Nymphaion

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For the Modern Greek village, see Nymphaio

An image of a ship on the wall of a temple in Nymphaion (3rd century BC).
An image of a ship on the wall of a temple in Nymphaion (3rd century BC).
Nymphaion and other ancient Greek colonies along the north coast of the Black Sea.
Nymphaion and other ancient Greek colonies along the north coast of the Black Sea.

Nýmphaion (Greek: Νυμφαιων, Latin: Nymphaeum, Russian: Нимфей) was a significant centre of the Bosporan Kingdom, situated on the Crimean shore of the Cimmerian Bosporus, about 17 kilometers south of Panticapaeum.

There was a Scythian settlement before the Greek colonists set up an emporium on the site in the 6th century BC. The town issued its own coins and generally prospered in the period of Classical antiquity, when its citizens controlled cereal trade, which was vital for the well-being of mainland Greece. Athens chose it as its principal military base in the region ca. 444 BC and Gylon, the grandfather of Demosthenes, suffered banishment from Athens on charges that he had betrayed Nymphaeum during the Peloponnesian War. Annexed to the Bosporan Kingdom by the end of the century, the city gradually declined, although it enjoyed a brief recovery in the early centuries AD. Starting from the 2nd century AD, it was increasingly barbarized by the Sarmatians until the Goths destroyed it in the mid-3rd century.

The site occupied a small hill by the sea. The acropolis contained the temples of Aphrodite (with several rooms) and of the Cabeiri. The lower terrace by the sea centred on the sanctuary of Demeter, first erected in the 6th century BC and several times rebuilt. Other ruins indicate that the town's architecture was unusually refined, perhaps the most sophisticated in the Bosporan Kingdom. One structure has no parallels in the Hellenistic world: it goes back to the 3rd century BC and is built of rose marl. The site also yielded a number of terracotta figurines, winemaking facilities (the oldest along the northern shore of the Black Sea) and several horse burials, associated with the Sarmatians.

[edit] References

  • The Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites. (eds. Stillwell, Richard. MacDonald, William L. McAlister, Marian Holland). Princeton University Press, 1976. ISBN 0-691-03542-3.


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