Product Code Database
Example Keywords: software -netbooks $62-108
   » » Wiki: Milyas
Tag Wiki 'Milyas'.
Tag

Milyas
 (

Rank: 100%
Bluestar Bluestar Bluestar Bluestar Blackstar

Milyas () was a mountainous country in ancient south-west (modern Turkey). However, it is generally described as being mostly in the northern part of the successor kingdom of , as well as southern , and part of eastern .. xii. p. 573. According to , the boundaries of Milyas were never fixed.. i. 173; , Anab. i. 25.

Its inhabitants used the (Μιλύαι),Herod. vii. 77 ; Strab. xiv. p. 667; Plin. v. 25, 42. or Milyans. However, the oldest known name for inhabitants of the area is (Σόλυμοι), Solymi and Solymians – names that are probably derived from the nearby Mount Solymus. suggested that the Solymoi originally spoke an unattested (this opinion is not commonly supported),Louis H. Feldman, 1996, Jew and Gentile in the Ancient World: Attitudes and Interactions from Alexander to Justinian. Princeton, Princeton University Press, pp. 190–1; 519–21. whereas the was an Indo-European language.


Toponymy
Later the name Milyas was sometimes used to describe only as a part of Lycia. However, after the accession of the dynasty of the Greek in Syria, the name Milyas was limited to the south-western part of Pisidia, bordering upon Lycia, that is, the territory extending from northward to the foot of . v. 72; Strab. xii. p. 570, xiii. p. 631, xiv. p. 666. This district, the western part of which bore the name of , is afterwards described, sometimes as a part of Lycia (as by )Ptol. v. 3. § 7, 5. § 6. and sometimes as part of or (as by Pliny the Elder).Plin. v. 42; see also Ptol. v. 2. § 12. After the conquest of the Greek Antiochus the Great, the Romans gave the country to ,Polyb. Exc. de Leg. 36 though Pisidian princes still continue to be mentioned as its rulers.


Geography
The Solymi appear to have taken their name from a mountain in Anatolia named Solymus (later Güllük Dagi).

The greater part of Milyas was rugged and mountainous, but it also contained a few fertile plains.Strab. xii. p. 570. The name, which does not occur in the poems, probably belonged to the remnants of the Milyae, who had been driven into the mountains by invaders from Crete, known as the Termilae, who later referred to themselves as .

Important cities and towns in Milyas included , , Balbura, and Bubon, which formed the Cibyratian tetrapolis. Some authors also mention a town named Milyas, which must have been situated north of Termessus in Pisidia.Polyb. v. 72; Ptol. v. 2. § 12; Steph. B. s. v. Μιλύαι

Page 1 of 1
1
Page 1 of 1
1

Account

Social:
Pages:  ..   .. 
Items:  .. 

Navigation

General: Atom Feed Atom Feed  .. 
Help:  ..   .. 
Category:  ..   .. 
Media:  ..   .. 
Posts:  ..   ..   .. 

Statistics

Page:  .. 
Summary:  .. 
1 Tags
10/10 Page Rank
5 Page Refs