Alalkomenes, Boeotia

Alalkomenes (Greek: Αλαλκομενές; before 1928: Μαμούρα Mamoura[1]) is a village and a community in the municipality of Livadeia, Boeotia, central Greece. It is situated in a wide plain, 6 km northeast of Koroneia, 10 km east of Livadeia and 30 km west of Thebes. The community Alalkomenes consists of the villages Alalkomenes and Agios Athanasios. The population of the community was 178 in 2011.[2]

Population

Year Population[3]
1835 127
1861 183
1879 126
1889 143
1896 186
1907 154
1920 253
1928 310
1940 476
1951 409
1961 435
1971 303
1981 296
1991 324
2011[2] 178

History

Map of ancient Boeotia

Alalcomenae (Ancient Greek: Ἀλαλκομεναί - Alalkomenai) was an ancient town on the south-west bank of Lake Copais (drained in the 19th century), west of Haliartus. Stephanus of Byzantium refers to the town by the name Alalkomenion.

In antiquity Alalcomenae was famous for a temple to the goddess Athena Alalcomeneis.[4] The epic poet Homer twice refers to her as Alalkomenean Athene (Ἀλαλκομενηῒς Ἀθήνη).[5] The town was by a hill which Strabo calls Mount Tilphossius (named for Telphousa, the spring visited by the god Apollo). Strabo also records that the tomb of the seer Teiresias, and the temple of Tilphossian Apollo, were located just outside Alalcomenae.[6]

Ancient sources preserve three accounts of the origin of the town's name:

In view of the cult of Athena there, presumably local myth in Alalcomenae followed the first of these theories. Pausanias recalls a story that the Roman general Sulla stole the icon of Athena from the temple, and in revenge Athena sent a plague of lice upon him; but afterwards the temple was neglected.

In 1928 the village Mamoura was renamed Alalkomenes after the nearby ancient town Alalcomenae.[1] The village became a separate community (together with Agios Athanasios) in 1928, when it was split from the community of Vrastamites. In 1997 it became part of the municipality of Koroneia, which merged into the municipality of Livadeia in 2010.[10]

References

  1. 1 2 Name changes of settlements in Greece
  2. 1 2 Detailed census results 2011 Archived December 25, 2013, at the Wayback Machine. (in Greek)
  3. Population history of Livadeia Province 1835-1991, sum of the localities Alalkomenes and Agios Athanaios.
  4. Schol. D on Iliad 4.8, Pausanias 9.33.5, Stephanus of Byzantium 68 s.v. Ἀλαλκομένιον.
  5. Iliad 4.8, 5.908.
  6. Strabo 9.2.27, 9.2.36.
  7. Pausanias 9.33.5; Stephanus of Byzantium 68 s.v. Ἀλαλκομένιον.
  8. Pausanias 9.33.5.
  9. Stephanus of Byzantium 68 s.v. Ἀλαλκομένιον, schol. D on Iliad 4.8, 5.908.
  10. EETAA local government changes

Coordinates: 38°24′36″N 22°59′10″E / 38.410°N 22.986°E / 38.410; 22.986

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