (36 m) and a flat semicircle to the N, is of fine polygonal masonry laid in horizontal courses. To the S of the temple is a large building (21 m N-S, 8.90 m E-W) with polygonal walls of the same type, dressed on both sides. Two doorways opened in the E wall. Inside the building four wooden pillars on square stone bases supported the roof. Its purpose is unknown. A large store of vases, lamps, and terracottas at the W foot of the peribolos shows that the Temple of Athena was used from the 6th to the beginning of the 2d c. B.C. A small necropolis, SE of the acropolis, provides evidence that the site was occupied in Roman times.
E of Haliartos, on the chain dividing Lake Kopais from the Teneric Plain, was the very ancient Temple of Poseidon Onchestios; it was the center of the Boiotian Confederacy from 338 to 146. (P. ROESCH)
Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haliartus
Wikidata ID: Q359627
Trismegistos Geo: 33349
Manto: 9651956
DARE: 22834

Info: Princeton Encyclopedia

Author, TitleTextDate
Author, TitleTextDate
Homer, Iliad§2.500  and Thisbe, the haunt of doves; that dwelt in Coroneia and grassy Haliartus, and that held Plataea and dwelt in Glisas; -1000
Hesiod, Fragments§CW.F28  of Byzantium: Onchestus: a grove. It is situate in the country of Haliartus and was founded by Onchestus the Boeotian, as Hesiod says. -1000
Homeric Hymn to Apollo§239  it, O worker from afar, you passed many-towered Ocalea and reached grassy Haliartus . -1000
Callimachus, Hymn on the Bath of Pallas§57  she drave her steeds towards ancient Thespiae or towards Coroneia or to Haliartus, passing through the tilled fields of the Boeotians — or toward -1000
Callimachus, Aetia (fragments)§F43b.1  wanted to know this also—for truly my amazement was encouraged— Why does Haliartus, the city of Cadmus near the water of Cissusa, celebrate the -1000
Statius, Thebaid§7.243  with the waters loved of Hecate, and they on whose young wheat Haliartos looks jealously, o'ergrowing the glad cornlands with too abundant grass. Unfashioned tree-trunks -1000
D Scholia to the Iliad§23.346  {“better, stouter”} because it was the best. Copreus, who was ruler of Haliartos in Boiotia, received this horse as a gift from Poseidon. He, in -1000
Nonnus, Dionysiaca§4.331  footstep on Tanagra bottom; and passing from Coroneia to the soil of Haliartos, he came near to the city of Thespiai, and Plataiai in -1000
Nonnus, Dionysiaca§13.53  later days; and the city of Thespiae and deepsloping Plataiai and moist Haliartos, separated from Helicon by the stream of a mountain river between; -1000
Nepos, Life of Lysander§3  some auxiliary troops to the Orchomenians, and killed by the Thebans at Haliartus . How just was the decision regarding him, the speech was a -500
Pausanias, Description of Greece§3.5.3  any further delay entered Boeotia and began assaults upon the wall of Haliartus, the citizens of which refused to revolt from Thebes. Already a -475
Pausanias, Description of Greece§3.5.5  took up for burial those who had fallen under the wall of Haliartus . The Lacedemonians disapproved of this decision, but the following reason leads -475
Thucydides, Peloponnesian War§4.93  were the Thebans and those of their province, in the center the Haliartians, Coronaeans, Copaeans, and the other people around the lake, and on -424
Hellenica Oxyrhynchia§16.3  two Boeotarchs; Thespiae with Eutresis and Thisbae provided two; Tanagra one; and Haliartus, Lebadea and Coronea provided another whom each of the cities sent -400
Diodorus Siculus, Library 8-40§14.81.2  war, but at the time they took the field alone and found Haliartus under siege by Lysander and the Phocians. In the battle which followed -396
Xenophon, Hellenika§3.5.6  the ban and sent Lysander to Phocis with orders to report at Haliartus, bringing with him the Phocians themselves and also the Oitaeans, Heracleots, [2 hits] -395
Xenophon, Hellenika§3.5.17  army from Phocis, Orchomenus, and the places in that region, arrived at Haliartus before Pausanias. -395
Xenophon, Hellenika§3.5.18  the army from Lacedemon, but went up to the wall of the Haliartians with the troops which he had. And at first he tried to -395
Xenophon, Hellenika§3.5.19  beside the wall; and a trophy stands at the gates of the Haliartians . Now when Lysander had been killed and his troops were fleeing -395
Xenophon, Hellenika§3.5.25  to trial for his life. He was charged with having arrived at Haliartus later than Lysander, though he had agreed to reach there on the -395
Plutarch, Life of Lysander§Lys.28.2  Pausanias, bidding him move from Plataea and join forces with him at Haliartus, and promising that he himself would be before the walls of [2 hits] -395
Plutarch, Life of Lysander§Lys.28.3  they themselves set out early in the night, and succeeded in reaching Haliartus a little before Lysander, and a considerable part of them entered the -395
Plutarch, Life of Lysander§Lys.28.4  And not far away the Cretan storax-shrub grows in profusion, which the Haliartans regard as a proof that Rhadamanthus once dwelt there; and they show -395
Plutarch, Life of Lysander§Lys.28.5  the Thebans inside the city, drawn up in battle array with the Haliartans, kept quiet for some time; when, however, they saw Lysander with -395
Plutarch, Life of Lysander§Lys.29.1  to Thespiae, and putting his army in battle array, he came to Haliartus . Thrasybulus also came from Thebes, leading his Athenians. But when Pausanias -395
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