Antandrus or Antandros () was an Ancient Greece city on the north side of the Gulf of Adramyttium in the Troad region of Anatolia. Its surrounding territory was known in Ancient Greek as Ἀντανδρία ( Antandria),Aristotle, Historia Animalium 519a16. and included the towns of Aspaneus on the coast and Astyra to the east.Strabo 13.1.51. It has been located on Devren hill between the modern village of Avcılar and the town of Altınoluk in the Edremit district of Balıkesir Province, Turkey.A map of the region is available at .
In the reign of Augustus the Greek mythographer Conon provided two alternative explanations for the origins of Antandrus.Konon FGrHist 26 F 1.41 ap. Photios, Bibliotheca 186.41 p.139a Bekker, cf. Pomponius Mela 1.92 (1st century AD), Servius ad Virgil, Aeneid 3.6 (4th century), Etymologicum Genuinum s.v. Ἄντανδρος (9th century). Both etymologize Ἄντανδρος ( Antandros) as ἀντ’ Ἄνδρου ( ant' Androu), exploiting the meaning 'in the stead of' of the Ancient Greek preposition ἀντί ( anti). In the first, Ascanius the son of Aeneas used to rule the city of Antandrus until he was captured by the Pelasgians; the ransom for his release was to give over the city, thus ἀντ’ ἄνδρου meaning '(a city) in the stead of/in exchange for a man (so ἄνδρου from ἄνδρος, the Ancient Greek genitive singular of ἀνήρ, 'man', i.e. Ascanius)'. This interpretation combines the reference to the city's Pelasgian origins in Herodotus and its brief role in Virgil Aeneid as the place from which Aeneas and the Troy flee to the west.Herodotus 7.42.1, Virgil, Aeneid 3.5-6, cf. Ovid, Metamorphoses 13.626. In the second explanation, the founders of Antandrus were exiles from the Cyclades island of Andros, who on being expelled set up a new home called Antandrus, hence ἀντ’ Ἄνδρου meaning 'in place of Andros'.
The first event in Antandrus' history is when in 512 BC Otanes, the Persian people satrap of Hellespontine Phrygia, captured the city while subduing north-west Asia Minor. Antandrus had access to large amounts of timber from Mount Ida as well as pitch, making it an ideal location for the construction of large fleets, giving the city strategic importance.Strabo 13.1.51 In 424 BC during the Peloponnesian War when the city had been captured by exiles from Mytilene, the historian Thucydides explains that:Thucydides 4.52.3 (trans. Rex Warner).
This importance is likewise attested by Xenophon later in the Peloponnesian War in 409 and 205 BC, and is perhaps reflected in Virgil choice of the city as the place where Aeneas builds his fleet before setting off to Italy.Xenophon, Hellenica 1.1.25-6, 2.1.10, Virgil, Aeneid 3.5-6. As late as the 14th century we hear of Antandrus being used by an Ottoman admiral to construct a large fleet of several hundred ships.P. Lemerle, L’émirat d’Aydin (1957) 96ff. Having joined the Delian League in 427 BC, when Antandrus first appears in the Athenian tribute lists in 425/42BC, it has an assessment of 8 talents, again indicating the city's relative prosperity. IG I3 71.III.125 (restored), IG I3 77.IV.15, Carusi (2003) 31-2. [[File:Antandros - AR diobol.jpg|thumb|300px|right|
female head (Artemis Astyrene?)
lion head within incuse square, ANTAN
this silver diobol was struck in Antandrus in the late 5th century BC
ref.: CNG E-369, 113; Gitbud & Naumann 24, 170]]
In 411/10 BC Antandrus expelled its Persian people garrison with the help of Peloponnesian troops who were stationed at Abydos on the Hellespont.Thucydides 8.108.4-5, Diodorus Siculus 13.42.4. Having briefly won its freedom, it quickly returned to Persian control, and in 409 BC the Pharnabazus constructed a fleet for the Peloponnesians here using the abundant timber of Mount Ida.Xenophon, Hellenica 1.1.25-6. The expulsion is narrated in the penultimate paragraph of Thucydides History of the Peloponnesian War. In the last paragraph before the manuscript breaks off mid-sentence, the Persian satrap Tissaphernes is protesting to the Peloponnesians for having supported the Antandrians (Thucydides 8.109.1); when Xenophon picks up the thread a year or so later, Antandrus has a Persian garrison once more. We do not know how the Persians regained Antandrus, but in 409 BC the Syracusans gained the Antandrians' friendship by helping to rebuild their fortifications, suggesting that a siege had taken place in the previous year.Xenophon, Hellenica 1.1.26. In the summer of 399 BC Xenophon Ten Thousand passed through on their way home from Persia,Xenophon, Anabasis 7.8.7. The Ten Thousand appear to have taken the same cross-country route from the Hellespont across Mount Ida to Antandrus as the Peloponnesian forces from Abydos did in 411/10 BC, perhaps suggesting an overland route here. and he later wrote in his Hellenica of the city's continuing strategic importance during the Corinthian War (395-387 BC).Xenophon, Hellenica 4.8.35. Himerius Or. 42.4 appears to attest the importance of Antandros to Agesilaos around this time.
After the Classical Greece period, references to Antandrus become scarce in surviving sources. The next reference to events at Antandrus comes several centuries later c. 200 BC, when Antandrus was on the route of thearodokoi,Plassart (1921) 8, Cook (1988) 12. and in the 2nd century BC an inscription from Antandrus tells us that the city sent judges to Peltai in Phrygia to arbitrate a dispute.C. Michel, Recueil d'inscriptions grecques no. 668. From c. 440 - c. 284 BC, Antandrus had minted its own coinage;B. V. Head, Historia Numorum2 541-2, SNG Cop. Troas 213-19. this began again in the reign of the Emperor Titus (AD 79-81) and continued until the reign of Elagabalus (AD 218-222).B. V. Head, Historia Numorum 447, W. Wroth, BMC Troad, Aeolis and Lesbos XXXVI-XXXVII. In the Byzantine empire period Antandrus was an episcopal see in the metropolis of Ephesus.See the various versions of the Notitiae Episcopatuum Ecclesiae Constantinopolitanae.
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