Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Abbreviations
- The Tradition of the Ionian Colonisation of Asia Minor: Remarks on the Sources
- Greeks and non-Greeks in the City of Emporion and the Construction of Their Different Identities
- Seleukid Settlements: Between Ethnic Identity and Mobility
- Ptolemaic Foundations in Asia Minor and the Aegean as the Lagids' Political Tool
- Die städtischen Eliten der Kolonien der syrischen Tetrapolis zwischen Seleukiden, Armeniern, Parthern und Römern
- Coloniam deducere. Colonisation as an Instrument of the Roman Policy of Domination in Italy in the 3rd and 2nd Centuries BC, as Illustrated by Settlements in the Ager Gallicus and Picenum
- Corinth after 44 BC: Ethnical and Cultural Changes
- Herulian Settlements in Byzantium under Emperors Anastasius and Justinian
- “ELECTRUM” – VOLUMES PUBLISHED
The Tradition of the Ionian Colonisation of Asia Minor: Remarks on the Sources
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 December 2014
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Abbreviations
- The Tradition of the Ionian Colonisation of Asia Minor: Remarks on the Sources
- Greeks and non-Greeks in the City of Emporion and the Construction of Their Different Identities
- Seleukid Settlements: Between Ethnic Identity and Mobility
- Ptolemaic Foundations in Asia Minor and the Aegean as the Lagids' Political Tool
- Die städtischen Eliten der Kolonien der syrischen Tetrapolis zwischen Seleukiden, Armeniern, Parthern und Römern
- Coloniam deducere. Colonisation as an Instrument of the Roman Policy of Domination in Italy in the 3rd and 2nd Centuries BC, as Illustrated by Settlements in the Ager Gallicus and Picenum
- Corinth after 44 BC: Ethnical and Cultural Changes
- Herulian Settlements in Byzantium under Emperors Anastasius and Justinian
- “ELECTRUM” – VOLUMES PUBLISHED
Summary
Atheniensium res gestae,
sicuti ego aestumo, satis amplae magnificaeque fuere,
verum aliquanto minores tamen quam fama feruntur.
Sed quia provenere ibi scriptorum magna ingenia,
per terrarum orbem Atheniensium facta pro maxumis celebrantur.
Sallustius, Bellum Catilinae 8Abstract: This article discusses the tradition of the Ionian colonisation preserved in ancient literary sources. The author focuses on the time and circumstances in which the view that the Athenians were responsible for the Ionian colonisation emerged. He also examines whether there is any support in the sources for the opinion expressed by some historians that such a belief was already strong in the Archaic period.
Key words: colonisation, Ionia, Athens, Euripides, Thucydides, Herodotus.
Ionian migration is a familiar term in historiography. Certainly, there is an ongoing debate about the extent to which accounts about the Ionians' arrival from Attica in Asia Minor reflect the actual events at the turn of the 1st millennium BC. However, it is generally accepted that as early as the 6th century BC the myth of the Ionian migration played a significant role in forming a bond between Athens and the Greek cities in Asia Minor. This paper is an attempt to critically re-examine the problem. We will start our examination by quoting a fragment of the Compendium of Roman History by Velleius Paterculus, who wrote at the turn of the eras:
Subsequenti tempore magna vis Graecae iuventutis, abundantia virium, sedes quaeritans in Asiam se effudit. […]
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Colonization in the Ancient World , pp. 9 - 22Publisher: Jagiellonian University PressPrint publication year: 2013