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Thurii




Thurii – , situated on the Tarentine Gulf , within a short distance of the site of Sybaris , of which it may be considered as having taken the place. Its location is in the '' Frazione '' of Thurio , '' Comune '' of Corigliano Calabro , in the Province Of Cosenza , Calabria region, Italy .


HISTORY


Thurii was one of the latest of all the was more successful, and that people determined to send out a fresh colony, at the same time that they reinstated the settlers who had been lately expelled from thence. A body of Athenian colonists was accordingly sent out by Pericles , under the command of Lampon and Xenocritus ; but the number of Athenian citizens was small, the greater part of those who took part in the colony being collected from various parts of Greece . Among them were two celebrated names – Herodotus the historian, and the orator Lysias , both of whom appear to have formed part of the original colony. (Diod. xii. 10; Strabo vi. p. 263; Dionys. Lys. p. 453; Vit. X. Orat. p. 835; Plut. ''Peric.'' 11, Nic. 5.)

The new colonists at first established themselves on the site of the deserted Sybaris, but shortly afterwards removed (apparently in obedience to an oracle) to a spot at a short distance from thence, where there was a fountain named "Thuria", from whence the new city derived its name of Thurii. (Diod. ''l. c.''; Strab ''l. c.'') The foundation of Thurii is assigned by Diodorus to the year ), Achaean (from Achaea ), Elean (from Elea ), Boeotian (from Boeotia ), Amphictyonic (from Amphictyonis ), Dorian (from Doris ), Ionian (from Ionia ), Athenian (from Athens ), Euboean (from Euboea ), and Nesiotic (from the islands). (Diod. xii. 11.) The form of government was democratic, and the city is said to have enjoyed the advantage of a well-ordered system of laws; but the statement of Diodorus, who represents this as owing to the legislation of Charondas , and that lawgiver himself as a citizen of Thurii, is certainly erroneous. The city itself was laid out with great regularity, being divided by four broad streets or plateae, each of which was crossed in like manner by three others. (Diod. xii. 10.)

Very shortly after its foundation, Thurii became involved in a war with Tarentum (modern Taranto ). The subject of this was the possession of the fertile district of the Siritis , about 50 Km north of Thurii, to which the Athenians had a claim of long standing, which was naturally taken up by their colonists. The Spartan general, Cleandridas , who had been banished from Greece some years before, and taken up his abode at Thurii, became the general of the Thurians in this war, which, after various successes, was at length terminated by a compromise, both parties agreeing to the foundation of the new colony of Heracleia in the disputed territory. (Diod. xii. 23, 36, xiii. 106; Strab. vi. p. 264; Polyaen. Strat. ii. 10.)

Our knowledge of the history of Thurii is unfortunately very scanty and fragmentary. Fresh disputes arising between the Athenian citizens and the other colonists were at length allayed by the Oracle Of Delphi , which decided that the city had no other founder than Apollo . (Diod. xii. 35.) But the same difference appears again on occasion of the great Athenian Expedition to Sicily , when the city was divided into two parties, the one desirous of favoring and supporting the Athenians, the other opposed to them. The latter faction at first prevailed, so far that the Thurians observed the same neutrality towards the Athenian fleet under Nicias and Alcibiades as the other cities of Italy ( Thuc. vi. 44). Thurii was, in fact, the city where Alcibiades escaped his Athenian captors who were taking him home for trial.

But two years afterwards ( 413 BC ) the Athenian party had regained the ascendency; and when Demosthenes and Eurymedon touched at Thurii, the citizens afforded them every assistance, and even furnished an auxiliary force of 700 hoplites and 300 dartmen. (''Id.'' vii. 33, 35.) From this time we hear nothing of Thurii for a period of more than 20 years, though there is reason to believe that this was just the time of its greatest prosperity. In 390 BC we find that its territory was already beginning to suffer from the incursions of the Lucanians , a new and formidable enemy, for protection against whom all the cities of Magna Graecia had entered into a defensive league. But the Thurians were too impatient to wait for the support of their allies, and issued forth with an army of 14,000 foot and 1000 horse, with which they repulsed the attacks of the Lucanians; but having rashly followed them into their own territory, they were totally defeated, near Laüs , and above 10,000 of them cut to pieces (Diod. xiv. 101).

