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Sybaris

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Sybaris



 
 
Sybaris (Greek
Greek language

Greek is an Indo-European languages native to the southern Balkan peninsula, the language of the Greek people. It forms an independent branch within Indo-European....
: ) was a celebrated city of Magna Graecia
Magna Graecia

Magna Graecia is the name of the area in Southern Italy and Sicily that was Colonies in antiquity#Greek colonies by Greek settlers in the eighth century BC, who brought with them the lasting imprint of their Hellenic civilization....
 on the western shore of the Gulf of Taranto
Gulf of Taranto

The Gulf of Taranto is a gulf of the Ionian Sea, in southern Italy.The Gulf of Taranto is almost square, 140 km long and wide, and is delimited by the capes Santa Maria di Leuca and Colonna ....
. The wealth of the city in the 6th century BC was such that the Sybarite
Sybarite

A sybarite is a general term for describing one fond of pleasure and luxury. It may also refer to:*A native of the ancient Italian city of Sybaris...
s became synonymous with pleasure and luxury.






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Sngans 841
Cosenza Posizione
Sybaris (Greek
Greek language

Greek is an Indo-European languages native to the southern Balkan peninsula, the language of the Greek people. It forms an independent branch within Indo-European....
: ) was a celebrated city of Magna Graecia
Magna Graecia

Magna Graecia is the name of the area in Southern Italy and Sicily that was Colonies in antiquity#Greek colonies by Greek settlers in the eighth century BC, who brought with them the lasting imprint of their Hellenic civilization....
 on the western shore of the Gulf of Taranto
Gulf of Taranto

The Gulf of Taranto is a gulf of the Ionian Sea, in southern Italy.The Gulf of Taranto is almost square, 140 km long and wide, and is delimited by the capes Santa Maria di Leuca and Colonna ....
. The wealth of the city in the 6th century BC was such that the Sybarite
Sybarite

A sybarite is a general term for describing one fond of pleasure and luxury. It may also refer to:*A native of the ancient Italian city of Sybaris...
s became synonymous with pleasure and luxury. The modern town of Sibari lies near the ruins of the Greek city; it is a frazione
Frazione

A frazione, in Italy, is the name given in administrative law to a type of territorial subdivision of a comune; for other administrative divisions, see municipio, circoscrizione, quartiere....
 of the comune
Comune

In Italy, the comune, is the basic administrative division of both provinces and regions, and may be properly approximated in casual speech by the English word township or municipality....
 of Cassano allo Ionio
Cassano allo Ionio

Cassano allo Ionio is a small town in province of Cosenza of Calabria, southern Italy, known in Ancient Rome times as Cassanum. It lies in fertile region in the concave recess of a steep mountain, 60 km NE from the town of Cosenza, 10 km W of the archaeological site of Sibari....
, in the province of Cosenza
Province of Cosenza

The Province of Cosenza is a Provinces of Italy in the Calabria region of Italy. Its capital is the city of Cosenza.It has an area of 6,650 km?, and a total population of 733,797 ....
.

Geography

Sybaris lay a short distance from the sea, between the rivers Crathis (Crati) and Sybaris (Coscile). The last of these, from which it derived its name, at the present day falls into the Crati about 5 km from its mouth, but in ancient times undoubtedly pursued an independent course to the sea. Sybaris was apparently the earliest of all the Greek
Ancient Greece

The term Ancient Greece refers to the period of History of Greece lasting from the Greek Dark Ages ca. 1100 BC and the Dorian invasion, to 146 BC and the Roman Republic conquest of Greece after the Battle of Corinth ....
 colonies in this part of Italy
Italy

Italy , officially the Italian Republic , is a country located on the Italian Peninsula in Southern Europe and on the two largest islands in the Mediterranean Sea, Sicily and Sardinia....
, being founded, according to the statement of Scymnus Chius, as early as 720 BC.

