An ancient town of Arcadia that was said to have been founded by Thyraeus, a son of Lycaon.
Thyraion
Θυραῖόν
dare:feature=settlement
dare:major=0
dare:ancient=1
Thyraion
ToposText Thyraion (Arkadia)
Wikidata Q7799665: Thyraion
Paus. (Spiro: Perseus) 8.35.7
Barrington Atlas: BAtlas 58 C2 Thyraion
Palamari?
An ancient town of Arcadia that was said to have been founded by Thyraeus, a son of Lycaon.
2021-11-14T23:31:18-04:00
The Archaic period in Greek and Roman history. For the purposes of Pleiades, this period is seen to begin in the year 750 and end in the year 550 before the birth of Christ. [[-750, -550]]
Archaic (Greco-Roman; 750-550 BCE/BC)
The Classical period in Greek and Roman history. For the purposes of Pleiades, this period is said to begin in the year 550 and end in the year 330 before the birth of Christ. [[-550, -330]]
Classical (Greco-Roman; 550 BC-330 BC)
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]]
Roman, early Empire (30 BC-AD 300)
The Hellenistic period in Greek history and the middle-to-late Republican period in Roman history. For the purposes of Pleiades, this period is said to begin in the year 330 and end in the year 30 before the birth of Christ. [[-330, -30]]
Hellenistic Greek, Roman Republic (330 BC-30 BC)
Θυραῖόν
300
Paus. (Spiro: Perseus) 8.35.7
Thyraion
Barrington Atlas: BAtlas 58 C2 Thyraion
Thyraion
2021-11-14T23:26:52-04:00
-750
-30
DARMC 9558
2012-02-14T21:33:56-04:00
DARMC OBJECTID: 9558
DARMC location 9558
1:500,000 scale representative point location digitized from the Barrington Atlas of the Greek and Roman World by the Digital Atlas of Roman and Medieval Civilizations project at Harvard University.
-750
Equivalent to "inhabited place" as defined by the Getty Art and Architecture Thesaurus: General term for places or areas occupied, modified, or planned to be inhabited by communities of human populations and that contain enough societal functions to be relatively self-sufficient. They are characterized by inhabitants living in neighboring sets of living quarters and by the place having a proper name or a locally recognized status.
settlement