Hēmeroskopeion () was an ancient Greece city.
Its location is unknown but it has been suggested by some scholars (and rejected by others) that it existed on what is now the city of Dénia, the judicial seat of the comarca of Marina Alta in the province of Alicante, which is a division of the Valencian Community, Spain. Its name means watchtower in Greek and it reflects the first use of the lofty promontory as such. According to Strabo, it was a small city and was founded by the Massaliot Greeks together with another two neighbouring and equally small cities, the names of which have not survived. The city was later conquered by the Romans and it was named Dianium, whence the modern name. This town was situated on the cape then called Artemisium () or Dianium (), named from a temple of Ephesia Artemis built upon it (goddess Artemis was called Diana in Latin). Apart from its strategic location the city was equally important for the iron mines that existed nearby.
The city must have already existed around the 1st century BC, judging by mentions from Strabo and Cicero, who noted it was used during the civil wars as a military base by Quintus Sertorius. While the foundation date of the Roman city cannot be determined, it is known that the settlement possibly inherited from the Iberian establishments at Punta de Benimaquia or Pico del Águila.Cerdá 2009: Dianium, p. 54
In the 1st century, it held the legal status of a civitas stipendiaria, which meant that it had to pay tribute and was subject to the power of the provincial governor, in this case, Hispania Citerior.Cerdá 2009: Dianium, p. 55 Inscriptions found in the area of the ancient city mention several decurions as municipal officials, indicating they date to a time after the era of the Flavian dynasty (late 1st century), when municipalities were unified. It is also known that during the same period, there was a college of Sodales Augustales, an organization of freedmen dedicated to the imperial cult.Cerdá 2009: Dianium, p. 59
Funerary discoveries confirm that the city remained active during the 3rd and early 4th centuries. It is likely that it was one of the cities under Byzantine Empire control around the 6th century.Cerdá 2009: Dianium, p. 66
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