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CHAPTER XXXIV.
ASIATIC IONIANS.
There existed at the commencement of historical Greece
in 776 b.c., besides the Ionians in Attica and
the Cyclades, twelve Ionian cities of note on or near the coast of Asia
Minor, besides a few others less important. Enumerated from south
to north, they stand—Miletus, Myus, Priene,
Samos, Ephesus, Kolophon, Lebedus, Teos,
Erythrae, Chios, Klazomenae, Phocaea.
That these cities, the great ornament of the Ionic
name, were founded by emigrants from European Greece, there is no reason
to doubt. How or when they were founded, we have no history to tell
us: the legend which has already been set forth in a preceding chapter,
gives us a great event called the Ionic migration, referred by chronologists
to one special year, 140 years after the Trojan war. This massive
grouping belongs to the character of legend—the Aeolic and Ionic
emigrations, as well as the Dorian conquest of Peloponnesus, are
each invested with unity and imprinted upon the imagination as the results
of a single great impulse. But such is not the character of the historical
colonies : when we come to relate the Italian and Sicilian emigrations, it will
appear that each colony has its own separate nativity and causes of
existence. In the case of the Ionic emigration, this large scale of
legendary conception is more than usually conspicuous, since to that event is
ascribed the foundation or re-peopling both of the Cyclades and of the Asiatic
Ionian cities.
Euripides treats Ion, the son of Kreusa by Apollo, as the planter of these latter cities: but the more current form of
the legend assigns that honour to the sons of Kodrus,
two of whom are especially named, corresponding to the two
greatest of the ten continental Ionic cities: Androclus as founder of
Ephesus, Neileus of Miletus. These two towns are
both described as founded directly from Athens. The others seem rather to
be separate settlements, neither consisting of Athenians, nor emanating
from Athens, but adopting the characteristic Ionic festival of the Apaturia and (in part at least) the Ionic tribes—and
receiving princes from the Kodrid families at
Ephesus or Miletus, as a condition of being admitted into the Pan-Ionic
confederate festival. The poet Mimnermus ascribed
the foundation of his native city Kolophon to emigrants from Pylus in Peloponnesus, under Andaemon: Teos
was settled by Minyae of Orchomenus, under Athamas: Klazomenae by settlers
from Kleonae and Phlius,
Phocaea by Phocians, Priene in large portion by Kadmeians from Thebes. And with regard to the powerful islands of Chios and Samos,
it does not appear that their native authors—the Chian poet Ion or
the Samian poet Asius—ascribed to them a
population emanating from Athens: Pausanias could not make out from the poems
of Ion how it happened that Chios came to form a part of the Ionic
federation. Herodotus especially dwells upon the number of Grecian tribes and
races who contributed to supply the population of the twelve Ionic
cities—Minyae from Orchomenus, Kadmeians, Dryopians, Phocians, Molossians, Arkadian Pelasgians,
Dorians from Epidaurus, and “several other sections” of Greeks. Moreover
he particularly singles out the Milesians, as claiming for themselves the
truest Ionic blood, and as having started from the Prytaneium at Athens; thus plainly implying his belief that the majority at least of
the remaining settlers did not take their departure from the same hearth.
But the most striking information which Herodotus
conveys to us is, the difference of language or dialect which marked these
twelve cities. Miletus, Myos and Priene, all situated on the soil of the Karians, had one dialect: Ephesus, Kolophon, Lebedus, Teos, Klazomenae and Phocaea,
had a dialect common to all, but distinct from that of the
three preceding: Chios and Erythrae exhibited a third dialect, and Samos
by itself a fourth. Nor does the historian content himself with simply
noting such quadruple variety of speech; he employs very strong terms
to express the degree of dissimilarity1. The testimony of Herodotus as to
these dialects is of course indisputable.
Instead of one great Ionic emigration, then, the ionic
cities statements above-cited conduct us rather to the folded
by supposition of many separate and successive settlements, formed by
Greeks of different sections, mingling with and modified by pre-existing
Lydians and Karians, and subsequently allying
themselves with Miletus and Ephesus into the so-called Ionic Amphictyony.
As a condition of this union, they are induced to adopt among their
chiefs, princes of the Kodrid gens or family;
who are called sons of Kodrus, but who are not
for that reason to be supposed necessarily contemporary with Androclus or Neileus.
