CHAONIA
Map of Chaonia, Molossis & Thesprotia
'Chaonia' or 'Chaon' (Ancient Greek Χαονία or Χάων) was the name of the northwestern part of Epirus, the homeland of the Epirot tribe of the Chaonians.[1][2] Its main town was called Phoenice. According to Virgil, Chaon was the eponymous ancestor of the Chaonians.[3]
| Contents |
| Geography |
| See also |
| References |
| External links |
Geography
Strabo in ''Geography'',[4] places Chaonia as part of Epirus, now part of north-western Greece and south-western Albania, and reached from the city of Onchesmos (now called Saranda) in the north, to the River Thyamis in the south, and as far as the Ambracian Gulf, including to the south the ancient city of Cestrine (now called Filiates), and represented the southernmost border to the wider region of Illyria. The Roman historian, Appian, mentions Chaonia as the southern border in his description and geography of Illyria.[5]
Important cities in Chaonia included Chimaera (modern Himarë), Buthrotum, Phoenice, Panormos, Onchesmus (today Saranda) and Antigonia. The region was likely named after the Chaonians who settled there.
See also
★ Chaonians
★ Thesprotians
★ Molossians
References
1. Malcolm Errington, "A History of Macedonia", California University Press,
1990
2. The Cambridge Ancient History: Vol. 6, the Fourth Century BC
3. Virgil, ''Aeneid, 3.295''
4. Strabo, ''The Geography, Book VII, Chapter 7.5'' at LacusCurtius ★ class=wikiexternal target=_blank>.html
5. Appian, ''The Foreign Wars, III.1'' (ed. Horace White)
External links
★ Plutarch - Pyrrhus
★ Virgil - Aeneid
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