The river Sybaris was said to be so named by the Greek colonists from a fountain of that name at Bura in Achaia: it had the property, according to some authors, of making horses shy that drank of its waters. It is a considerable stream, and has its sources in the Apennines near Murano
Murano

Murano is usually described as an island in the Venetian Lagoon, although like Venice itself it is actually an archipelago of islands linked by bridges....
, flows beneath Castrovillari
Castrovillari

Castrovillari is town and comune in the province of Cosenza in the Calabria region of southern Italy....
, and receives several minor tributary streams before it joins the Crathis.

History

Sybaris was an Achaean colony, and its Oekist (founder) was a citizen of Helice in Achaia; but with the Achaean emigrants were mingled a number of Troezen
Troezen

Troezen , modern: Troizina or Trizina is a small town in the northeastern Peloponnese, located southwest of Athens and a few miles south of Methana....
ian citizens. The Achaeans, however, eventually obtained the preponderance, and drove out the Troezenians. The Sybarites indeed appear to have sought for an origin in heroic times; and Solinus has a story that the first founder of the city was a son of Oïlean Ajax
Ajax the Lesser

Ajax was a Greeks Greek mythology hero, son of Oileus, the king of Locris. He was called the "lesser" or "Locrian" Ajax, to distinguish him from Ajax , son of Telamon....
 ; but this is evidently mere fiction, and the city was, historically speaking, undoubtedly an Achaean colony. It rose rapidly to great prosperity, owing in the first instance to the fertility of the plain in which it was situated. Its citizens also, contrary to the policy of many of the Greek states, freely admitted settlers of other nations to the rights of citizenship, and the vast population of the city is expressly ascribed in great measure to this cause. Sybaris had in the sixth century BC attained a degree of wealth and power unprecedented among Greek cities; this excited the admiration of the rest of the Hellenic world. Sybaris may have been the first city to boast an effective, yet primitive, streetlighting system. We are told that the Sybarites ruled over 25 subject cities, and could bring into the field 300,000 of their own citizens , a statement obviously incredible. The subject cities were probably for the most part Oenotrian
Oenotrians

The Oenotrians, were an Ancient Italic peoples who settled a territory of remarkably large dimensions, including the region of Apulia, Basilicata and the northern part of the region of Calabria in southern Italy....
 towns in the interior, but we know that Sybaris had extended its dominion across the peninsula to the Tyrrhenian Sea
Tyrrhenian Sea

The Tyrrhenian Sea is part of the Mediterranean Sea off the western coast of Italy.It is bounded by Corsica and Sardinia , Tuscany, Lazio, Campania, and Calabria , and Sicily ....
, where it had founded the colonies of Poseidonia
Paestum

Paestum is the classical Roman name of a major Graeco-Roman city in the Campania region of Italy. It is located in the north of Cilento, near the coast about 85 km SE of Naples in the province of Salerno, and belongs to the commune of Capaccio....
 (Paestum), Laüs
Laüs

La?s or Laus or Laos , was an ancient city on the west coast of Lucania, at the mouth of the Lao River, which formed the boundary between Lucania and Bruttium; the site of La?s is in the frazione of Marcellina in the comune of Santa Maria del Cedro, Province of Cosenza, Calabria region, Italy....
 (Laus), and Scidrus
Scidrus

Scidrus , was an Ancient Greece city on the coast of Lucania, on the Tyrrhenian Sea, between Pyxus and La?s....
. The city itself was said to be not less than 50 stadia in circumference, and the horsemen or knights who figured at the religious processions are said to have amounted to 5000 in number , which would prove that these wealthy citizens were more than four times as numerous as at Athens
Athens

Athens , the Capital and largest city of Greece, dominates the Attica periphery; as one of the List of cities by time of continuous habitation, its recorded history spans around 3,400 years....
.