The account of Herodotus shows us that these colonies
were composed of mixed sections of Greeks, —an important circumstance in
estimating their character. Such was usually the case more or less in
respect to all emigrations, and hence the establishments thus planted
contracted at once, generally speaking, both more activity and more instability
than was seen among those Greeks who remained at home, and among whom the
old habitual routine had not been counterworked by any marked change of
place or of social relations. For in a new colony it became necessary to
adopt fresh classifications of the citizens, to range them together in
fresh military and civil divisions, and to adopt new characteristic
sacrifices and religious ceremonies as bonds of union among all the
citizens conjointly. At the first outset of a colony, moreover, there were
inevitable difficulties to be surmounted which imposed upon its leading men the
necessity of energy and forethought—more especially in regard to maritime
affairs, on which not only their connection with the countrymen whom
they had left behind, but also their means of
establishing advantageous relations with the population of
the interior, depended. At the same time, the new arrangements
indispensable among the colonists were far from working always
harmoniously: dissension and partial secessions were not unfrequent occurrences. And what has been called the
mobility of the Ionic race, as compared with the Doric, is to be ascribed in a
great measure to this mixture of races and external stimulus arising out of
expatriation; for there is no trace of it in Attica anterior to Solon; and on
the other hand, the Doric colonies of Corcyra and Syracuse exhibit a
population not less excitable than the Ionic towns generally1,
and much more so than the Ionic colony of Massalia. The remarkable
commercial enterprise, which will be seen to characterise Miletus, Samos
and Phocaea, belongs but little to anything connected with the Ionic
temperament.
All the Ionic towns, except Klazomenae and Phocaea, are represented to have been founded on some pre-existing
settlements of Karians, Lelegians, Cretans,
Lydians, or Pelasgians. In some cases these previous inhabitants were
overcome, slain, or expelled; in others they were accepted as fellow residents,
and the Grecian cities thus established acquired a considerable tinge of
Asiatic customs and feelings. What is related by Herodotus respecting the
first establishment of Neileus and his emigrants
at Miletus is in this point of view remarkable. They took out with them no
women from Athens (the historian says), but found wives in the Karian
women of the place, whose husbands and fathers they overcame and put to death;
and the women, thus violently seized, manifested their repugnance by
taking a solemn oath among themselves that they would never eat with their
new husbands, nor ever call them by their personal names. This same
pledge they imposed upon their daughters; but how long the practice
lasted, we are not informed: it rather seems from the language of the
historian that traces of it were visible even in his day in the family
customs of the Milesians. The population of this greatest of the
Ionic towns must thus have been half of Karian breed. It is to be
presumed that what is true of Neileus and his
companions would be found true also respecting most of the maritime colonies of
Greece, and that the vessels which took them out would be scantily
provided with women. But on this point, unfortunately, we are left without
information.
The worship of Apollo Didymaeus,
at Branchida near Miletus—that of Artemis, near
Ephesus—and that of the Apollo Klarius, near Kolophon—seems to
have existed among the native Asiatic population before the establishment
of either of these three cities. To maintain these pre-existing local
rites was not less congenial to the feelings, than beneficial to the
interests, of the Greeks: all the three establishments acquired increased
celebrity under Ionic administration, and contributed in their
turn to the prosperity of the towns to which they were attached. Miletus, Myus, and Priene were situated on or near the
productive plain of the river Maeander; while Ephesus was in like
manner planted near the mouth of the Kaister,
thus immediately communicating with the productive breadth of land
separating Mount Tmolus on the north from Mount Messogis on the south, through which that river runs: Kolophon is only a very few
miles north of the same river. Possessing the best means of
communication with the interior, these three towns seem to have thriven
with greater rapidity than the rest; and they, together with the
neighbouring island of Samos, constituted in early times the strength of
the Pan-Ionic Amphictyony. The situation of the sacred precinct of Poseidon
(where this festival was celebrated), on the north side of the promontory of
Mykale, near Priene, and between Ephesus and Miletus, seems to show
that these towns formed the primitive centre to which the other
Ionian settlements became gradually aggregated. For it was by no means a
centrical site with reference to all the twelve; so that Thales of Miletus—who
at a subsequent period recommended a more intimate political union between
the twelve Ionic towns, and the establishment of a common government
to manage their collective affairs—indicated Thales and not Priene, as the
suitable place for it. Moreover it seems that the Pan-Ionic festival,
though still formally continued, had lost its importance before the time of
Thucydides, and had become practically superseded by the more
splendid festival of the Ephesia, near Ephesus, where the cities of
Ionia found a more attractive place of meeting.
