The Herodotus Encyclopedia. Группа авторов

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1995. “Abdera, Maroneia, Ainos und der Odrysenstaat.” Tekmeria 1: 136–72.

      ALISON LANSKI

       University of Notre Dame

      A region on the northeastern coast of the ISLAND of THASOS (BA 51 D3). Herodotus writes that he saw the GOLD mines between Aenyra and COENYRA (probably on Mt. Hypsarion: cf. Müller I, 108–17), which had been opened by the PHOENICIANS and contributed greatly to Thasos’ WEALTH (6.47.2). Aenyra appears on a fifth‐century BCE Thasian inscription indicating distances around the island, and probably designated the area around modern Potamia (Salviat and Servais 1964, 276–84; Graham 1978, 88–89).

      SEE ALSO: Epigraphy; Mining; Scaptesyle

      REFERENCES

      1 Graham, A. J. 1978. “The Foundation of Thasos.” ABSA 73: 61–98.

      2 Salviat, François, and Jean Servais. 1964. “Stèle indicatrice thasienne trouvée au sanctuaire d’Aliki.” BCH 88.1: 267–87.

      JEREMY LABUFF

       Northern Arizona University

      The closest that Herodotus comes to acknowledging the tradition of an Aeolian MIGRATION from mainland Greece is at 7.176.4, where he calls Thessaly the “Aeolian land.” Apollodorus (Bibl. 1.50.7–9) reports that Thessaly was given to AEOLUS to rule over by HELLEN. This stands in stark contrast to the Boeotian migration tradition, which is at least as early as PINDAR. He refers to a colonizing band of Aeolians from Boeotia led by ORESTES (Nem. 11.34; cf. Hellanicus (BNJ 4 F32), Demon (BNJ 327 F20), Strabo (13.1.3/C582), and Pausanias (3.2.1)). Herodotus, however, sees the Aeolians as former PELASGIANS (7.95.1) and seems to reject the tradition that saw the Pelasgians as displaced by Boeotian Aeolians (Diod. Sic. 5.81; Strabo 13.3.3/C621). Instead, his view seems to be that Thessalian Pelasgians migrated to Asia Minor, either before or after becoming Aeolian Greeks (cf. Hes. F9 M‐W). In this version, was Boeotia a tertiary Aeolian settlement, receiving colonists from Asia Minor such as Hesiod’s father?

      The paucity of detail in discussing Aeolia as compared to Herodotus’ much more extensive treatment of the Ionians only underscores his view that the Aeolians were of secondary historical importance to their southern neighbors. His habit is to place the Ionians first when mentioning both groups, and he stresses the minor role of the Aeolians in the founding of the HELLENION at NAUCRATIS (2.178.2) and in the decision to guard the bridge at the ISTER during DARIUS I’s Scythian campaign (4.138.2). In a few places, Herodotus even subsumes them into the term “Ionians,” for example when the Spartans refuse to help the Ionians against CYRUS (II), though the envoys have just been identified as including Aeolians (1.152). Thus, the reader may suspect that Herodotus is a useful source on the Aeolians only insofar as they were associated (or contrasted) with the Ionians, for example, the fourteen passing references to CONQUEST or control by the Lydian and Persian empires (1.6.2, 26.2, 28, 141.1, 171.1; 2.1.1; 3.1.1, 90.1; 4.89.1; 5.123; 6.98.1; 7.9.α.1, 95.1), or when he tells us that both peoples shared the custom of consulting the ORACLE at BRANCHIDAE (1.157.3). Despite the “Ionian” perspective of Herodotus’ account of the Aeolians, scholarly consensus has come to take as fact Beloch’s hypothesis (1912, I.1: 140) that an Aeolian League existed with a religious center at Gryneia. There is no ancient evidence to support this proposal.

      SEE ALSO: Boeotians; Ethnicity; Hellas

      REFERENCES

      1 Beloch, Karl Julius. 1912. Griechische Geschichte. 2nd edition, 4 vols. Strasbourg: Trübner.

      2 Hall, Jonathan M. 2002. Hellenicity: Between Ethnicity and Culture. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

      3 Hertel, D. 2007. “Die aiolische Seidlungsraum (Aiolis) am Übergang von der Bronze‐ zur Eisenzeit.” In Frühes Ionien: Eine Bestandsaufnahme, edited by J. Cobet, V. von Graeve, W.‐D. Niemeier, and K. Zimmermann, 97–122. Mainz: Philipp von Zabern.

      4 Parker, H. N. 2008. “The Linguistic Case for the Aiolian Migration Reconsidered.” Hesperia 77.3: 431–64.

      5 Rose, C. B. 2008. “Separating Fact from Fiction in the Aiolian Migration.” Hesperia 77.3: 399–430.

      FURTHER READING

      1 Bérard, J. 1959. “La migration éolienne.” RA 1: 1–28.

      2 Cook, J. M. 1975. “Aeolic Settlement in Lesbos and the Adjacent Coastlands.” In CAH3 II.2, 776–82.

      CHRISTOPHER BARON

       University of Notre Dame

      SEE ALSO: Ethnicity

      REFERENCE

      1 McInerney, Jeremy. 1999. The Folds of Parnassos: Land and Ethnicity in Ancient Phokis. Austin: University of Texas Press.

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