This defeat must have inflicted a severe blow on the prosperity of Thurii, while the continually increasing power of the Lucanians and Bruttians , in their immediate neighborhood would prevent them from quickly recovering from its effects. The city continued also to be on hostile, or at least unfriendly, terms with Dionysius Of Syracuse , and was in consequence chosen as a place of retirement or exile by his brother Leptines and his friend Philistus (Diod. xv. 7). The rise of the Bruttian people about 356 BC probably became the cause of the complete decline of Thurii, but the statement of Diodorus that the city was conquered by that people (xvi. 15) must be received with considerable doubt. It reappears in history at a later period, when Corinth ian soldiers en route to join Timoleon on his expedition to Syracuse are blockaded there by Carthaginian ships. At this point it is still an independent Greek city, though much fallen from its former greatness. No mention of it is found during the wars of Alexander Of Epirus in this part of Italy; but at a later period it was so hard pressed by the Lucanians that it had recourse to the alliance of Rome ; and a Roman army was sent to its relief under C. Fabricius . That general defeated the Lucanians, who had actually laid siege to the city, in a pitched battle, and by several other successes to a great extent broke their power, and thus relieved the Thurians from all immediate danger from that quarter. ( Livy ''Epit.'' xi.; Pliny xxxiv. 6. s. 15; Val. Max. i. 8. § 6.) But shortly after they were attacked on the other side by the Tarentines, who are said to have taken and plundered their city ( Appian , Samn. 7. § 1); and this aggression was one of the immediate causes of the war declared by the Romans against Tarentum in 282 BC .

Thurii now sunk completely into the condition of a dependent ally of Rome, and was protected by a Roman garrison. No mention is found of its name during the wars with , it was one of the places selected for the establishment of a Roman Colony with Latin rights. (Liv. xxxiv. 53; Strab. vi. p. 263.) The number of colonists was small in proportion to the extent of land to be divided among them, but they amounted to 3000 foot and 300 knights. (Liv. xxxv. 9.) Livy says merely that the colony was sent in ''Thurinum agrum'', and does not mention anything of a change of name; but Strabo tells us that they gave to the new colony the name of Copiae, and this statement is confirmed both by Stephanus Of Byzantium , and by the evidence of coins, on which, however, the name is written "COPIA" (Strab. ''l. c.''; Steph. Byz. ''s. v.'' ; Eckhel, vol. i. p. 164.) But this new name did not continue long in use, and Thurii still continued to be known by its ancient appellation. It is mentioned as a municipal town on several occasions during the latter ages of the Roman Republic . In 72 BC it was taken by Spartacus , and subjected to heavy contributions, but not otherwise injured. (Appian, ''B.C.'' i. 117.) According to Suetonius , the Octavian family held some renown there, and Gaius Octavius (father of the future Caesar Augustus ) defeated a Spartacist army near there; as a result, the future emperor was granted the surname Thurinus shortly after birth. At the outbreak of the Civil Wars it was deemed by Julius Caesar of sufficient importance to be secured with a garrison of Gaul ish and Spanish horse; and it was there that M. Coelius was put to death, after a vain attempt to excite an insurrection in this part of Italy. (Caes. ''B.C.'' iii. 21, 22.) In 40 BC also it was attacked by Sextus Pompeius , who laid waste its territory, but was repulsed from the walls of the city. (Appian, ''B.C.'' v. 56, 58.)

It is certain therefore that Thurii was at this time still a place of some importance, and it is mentioned as a still existing town by Pliny and Ptolemy, as well as Strabo. (Strab. vi. p. 263; Plin. iii. 11. s. 15; Ptol. iii. 1. § 12.) It was probably, indeed, the only place of any consideration remaining on the coast of the Tarentine gulf, between Crotona and Tarentum; both Metapontum and Heracleia having already fallen into almost complete decay. Its name is still found in the Itineraries ( Itin. Ant. p. 114, where it is written Turios; Tab. Peut. ); and it is noticed by Procopius as still existing in the 6th Century . (Procop. ''B. G.'' i. 15.) The period of its final decay is uncertain; but it seems to have been abandoned during the Middle Ages, when the inhabitants took refuge at a place called Terranova (Terranova da Sibari), about 12 miles inland, on a hill on the left bank of the Crathis .

The exact location of Greek Thurii is not known, but that of the Roman town, which probably though not certainly occupied the same site, is fixed by insignificant ruins as being 4 miles to the east of Terranova da Sibari, and as occupying an area some 4 miles in circuit. It is clear, from the statements both of Diodorus and Strabo, that Thurii occupied a site near to, but distinct from, that of Sybaris (Diod. xii. 10; Strab. ''l. c.''): hence the position suggested by some local topographers at the foot of the hill of Terranova, is probably too far inland. It is more likely that the true site is to be sought to the north of the Coscile (the ancient Sybaris), a few miles from the sea, where, according to Zannoni 's map, ruins still exist, attributed by that geographer to Sybaris, but which are probably in reality those of Thurii. Swinburne, however, mentions Roman ruins as existing in the peninsula formed by the rivers Crathis and Sybaris near their junction, which may perhaps be those of Thurii. (Swinburne, ''Travels'', vol. i. pp. 291, 292; Romanelli, vol. i. p. 236.)


COINAGE

Thurii had an active mint in antiquity. The coins of Thurii are of great beauty; their number and variety indeed gives us a higher idea of the opulence and prosperity of the city than we should gather from the statements of ancient writers.


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