Smindyrides, a citizen of Sybaris, who was one of the suitors for the daughters of Cleisthenes of Sicyon
Cleisthenes of Sicyon

Cleisthenes was the tyrant of Sicyon from c.600-570 BC, who aided in the First Sacred War against Kirrha that destroyed that city in 595 BC. He is also told to have organized with success a war against Argos because of his anti-Dorians feelings....
, is said by Herodotus
Herodotus

Herodotus of Halicarnassus was a Greeks historian who lived in the 5th century BC and is regarded as the "Father of History" in Western culture....
 to have surpassed all other men in refined luxury. It was asserted that on this occasion he carried with him a train of 1000 slaves, including cooks, fishermen, etc. Athenaeus
Athenaeus

Athenaeus , of Naucratis in Egypt, Greeks rhetorician and grammarian, flourished about the end of the 2nd and beginning of the 3rd century A.D. The Suda only tells us that he lived in the times of Marcus ; but the contempt with which he speaks of Commodus shows that he survived that emperor....
 ascribed absurd refinements of luxury to the Sybarites, which have rendered their very name proverbial. They were particularly noted for the splendour of their attire, which was formed of the finest Milesian wool, and this gave rise to extensive commercial relations with Miletus
Miletus

Miletus was an ancient city on the western coast of Anatolia , near the mouth of the Maeander River in ancient Caria. Evidence of first settlement at the site has been made inaccessible by the rise of sea level and deposition of sediments from the Maeander....
, which produced a close friendship between the two cities. As an instance of their magnificence we are told that Alcimenes of Sybaris had dedicated as a votive offering in the temple of the Lacinian Juno
Juno (mythology)

File:Juno sospita pushkin.jpgJuno was an Roman religion, the protector and special counselor of the state. She is a daughter of Saturn and sister of the chief god Jupiter and the mother of Juventas, Mars , and Vulcan ....
 a splendid figured robe, which long afterwards fell into the power of Dionysius of Syracuse
Dionysius of Syracuse

The name Dionysius of Syracuse can refer to:*Dionysius I of Syracuse, the tyrant of the ancient Greek city of Syracuse, Italy from 405 BC to 367 BC....
, and was sold by him for 120 talents
Talent (weight)

The talent is an ancient unit of mass. It corresponded generally to the mass of water in the volume of an Amphora , i.e. one foot cubed. Depending on the length of the respective legal foot, this corresponds roughly to the mass of 27 kg or about 60 English pound s....
. Sybaris also minted its own coins.

Notwithstanding these details concerning the wealth and luxury of Sybaris, we are almost wholly without information as to the history of the city until shortly before its fall. Herodotus incidentally refers to the time of Smindyrides (about 580-560 BC) as the period when Sybaris was at the height of its power. At a later period it seems to have been agitated by political dissensions, with the circumstances of which we are very imperfectly acquainted. It appears that the government had previously been in the hands of an oligarchy, to which such persons as Smindyrides and Alcimenes naturally belonged; but the democratic party, headed by a demagogue named Telys, succeeded in overthrowing their power, and drove a considerable number of the leading citizens into exile. Telys hereupon seems to have raised himself to the position of despot or tyrant of the city. The exiled citizens took refuge at Crotona; but not content with their victory, Telys and his partisans called upon the Crotoniats to surrender the fugitives. This they refused to do, and the Sybarites hereupon declared war on them, and marched upon Crotona with an army said to have amounted to 300,000 men. They were met at the river Traeis by the Crotoniats, whose army did not amount to more than a third of their numbers; notwithstanding which they obtained a complete victory, and put the greater part of the Sybarites to the sword, continuing the pursuit to the very gates of the city, of which they easily made themselves masters, and which they determined to destroy so entirely that it should never again be inhabited. For this purpose they turned the course of the river Crathis, so that it inundated the site of the city and buried the ruins under the deposits that it brought down. This catastrophe occurred in 510 BC, and seems to have been viewed by many of the Greeks as a divine vengeance upon the Sybarites for their pride and arrogance, caused by their excessive prosperity, more especially for the contempt they had shown for the great festival of the Olympic Games
Olympic Games

The Olympic Games are an international multi-sport event established for both summer and winter sports. There have been two generations of the Olympic Games; the first were the Ancient Olympic Games held at Olympia, Greece, Greece....
, which they are said to have attempted to supplant by attracting the principal artists, athletes, etc., to their own public games.

