'Ozolian Locris' or 'Western Locris' was a district inhabited by the 'Locri Ozolae' (
Greek: Oζόλαι Λοκροί) a tribe of the
Locrians, upon the
Corinthian gulf, bounded on the north by
Doris, on the east by
Phocis, and on the west by
Aetolia.
Situation and history
This district is mountainous and for the most part unproductive. The declivities of
Mount Parnassus from Phocis, and of
Mount Corax from Aetolia, occupy the greater part of it. The only river, of which the name is mentioned in antiquity, is the Hylaethus (now
Mornos), which runs in a southwesterly direction, and falls into the Corinthian gulf near
Naupactus. The frontier of the Locri Ozolae on the west was close to the promontory
Antirrhium, opposite the promontory
Rhium on the coast of
Achaea. The eastern frontier of Locris, on the coast, was close to the Phocian town of
Crissa; and the Crissaean gulf washed on its western side the Locrian, and on its eastern the Phocian coast. The origin of the name of Ozolae is uncertain. Various etymologies were proposed by the ancients. (
Paus. x. 38. § 1, ''seq.'') Some derived it from the greek verb ''όζειν'' (''smell''), either from the stench arising from a spring at the foot of Mount Taphiassus, beneath which the centaur
Nessus is said to have been buried, and which still retains this property (''cf.''
Strabo ix. p. 427), or from the abundance of asphodel which scented the air. (''Cf.'' Archytas, ap.
Plut. ''Quaest. Graec.'' 15.) Others derived it from the undressed skins which were worn by the ancient inhabitants; and the Locrians themselves from the branches () of a vine which was produced in their country in a marvellous manner. The Locri Ozolae are said to have been a colony from the
Opuntian Locrians. They first appear in history in the time of the
Peloponnesian War, when they are mentioned by
Thucydides as a semi-barbarous nation, along with the Aetolians and
Acarnanians, whom they resembled in their armour and mode of fighting. (Thuc. i. 5, iii. 94.) In
426 BCE, the Locrians promised to assist
Demosthenes, the
Athenian commander, in his invasion of Aetolia; but, after the defeat of Demosthenes, most of the Locrian tribes submitted without opposition to
Spartan Eurylochus, who marched through their territory from
Delphi to Naupactus. (Thuc. iii. 95, seq.) They belonged at a later period to the
Aetolian League. (Polyb. xviii. 30.)
Cities and towns
The chief town of the Ozolae was
Amfissa and their most important port
Naupactus. The other towns, in the direction of west to east, were:
Molycreia,
Oeneon,
Anticirrha,
Eupalium,
Erythrae,
Tolophon,
Hessus,
Oeantheia,
Ipnus,
Chalaeum, and more inland,
Aegitium,
Potidania,
Crocyleium,
Teichium,
Olpae,
Messapia,
Hyle,
Tritaea,
Myonia.
References
★
★ On the geography of the Locrian tribes, see Leake, ''Northern Greece'', vol. ii. pp. 66, ''seq.'', 170, ''seq.'', 587, ''seq.''