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Towns of ancient Greece

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The archetypical settlement in ancient Greece was the self-governing city state called the polis (Template:Lang-grc-gre), but other types of settlement occurred.

Kome

A kome (Template:Lang-grc-gre) was typically a village that was also a political unit. The translation is inexact, but according to Thucydides, Sparta, though it was a polis, resembled four unwalled villages. Similarly, a kome could be a neighbourhood within a larger polis or its own rural settlement. Thucydides mused that the polis had developed from the kome.[1]

Katoikia

A katoikia (Template:Lang-grc-gre) was similar to a polis, typically a military colony,[2] with some municipal institutions, but not those of a full polis. The word derives from the Template:Lang-grc for "to inhabit" (a settlement) and is somewhat similar[citation needed] to the Latin civitas. In the Classical era, there were few katoikiai; however, with the rise of large centralized empires following the conquests of Alexander the Great, they became the main type of Greek settlement, especially in the newly conquered east.[3] Sometimes these were fortresses, inside a city or in an open position. They were an equivalent of the English idea of a fort.

Colonies

Many of the poleis in ancient Greece established colonies, of which many went on to be fully independent poleis of their own. These include:

Emporia

  • An Emporion (Template:Lang-grc-gre) was a Greek trading-colony and could be a self-contained settlement or a section of either another Greek polis or of a non-Greek town. Emporia were usually found in ports and could be considered to be the reverse of a politeum.

Cleruchy

Politeum

  • Politeuma denoted, particularly in the Seleucid kingdom and Ptolemaic Egypt, enclaves of minority populations of Macedonians, Greeks, Persians and Jews, who had some degree of self-government and independent jurisdiction within a city.[4]

Military settlements

Within the Greek world, several military establishments resembled civilian towns.

References

  1. ^ Hansen, Mogens Herman; Raaflaub, Kurt A. (1995-01-01). Studies in the Ancient Greek Polis. Franz Steiner Verlag. ISBN 9783515067591.
  2. ^ Bar-Kochva, Bezalel (1976). The Seleucid Army: Organization and Tactics in the Great Campaigns. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521206679.
  3. ^ "Strong's Greek: 2733. κατοικία (katoikia) -- a dwelling, habitation". biblehub.com. Retrieved 2016-04-10.
  4. ^ M. Th. Lenger, Corpus des Ordonnances des Ptolémées, 21980, XVIIIf.