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Ophryneion

Ophryneion
Ὀφρύνειον
Ophryneion is located in Turkey
Ophryneion
Shown within Turkey
Location İntepe, Çanakkale Province, Turkey
Region Troad
Coordinates 40°1′22″N 26°20′6″E / 40.02278°N 26.33500°E / 40.02278; 26.33500Coordinates: 40°1′22″N 26°20′6″E / 40.02278°N 26.33500°E / 40.02278; 26.33500
Type Settlement
History
Founded 6th century BC
Periods Archaic Greece to Byzantine Empire

Ophryneion (Ancient Greek: Ὀφρύνειον Ophryneion) was an ancient Greek city in the northern Troad region of Anatolia. Its territory was bounded to the west by Rhoiteion and to the east by Dardanos. It was located about 1.5 km north-east of the village of İntepe (previously known as Erenköy) in Çanakkale Province, Turkey. The city was situated on the steep brow of a hill overlooking the Dardanelles, hence the origin of its Ancient Greek name ὀφρῦς (ophrus), meaning 'brow of a hill', 'crag'.

Ophryneion was supposedly one of a series of cities founded by Akamas the son of Theseus which he subsequently passed off as being founded by Ascanius and Skamandrios, the sons of Aeneas and of Hector respectively. This story was taken from the 2nd century BC scholar Lysimachus of Alexandria, who related it in Book 2 of his Nostoi, who in turn derived it from a late 4th century BC historian known as Dionysios of Chalkis. It has been argued that this tradition reflects a pro-Athenian bias, as it makes the founder of many places in the Troad the son of Athens' most important hero, Theseus, while at the same time explaining away the fact that contemporary traditions made no mention of such a connection. By contrast with the story of Ophryneion being founded by Akamas, which puts the city's origins in the period immediately following the destruction of Troy, surface surveys conducted on the site suggest that it was occupied no earlier than the 6th century BC.


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