synoecism การใช้
- According to Strabo, Boibe participated in the 3rd century BC synoecism of Demetrias.
- In similar fashion there was also considerable overlap between the concepts of synoecism and " sympoliteia ".
- In the late 4th century BC, Pyrasos was joined ( synoecism ) with the neighbouring cities of Phylake and Phthiotic Thebes.
- Claude Nicolet traces the first word and concept for the citizen at Rome to the first known instance resulting from the synoecism of Romans and Sabines presented in the legends of the Roman Kingdom.
- In ca . 310 BCE Antigonus I Monophthalmus founded the city of Antigonia Troas ( after 301 BCE renamed Alexandria Troas ) as a synoecism of the surrounding cities of the Troad, including Neandreia.
- A . J . Graham thinks it was plausible that the number of refugees was large enough for some kind of synoecism to have occurred between the Poseidonians and the Sybarites, possibly in the form of a sympolity.
- Already in Classical times, before their synoecism and creation of the single Rhodian state in 408 BC, the three cities of Rhodes, Lindos, Ialyssos, and Kameiros, separately possessed territory on the mainland of Asia Minor.
- From Lysimachus it passed to Seleucus I Nicator, whose son Antiochus I Soter, seeing its geographical importance, refounded it on a more open site as Nysa, a new city constituted by the synoecism of three separate villages ."
- The settlement at Hamaxitus appears to have survived at least until the early Roman period following its synoecism with Alexandreia Troas ( the city had been renamed from Antigoneia Troas following the death of Antigonus at the Battle of Ipsus in 301 BC ).
- The urbanisation process in Archaic Greece known as " synoecism " & ndash; the amalgamation of several small settlements into a single urban centre & ndash; took place in much of Greece in the eighth century BC . Both Athens and Argos, for instance, began to coalesce into single settlements around the end of that century.
- Synoecism is the result of a few major factors, mainly an increase in population density of adjacent settlements, with an incorporation proposed for economic, political or ideological advantages, such as the synoecism of the communities of Attica into Athens, or by imposition of a ruling power, such as the synoecism of Messenia into the newly built city of Messene.
- Synoecism is the result of a few major factors, mainly an increase in population density of adjacent settlements, with an incorporation proposed for economic, political or ideological advantages, such as the synoecism of the communities of Attica into Athens, or by imposition of a ruling power, such as the synoecism of Messenia into the newly built city of Messene.
- Synoecism is the result of a few major factors, mainly an increase in population density of adjacent settlements, with an incorporation proposed for economic, political or ideological advantages, such as the synoecism of the communities of Attica into Athens, or by imposition of a ruling power, such as the synoecism of Messenia into the newly built city of Messene.
- The fame of Apollo Smintheus only increased following the synoecism, which rebuilt the temple, created a new festival in the god's honour, and featured Apollo Smintheus on its coins until the mid-3rd century AD . The Smintheum continued to appear on Roman and early mediaeval itineraries such as the " Tabula Peutingeriana " ( 4th or 5th century ) and the " Ravenna Cosmography " ( 7th or 8th century ).
- When members of the state went forth to found a new colony they took with them a brand from the Prytaneum altar to kindle the new fire in the colony; the fatherless daughters of Aristides, who were regarded as children of the state at Athens, were married from the Prytaneum as from their home; Thucydides informs us that in the Synoecism of Theseus the Prytanea of all the separate communities were joined in the central Prytaneum of Athens as a symbol of the union; foreign ambassadors and citizens who had deserved especially well of the state were entertained in the Prytaneum as public guests.