An island close adjoining to the coast, or an outlying
tongue of land connected with the continent by a narrow isthmus, and presenting
some hill sufficient for an acropolis, seems to have been considered as the
most favourable situation for Grecian colonial settlement. To one or other
of these descriptions most of the Ionic cities conform. The city of Miletus
at the height of its power had four separate harbours, formed probably by
the aid of the island of Lade and one or two islets which lay close
off against it: the Karian or Cretan establishment, which the Ionic colonists
found on their arrival and conquered, was situated on an
eminence overhanging the sea, and became afterwards known by the name
of Old Miletus, at a time when the new Ionic town had been extended down
to the water-side and rendered maritime. The territory of this
important city seems to have comprehended both the southern promontory
called Poseidium and the greater part of the
northern promontory of Mykale, reaching on both sides of the river Maeander:
the inconsiderable town of Myus on the southern bank
of the Maeander, an offset seemingly formed by the secession of some
Milesian malcontents under a member of the Neleid gens named Kydrelus, maintained for a long time
its autonomy, but was at length absorbed into the larger unity of Miletus;
its swampy territory having been rendered uninhabitable by a plague of gnats.
Pri6n6 acquired an importance greater than naturally belonged to it by its
immediate vicinity to the holy Pan-Ionic temple and its function of
administering the sacred rites—a dignity which it probably was only
permitted to enjoy in consequence of the jealousies of its greater neighbours
Miletus, Ephesus, and Samos. The territories of these Grecian
cities seem to have been interspersed with Karian villages, probably in
the condition of subjects.
It is rare to find a genuine Greek colony established
at any distance from the sea; but the two Asiatic towns called Magnesia form
exceptions to this position—one situated on the south side of
the Maeander, or rather on the river Lethaeus,
which runs into the Maeander; the other more northerly, adjoining to
the Aeolic Greeks, on the northern declivity of Mount Sipylus,
and near to the plain of the river Hermus. The settlement of
both these towns dates before the period of history: the tale which
we read affirms them to be settlements from the Magnates in Thessaly,
formed by emigrants who had first passed into Crete, under the orders of
the Delphian oracle, and next into Asia, where they are said to have
extricated the Ionic and Aeolic colonists, then recently arrived, from
a position of danger and calamity. By the side of this story, which
can neither be verified nor contradicted, it is proper to mention the opinion
of Niebuhr, that both these towns of Magnesia are remnants of a
primitive Pelasgic population, akin to, but not
emigrants from, the Magnates of Thessaly—Pelasgians whom he supposes to have
occupied both the valley of the Hermus and that of the Kaister,
anterior to the Aeolic and Ionic migrations. In support of this opinion, it may
be stated that there were towns bearing the Pelasgic name of Larissa, both near the Hermus and near the Maeander: Menekrates of Elaea considered the Pelasgians as having once
occupied most part of that coast; and O. Muller even conceives the
Tyrrhenians to have been Pelasgians from Tyrrha,
a town in the interior of Lydia south of Tmolus. The point is one
upon which we have not sufficient evidence to advance beyond
conjecture.
Of the Ionic towns, with which our real knowledge of
Asia Minor begins, Miletus was the most powerful; and its celebrity was derived
not merely from its own wealth and population, but also from the
extraordinary number of its colonies, established principally in the Propontis
and Euxine, and amounting, as we are told by some authors, to not
less than 75 or 80. Respecting these colonies I shall speak presently, in
treating of the general colonial expansion of Greece during the eighth
and seventh centuries b.c.: at present it is
sufficient to notice, that the islands of Ikarus and Lerus, not far from Samos and the Ionic
coast generally, were among the places planted with Milesian settlers.
