Phrygia$505675$ - ορισμός. Τι είναι το Phrygia$505675$
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Τι (ποιος) είναι Phrygia$505675$ - ορισμός

ANCIENT CITY IN PHRYGIA
Ipsos (Phrygia)

Eumeneia         
ANCIENT GREEK CITY OF PHRYGIA IN ASIA MINOR
Eumenia (Phyrgia); Fulvia (Phrygia); Eumenia (Phrygia)
Eumeneia or Eumenia () was a town of ancient Phrygia, situated on the river Glaucus, on the road from Dorylaeum to Apameia. It is said to have received its name from Attalus II, who named the town after his brother and predecessor, Eumenes II.
Hellespontine Phrygia         
  • psilos]]'', [[Altıkulaç Sarcophagus]], early 4th century BC.
  • Late Greek Archaic]] style, 520-500 BC. [[Çanakkale Archaeological Museum]].
SATRAPY OF THE ACHAEMENID EMPIRE (525-321 BC)
Phrygia-Hellespont
Hellespontine Phrygia () or Lesser Phrygia () was a Persian satrapy (province) in northwestern Anatolia, directly southeast of the Hellespont. Its capital was Dascylium, and for most of its existence it was ruled by the hereditary Persian Pharnacid dynasty.
Bria (Phrygia)         
ANCIENT CITY IN PHRYGIA, ASIA MINOR
Acemlar; Bria, Phrygia
Bria is an ancient city in Phrygia, Asia Minor. Bria was located in the late Roman province of Phrygia Pacatiana Prima, south of Acmonia.

Βικιπαίδεια

Ipsus

Ipsus or Ipsos (Ancient Greek: Ἴψος) or Ipsous (Ἴψους), was a town of ancient Phrygia a few miles below Synnada. The place itself never was of any particular note, but it is celebrated in history for the great battle fought in its plains, in 301 BCE, by the aged Antigonus and his son Demetrius against the combined forces of Cassander, Lysimachus, and Seleucus, in which Antigonus lost his conquests and his life. From Hierocles and the Acts of Councils, we learn that in the seventh and eighth centuries it was the see of a Christian bishop. No longer the seat of a residential bishop, Ipsus remains a titular see of the Roman Catholic Church.

Its site is located near Çayırbağ in Asiatic Turkey.