2022-09-04T09:42:08-04:00
Ἀφροδίσιον
37.8267775125
21.9036374948
Aphrodision
Aphrodision.
Paus. (Spiro: Perseus) 8.25.1
BAtlas 58 B2 Aphrodision M.
Barrington Atlas: BAtlas 58 B2 Aphrodision M.
Aphrodision (mountain)
Richard Talbert
Aphrodision (mountain)
Aphrodision.
2022-09-04T09:37:34-04:00
POLYGON ((21.9622265186910113 37.8170222332874459, 21.9512809980642487 37.8260641851096011, 21.9408113696385385 37.8308231071212617, 21.9160649751779602 37.8379614901387527, 21.9094024843616921 37.8384373823399187, 21.8932221495219324 37.8389132745411416, 21.8837043054986111 37.8374855979377003, 21.8741864614752899 37.8351061369318700, 21.8656204018543576 37.8322507837248168, 21.8603855876414741 37.8298713227189864, 21.8427775761984435 37.8203534786956652, 21.9622265186910113 37.8170222332874459))
{"type": "Polygon", "coordinates": [[[21.96222651869101, 37.817022233287446], [21.95128099806425, 37.8260641851096], [21.94081136963854, 37.83082310712126], [21.91606497517796, 37.83796149013875], [21.909402484361692, 37.83843738233992], [21.893222149521932, 37.83891327454114], [21.88370430549861, 37.8374855979377], [21.87418646147529, 37.83510613693187], [21.865620401854358, 37.83225078372482], [21.860385587641474, 37.82987132271899], [21.842777576198444, 37.820353478695665], [21.96222651869101, 37.817022233287446]]]}
Centerline/arc of label location used on the Barrington Atlas map for this feature
Pleiades
BAtlas Map Label Location
Richard Talbert
BAtlas 58 B2 Aphrodision
AWMC Geodata: Regional Name Linework Aphrodision M.
-30
Ἀφροδίσιον
2022-09-04T16:23:47-04:00
Aphrodision
Roman, early Empire (30 BC-AD 300)
The Roman period (i.e., the early Roman Empire) in Greek and Roman history. For the purposes of Pleiades, this period is said to begin in the year 30 before the birth of Christ and to end in the year 300 after the birth of Christ. [[-30, 300]]
Paus. (Spiro: Perseus) 8.25.1
Barrington Atlas: BAtlas 58 B2 Aphrodision M.
Aphrodision
300
mountain
A mountain as defined by the Getty Art and Architecture Thesaurus: Prominent landforms rising considerably above the surrounding area, typically having steep slopes, a sharp summit area, and large mass. Mountains rarely occur individually, and in most cases, are found in ranges, chains, or systems.