The colonization of Ephesus by Androclus appears to be
connected with the Ionic occupation of Samos, so far as the confused
statements which we find enable us to discern. Androclus is said to have
lingered upon that island for a long time, until the oracle vouchsafed to
indicate to him what particular spot to occupy on the continent;
at length the indication was given, and he planted his colonists at
the fountain of Hypelaeon and on a portion of the
hill of Koressus, within a short distance of the
temple and sanctuary of Artemis; whose immediate inhabitants he respected and
received as brethren, while he drove away for the most part
the surrounding Lelegians and Lydians. The
population of the new town of Ephesus was divided into
three tribes,—the pre-existing inhabitants, or Ephesians proper, the Bennians, and the Euonymeis, so
named (we are told) from the deme Euonymus in Attica. So much did the
power of Androclus increase, that he was enabled to conquer Samos, and to
expel from it the prince Leogorus: of the
retiring Samians, a part are said to have gone to Samothrace and there
established themselves, while another portion acquired possession of Marathesium near
Ephesus, on the adjoining continent of Asia Minor, from whence, after a
short time, they recovered their island, compelling Androclus to return
to Ephesus. It seems, however, that in the compromise and treaty
which ensued, they yielded possession of Marathesium to Androklus, and confined themselves to Anaea,
a more southerly district farther removed from the Ephesian settlement,
and immediately opposite to the island of Samos. Androclus is said to have
perished in a battle fought for the defence of Priene, which town he had come
to aid against an attack of the Carians. His dead body was brought from
the field and buried near the gates of Ephesus, where the tomb was yet
shown during the days of Pausanias; but a sedition broke out
against his sons after him, and the malcontents strengthened their
party by inviting reinforcements from Teos and Karina. The struggle which
ensued terminated in the discontinuance of the kingly race and
the establishment of a republican government—the descendants of Androclus
being allowed to retain both considerable honorary privileges and the
hereditary priesthood of the Eleusinian Demeter. The newly-received
inhabitants were enrolled in two new tribes, making in all five tribes,
which appear to have existed throughout the historical times
at Ephesus. It appears too that a certain number of fugitive
proprietors from Samos found admission among the Ephesians and received
the freedom of the city; and the part of the city in which
they resided acquired the name of Samoma or Smyrna, by which name it
was still known in the time of the satirical poet Hipponax, about 530 b.c.
Such are the stories which we find respecting the
infancy of the Ionic Ephesus. The fact of its increase and of its considerable
acquisitions of territory, at expense the neighbouring Lydians, is at least
indisputable. It does not appear to have been ever very powerful or
enterprising at sea, and few maritime colonies owed their origin to its
citizens ; but its situation near the mouth and the fertile plain of the Kaister was favourable both to the multiplication of
its inland dependencies and to its trade with the interior. A despot named
Pythagoras is said to have subverted by stratagem the previous government
of the town, at some period before Cyrus, and to have exercised power for
a certain time with great cruelty. It is worthy of remark, that we find no
trace of the existence of the four Ionic tribes at Ephesus; and this, when
coupled with the fact that neither Ephesus nor Kolophon solemnised
the peculiar Ionic festival of the Apaturia, is one
among other indications that the Ephesian population had little community
of race with Athens, though the Oekist may have been of heroic
Athenian family. Guhl attempts to show, on mistaken grounds, that the
Greek settlers at Ephesus were mostly of Arkadian origin.
Kolophon, about fifteen miles north of Ephesus, and
divided from the territory of the latter by the precipitous mountain range
called Gallesium, though a member of the Pan-Ionic Amphictyony,
seems to have had no Ionic origin: it recognised neither an Athenian Oekist
nor Athenian inhabitants. The Colophonian poet Mimnermus tells us that the Oekist of the place was the Pylian Andraemon, and that the settlers were Pylians from Peloponnesus. “ We quitted (he says) Pylus,
the city of Neleus, and passed in our vessels to the much-desired
Asia. There, with the insolence of superior force, and employing from
the beginning cruel violence, we planted ourselves in the tempting Kolophon.”
This description of the primitive Colophonian settlers, given with
Homeric simplicity, forcibly illustrates the account given by Herodotus of
the proceedings of Neileus at Miletus. The
establishment of Andramon must have been effected by
force, and by the dispossession of previous inhabitants,
leaving probably their wives and daughters as a prey to the victors.
The city of Kolophon seems to have been situated about two miles inland,
but it had a fortified port called Notium, not
joined to it by long walls as the Peiraeus was to Athens, but completely
distinct. There were times in which this port served the Colophonians as a
refuge, when their upper town was assailed by Persians from the interior;
but the inhabitants of Notium occasionally manifested inclinations to act as a separate community, and
dissensions thus occurred between them and the people in Kolophon—so
difficult was it in the Greek mind to keep up a permanent feeling of
political amalgamation beyond the circle of the town walls.