It is certain that Sybaris was never restored. The surviving inhabitants took refuge at Laüs and Scidrus, on the shores of the Tyrrhenian sea. An attempt was indeed made, 58 years after the destruction of the city, to establish them anew on the ancient site, but they were quickly driven out by the Crotoniats, and the fugitives afterwards combined with the Athenian colonists in the foundation of Thurii
Thurii

Thurii – Greek language: , called also by some Latin writers and by Ptolemy, Thurium , for a time also Copia and Copiae and sometimes written as Turios; – was a city of Magna Graecia, situated on the Gulf of Taranto, within a short distance of the site of Sybaris, of which it may be considered as having ta...
.

At the present day the site is utterly desolate, and even the exact position of the ancient city cannot be determined. Explorations undertaken by the Italian government in 1879 and 1887 failed to lead to a precise knowledge of the site. Only two discoveries were made: an extensive necropolis
Necropolis

A necropolis is a large cemetery or burial place . Apart from the occasional application of the word to modern cemeteries outside large towns, the term...
, some 12 km to the west of the confluence of the two rivers, of the end of the first Iron Age, known as that of Torre Mordillo, the contents of which are now preserved at Potenza; a necropolis of about 400 BC – the period of the greatest prosperity of Thurii – consisting of tombs covered by tumuli (locally called timponi), in some of which were found fine gold plates with mystic inscriptions in Greek characters; one of these tumuli was over 2.7 m in diameter at the base with a single burial in a sarcophagus in the center.

The whole plain watered by the rivers Coscile and Crati (the ancient Sybaris and Crathis), so renowned in ancient times for its fertility – it is cited as such by Varro
Varro

Varro was a Ancient Rome cognomen carried by:*Gaius Terentius Varro, the consul defeated at the battle of Cannae*Marcus Terentius Varro , the scholar...
, who tells us that in Sybaritano wheat was said to produce a hundred-fold. – was for long a desolate swampy tract, pestilential from malaria, and frequented only by vast herds of buffaloes, the usual accompaniment in Southern Italy of all such pestiferous regions. The circumstance mentioned by Strabo that the river Crathis had been turned from its course to inundate the city, is confirmed by the accidental mention in Herodotus of the dry channel of the Crathis : and this would sufficiently account for the disappearance of all traces of the city. Henry Swinburne
Henry Swinburne

Henry Swinburne was an English travel writer....
 indeed tells us that some degraded fragments of aqueducts and tombs were still visible on the peninsula formed by the two rivers, and were pointed out as the ruins of Sybaris, but these, as he justly observes, being built of brick, are probably of Roman times, and have no connection with the ancient city. Keppel Craven, on the other hand, speaks of a wall sometimes visible in the bed of the Crathis when the waters are very low as being the only remaining relic of the ancient Sybaris.

The word Sybaritic has become a byword meaning extreme luxury and a seeking for pleasure and comfort. One story has a Sybarite turning in his bed sleeplessly, because a crumpled rose petal had gotten into it. The best known anecdote of the Sybarites is of their defeat in battle. It is told that to amuse themselves the Sybarite cavalrymen trained their horses to dance to pipe music. Armed with pipes, an invading army from nearby Crotonia assailed the Sybarite cavalry with music. The attacking forces easily passed through the dancing horses and their helpless riders, and conquered the city.

External links

  • - from Book 12 of Athenaeus
  • A 2005 scholarly article about the geological changes around Sybaris, which reports evidence of subsidence and repeated alluvial deposition since Greek times, "Geology versus Myth: the Holocene Evolution of the Sybaris Plain" by Luigi Cucci