Pelodes (original) (raw)
- In Antiquity, Pelodes (Ancient Greek: Πηλώδης) or Palodes (Ancient Greek: Παλῶδες) was a site that cannot be identified with any certainty. One obscure Palodes was a minor port site on the eastern side of the Bosporus, about halfway up, a little south of Amycus. A reference to another Palodes is in Plutarch's De defectu oraculorum ("Obsolescence of Oracles") of which a common reading is that the Greek god Pan is dead. During the reign of Tiberius (AD 14-37), Plutarch records, the news of Pan's death came to one Thamus, a sailor on his way to Italy by way of the island of Paxi. A divine voice hailed him across the salt water, "Thamus, are you there? When you reach Palodes, take care to proclaim that the great god Pan is dead." Which Thamus did, and the news was greeted from shore with groans and laments. But see Pan (mythology). In Plutarch's context, Epitherses was sailing up the western coast of Greece, presumably intending to cross to Italy once he reached Corfu, following a standard Roman sea-route between Italy and Greece. The ship had already drifted from the Echinades (near Ithaca) up to Paxi. Strabo (7.7.5) mentions "the mouth of the so-called Pelodes Limen (Ancient Greek: Πηλώδης λιμήν) as the location of Buthrotum (modern Butrint in southern Albania, opposite the northern end of Corfu. (en)
- Pelodes limen (in greco antico: Πηλώδης λιμήν) è stata un'antica città nell'Epiro meridionale. Strabone descrive il sito come parte finale di un promontorio nei pressi di un lago di acqua fresca (probabilmente il lago di Butrinto) chiamato "Pelodes limen". (it)
- Pelodes limen (in greco antico: Πηλώδης λιμήν) è stata un'antica città nell'Epiro meridionale. Strabone descrive il sito come parte finale di un promontorio nei pressi di un lago di acqua fresca (probabilmente il lago di Butrinto) chiamato "Pelodes limen". (it)
- In Antiquity, Pelodes (Ancient Greek: Πηλώδης) or Palodes (Ancient Greek: Παλῶδες) was a site that cannot be identified with any certainty. One obscure Palodes was a minor port site on the eastern side of the Bosporus, about halfway up, a little south of Amycus. (en)