It is much to be regretted that nothing beyond a few
lines of Mimnermus, and nothing at all of
the long poem of Xenophanes (composed seemingly near a century after Mimnermus) on the foundation of Colophon, has reached us.
The short statements of Pausanias omit all notice of that violence
which the native Colophonian poet so emphatically signalizes in his
ancestors: they are derived more from the temple legends of the adjoining Clarian
Apollo and from morsels of epic poetry referring to that holy place, which
connected itself with the worship of Apollo in Crete, at Delphi, and
at Thebes. The old Homeric poem, called Thebais,
reported that Manto, daughter of the Theban prophet Teiresias, had been
presented to Apollo at Delphi as a votive offering by the victorious
Epigoni: the god directed her to migrate to Asia, and she thus arrived at Clarus,
where she married the Cretan Rhakius. The
offspring of this marriage was the celebrated prophet Mopsus, whom
the Hesiodic epic described as having gained a victory in prophetic skill over Kalchas; the latter having come to Clarus after the Trojan
war in company with Amphilochus son of Amphiaraus. Such tales evince the
early importance of the temple and oracle of Apollo at Clarus, which
appears to have been in some sort an emanation from the great
sanctuary of Branchidae near Miletus; for we are told that the high priest
of Clarus was named by the Milesians. Pausanias states that Mopsus expelled the indigenous Carians, and established the
city of Kolophon; and that the Ionic settlers under Promethus and Damasichthon, sons of Codrus,
were admitted amicably as additional inhabitants: a story probably
emanating from the temple, and very different from that of the Colophonian
townsmen in the time of Mimnermus. It seems
evident that not only the Apollinic sanctuary at Clarus,
but also the analogous establishments on the south of Asia Minor at
Phaselis, Mallus, &c., bad their own
foundation legends, (apart from those of the various bands of
emigrant settlers,) in which they connected themselves by the best
thread which they could devise with the epic glories of Greece.
Passing along the Ionian coast in a north-westerly
direction from Colophon, we come first to the small but independent Ionic
settlement of Lebedus— &c. next, to Teos,
which occupies the southern face of a narrow isthmus, Klazomenae being placed on the northern: this isthmus, a low narrow valley of about
six miles across, forms the eastern boundary of a very considerable
peninsula, containing the mountainous and woody regions called Mimas
and Korykus. Teds is said to have been first
founded by Orchomenian Minyae under Athamas, and to have received afterwards
by consent various swarms of settlers, Orchomenians and others, under the Kodrid leaders Apoekus, Nauklus and Damasus. The
valuable Teian inscriptions published in the large collection of Boeckh, while they mention certain names and titles of
honour which connect themselves with this Orchomenian origin, reveal to us at the same time some particulars respecting
the internal distribution of the Teian citizens. The territory of the
town was distributed amongst a certain number of towers, to each of which
corresponded a symmory or section of the
citizens, having its common altar and sacred rites, and often its
heroic Eponymus. How many in number the tribes
of Teos were, we do not know: the name of the Geleontes,
one of the four old Ionic tribes, is preserved in an inscription; but the
rest, both as to names and number, are unknown. The symmories or tower-fellowships of Teos seem to be analogous to the phratries of
ancient Athens— forming each a factitious kindred, recognising
a common mythical ancestor, and bound together by a communion at once
religious and political. The individual name attached to each tower is in
some cases Asiatic rather than Hellenic, indicating in Teos the mixture not
merely of Ionic and Aeolic, but also of Carian or Lydian inhabitants, of
which Pausanias speaks. Gerrhaeidae or Cherraeidae, the port on the west side of the town of Teos,
had for its eponymous hero Geres the Boeotian, who was said to have
accompanied the Kodrids in their settlement.
