Mantineia
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Mantineia (Μαντίνεια) | ||
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Coordinates | 37°37′ N 22°23′ E | |
Country | Greece | |
Periphery | Peloponnese | |
Prefecture | Arcadia | |
Population | 3,510 (2001) | |
Elevation | 600 m | |
Postal code | 220 05 | |
Area code | 2710 | |
Licence plate code | TP |
Mantineia (Greek: Mαντίνεια, formerly also Antigonia - Αντιγόνεια) was a city in ancient Arcadia in the central Peloponnese that was the site of two significant battles in Classical Greek history. It is also a municipality in modern Arcadia, Greece, with its seat in the village Nestani.
The first battle of Mantinea, in 418 BC, was the largest land battle of the Peloponnesian War. On one side were Sparta and its remaining allies, and on the other were Athens, its allies, plus the cities that had revolted against the Spartans. After Laches the Athenian commander was killed, the battle turned into a rout of the Athenian and allied armies, a result attributed to greater Spartan courage.
The second battle of Mantinea, in 362 BC, led to the fall of Theban hegemony. In that battle, Athens and Sparta were allied. Thebes won the battle, but its greatest general, Epaminondas, was killed in the fighting.
Macedonian king Antigonus III Doson renamed the city Antigonia; Mantineia's name was restored by Hadrian. [1]
Modern-day Mantineia is the region around the city of Tripoli in the prefecture of Arcadia, and was named after the namesake city of old. It is also the name of a Protected designation of origin of Greek blanc de gris wine, made of the moschofilero grape traditionally grown in the region. The seat of Mantineia is Nestani, home to about one-fifth (20%) of the population. Mantineia is located about a few kilometres north of GR-33 and GR-77, west of the Tripoli-Corinth/Athens Superhighway (E65), and SE of Vytina.
Mountains surround the valley, including the Lyrkeia mountains as well as the Mainalo mountains to the southwest. The valley consists of vineyards, potato and wheat farms as well as other crops, and covers about half of the municipality. Several floods ravaged Mantineia in the mid-20th century, even to the extent of forming a lake that has since been drained. Forests dominate the mountains with traces in the valley areas. Rocks and grasslands cover most of the northeast.
Contents |
[edit] Communities
- Artemisi (pop: 650)
- Kapsas/Kapsia (pop: 505)
- Louka (pop: 653)
- Milia (pop: 76)
- Nestani (pop: 778)
- Gorgoepikoos Monastery
- Milea (pop: 237)
- Pikerni (pop: 192)
- Sagka (pop: 241)
- Simiades (pop: 172)
- Neos Kardaros (abandoned)
[edit] Historical population
Year | Municipal Population | Change |
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1981 | - | - |
1991 | 3,628 | - |
2001 | 3,510 | 118/3.25% |
[edit] Other
Naxos has schools, lyceums (middle schools), gymnasia (secondary school), churches, a post office and squares (plateies).
[edit] External links
- Map and aerial photos:
- Street map: Street map from Mapquest, MapPoint or Google or Yahoo! Maps
- Satellite images: Google or Microsoft Virtual Earth - image not yet available
- Coordinates:
- Hazlitt, Classical Gazetteer, "Mantinea"
[edit] See also
Northwest: Levidi | North: Alea | Northeast: Lyrkia |
West: Falanthos | Mantineia/Mantinia | East: Argos? |
Southwest: Falanthos | South: Tripoli | Southeast: Korythios |
Communities of Mantineia/Mantinia | ||
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Artemisi | Kapsas | Louka | Nestani | Pikerni | Sagka | Simiades |
Municipalities and communities of the Arcadia Prefecture |
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Apollonas • Dimitsana • Falanthos • Falaisia • Gortyna • Iraia • Kleitor • Kontovazaina • Korythio • Lagkadia • Leonidio • Levidi • Mantineia • Megalopoli • North Kynouria • Skyritida • Tegea • Trikolonoi • Tripoli • Tropaia • Valtetsi • Vytina |
Kosmas |