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Heraclea Pontica (; ; , ), known in and later times as Pontoheraclea (), was an ancient city on the coast of in , at the mouth of the river Lycus. The site is now the location of the modern city Karadeniz Ereğli, in the Zonguldak Province of .


History
Heraclea Pontica was founded by the Greek city-state of For report of Boeotian involvement see Pausanias 5.26.7 in approximately 560–558 BC and was named after who the Greeks believed at a cave on the adjoining Archerusian cape.

The colonists soon subjugated the native but agreed to terms that none of the latter, now -like serfs, be sold into slavery outside their homeland. Prospering from the rich, fertile adjacent lands and the sea-fisheries of its natural harbor, Heraclea soon extended its control along the coast as far east as Cytorus (Gideros, near ), eventually establishing Black Sea colonies of its own (Cytorus, and Chersonesus). It was the birthplace of the philosopher Heraclides Ponticus.

The prosperity of the city, rudely shaken by the and the , was utterly destroyed in the .

The Greek historical author Memnon of Heraclea (fl. 1st century AD) wrote a local history of Heraclea Pontica in at least sixteen books. The work has perished, but Photius's Bibliotheca preserves a compressed account of books 9–16, seemingly the only ones extant in his day. These books run from the rule of the tyrant Clearchus (c. 364–353 BC) to the later years of (c. 40 BC) and contain many colorful accounts including the Bithynian introduction of the barbarian into Asia where they first allied themselves with the Heracleans and later turned violently against them.

Then, Heraclea Pontica was part of the (Eastern) Roman Empire for more than 1000 years. The Turks ravaged the area after the Battle of Mantzikert in 1071. , brother of the ruler of Trebizond Alexios I of Trebizond, took Heraclea Pontica in 1205 and made it capital of his domain, called Paphlagonia; he lost it in 1214 to Theodore I Laskaris, who made it a major frontier bulwark. The Genoese had a colony there after 1261. When the Turks conquered Paphlagonia in 1360, Genoa bought the city from the weakening Byzantine Empire. Heraclea developed as a trading centre of the Genoese, who settled there in large numbers. A ruined citadel on a height overlooking the town is a remnant of this period. The Italian name of the city was Pontarachia. The Genoese held the city until the Ottomans captured it after 1453.Kazhdan, Alexander P. - The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium - Volume 2 (1991, Oxford University Press), entry "Herakleia Pontike"


Notable people
  • , , born in Heraclea.
  • Heraclides Ponticus, philosopher and astronomer, born in Heraclea
  • Evagrius Ponticus, philosopher, monk, and ascetic
  • Xenagoras (historian), historian Suda Encyclopedia, nu.598
  • Memnon of Heraclea, historian
  • Bryson of Heraclea, mathematician and sophist
  • Clearchus of Heraclea, tyrant of Heraclea
  • Timotheus of Heraclea, son of Clearchus and succeeded him after his death
  • Chion of Heraclea, a disciple of who helped assassinate the tyrant Clearchus
  • Oxyathres of Heraclea, tyrant of Heraclea
  • Chamaeleon, philosopher
  • Promathidas of Heraclea, historian Athenaeus, Deipnosophistae, §11.77 Athenaeus, Deipnosophistae, §7.2957
  • Marcian of Heraclea, geographer
  • Nicetas of Heraclea, Metropolitan of Heraclea
  • Dionysius of Heraclea, tyrant of Heraclea
  • Amastris, tyrant of Heraclea, niece to Persian King
  • , a Greek grammarian
  • Theodore Stratelates, Christian martyr saint


See also
  • List of ancient Greek cities


Notes
  • "Outpost of Hellenism: The Emergence of Heraclea on the Black Sea", Stanley Mayer Burstein, University of California Publications: Classical Studies, 14 (Berkeley, 1976).


Further reading
  • Bittner, Angela (1998). Gesellschaft und Wirtschaft in Herakleia Pontike. Eine Polis zwischen Tyrannis und Selbstverwaltung Society. Bonn: Habelt, .
  • (1966). Herakleia Pontike – Ereğli. Eine baugeschichtliche Untersuchung Heraclea. Tituli Asiae Minoris, supplementary volume 1. Vienna: Böhlau.
  • Saprykin, Sergei J. (1997). Heracleia Pontica and Tauric Chersonesus before Roman domination. VI–I centuries B.C. Amsterdam: Hakkert, .


External links

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