The worship of Athene Polias at Erythrae may probably be traceable to Athens, and that of the Tyrian Herakles
(of which Pausanias recounts a singular legend) would seem to indicate an
inter-mixture of Phoenician inhabitants. But the close neighbourhood of
Erythrae to the island of Chios, and the marked analogy of dialect which
Herodotus attests between them, show that the elements of the population must
have been much the same in both. The Chian poet Ion mentioned the
establishment of Abantes from Euboea in his native island, under Amphiklus, intermixed with the preexisting Carians: Hektor,
the fourth descendant from Amphiklus, was said
to have incorporated this island in the Pan-Ionic Amphictyony. It is
to Pherecydes that we owe the mention of the name of Egertius, as having conducted a miscellaneous colony
into Chios; and it is through Egertius (though Ion,
the native poet, does not appear to have noticed him) that this
logographer made out the connection between the Chians and the
other group of Kodrid settlements. In Erythrae, Knopus or Kleopus is noted as the Kodrid Oekist, and as having procured for himself,
partly by force, partly by consent, the sovereignty of the preexisting
settlement of mixed inhabitants. The Erythraean historian Hippias recounted how Knopus had been
treacherously put to death on shipboard, by Ortyges and some other false adherents; who, obtaining some auxiliaries from the
Chian king Amphiklus, made themselves masters of
Erythrae and established in it an oppressive oligarchy. They maintained
the government, with a temper at once licentious and cruel, for some time,
admitting none but a chosen few of the population within the walls of
the town; until at length Hippotes the brother
of Knopus, arriving from without at the head of
some troops, found sufficient support from the discontents of the Erythraeans to enable him to overthrow the tyranny.
Overpowered in the midst of a public festival, Ortyges and his companions were put to death with cruel tortures; and
the same tortures were inflicted upon their innocent wives and
children—a degree of cruelty which would at no time have found place
amidst a community of European Greeks: even in the murderous party dissensions
of Corcyra during the Peloponnesian war, death was not aggravated
by preliminary tortures. Aristotle mentions the oligarchy of the Basilids as having existed in Erythrae, and as having been
overthrown by a democratical revolution, although prudently managed: to what
period this is to be referred we do not know.
Klazomenae is said to have been founded by a wandering party, either of Ionians or
of inhabitants from Kleonae and Phlius,
under Parphorus or Paralus; and Phocaea by a
band of Phocians under Philogenes and Damon.
This last-mentioned town was built at the end of a peninsula which formed
part of the territory of the Aeolic Kyme: the Kymaeans were induced to cede it amicably, and to
permit the building of the new town. The Phocaeans asked and obtained
permission to enrol themselves in the Pan-Ionic Amphictyony ; but the
permission is said to have been granted only on condition that
they should adopt members of the Kodrid family
as their Oekists; and they accordingly invited
from Erythrae and Teos three chiefs belonging to that family or gens—Deoetes, Periclus, and Abartus.
Smyrna, originally an Aeolic colony, established from Kyme, fell subsequently into the hands of the Ionians
of Kolophon. A party of exiles from the latter city, expelled during an
intestine dispute, were admitted by the Smyrnaeans into their
city—a favour which they repaid by shutting the gates and seizing the
place for themselves, at a moment when the Smyrnaeans had gone forth in a
body to celebrate a religious festival. The other Aeolic towns sent auxiliaries
for the purpose of re-establishing their dispossessed brethren; but they were
compelled to submit to an accommodation whereby the Ionians retained
possession of the town, restoring to the prior inhabitants all their moveables. These exiles were distributed as citizens
among the other Aeolic cities.
Smyrna after this became wholly Ionian; and the
inhabitants in later times, if we may judge by Aristides the rhetor,
appear to have forgotten the Aeolic origin of their town, though the fact
is attested both by Herodotus and by Mimnermus.
At what time the change took place, we do not know; but Smyrna
appears to have become Ionian before the celebration of the twenty-third
Olympiad, when Onomastus the Smyrnaean gained
the prize. Nor have we information as to the period at which the city
was received as a member into the Pan-Ionic Amphictyony, for the assertion of
Vitruvius is obviously inadmissible, that it was admitted at the
instance of Attalus king of Pergamus, in place of a previous town called
Melite, excluded by the rest for misbehaviour. As little can we
credit the statement of Strabo, that the city of Smyrna was destroyed
by the Lydian kings, and that the inhabitants were compelled to live in
dispersed villages until its restoration by Antigonus. A fragment of
Pindar, which speaks of “the elegant city of the Smyrnaeans,” indicates that it
must have existed in his time. The town of Erae, near Lebedus, though seemingly autonomous, was
not among the contributors to the Pan-Ionion: Myonnesus seems to have been a dependency of Teos, as Pygela and Marathesium were of Ephesus. Notium, after
its re-colonisation by the Athenians during the Peloponnesian war, seems
to have remained separate from and independent of Kolophon: at least
the two are noticed by Skylax as distinct towns.
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