Serraepolis

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Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Serraepolis (Greek: Σερραίπολις) was an ancient city in Asia Minor, in coastal Cilicia, on the lower course of river Pyramos. It was also known under the names Serretilis, Ser(r)opolis, Serrai kome and Siris, as well as Kassipolis by Pliny.

It was a colony from eastern Macedonia whose metropolis was Siris (modern Serres), and after which it was named. It was located 150 stadia from another Macedonian colony called Aegeae (modern Yumurtalık) and 250 stadia from Antioch (modern Antakya). Although the exact foundation time of the city is unknown, it would be safe to assume that it was either established by refugees from Paeonia, forcibly resettled by the Persian general Megabazus in 486 B.C., or established during the Hellenistic period by colonists from Siris that followed Alexander the Great and the Seleucids.

In place of the ancient Greek city today lies the modern city Sirintilinin Çiftlik in southeastern Turkey.

Sources

  • The Great Greek Encyclopedia.
  • Nea Hellas by Tryfon Evangelidis, Athens 1913, D.G.Efstratiou and D.Delis.
  • Κλαυδίου Πτολεμαίου γεωγραφική υφήγησις by Athanassios Aggelopoulos, publ. Eleftheri skepsis.