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'''Attalis''' ({{langx|grc|Ἀτταλίς}}) was a tribe (]) added by the ] to the previous list of 11 Athenian tribes (consisting of ] and ]s) in the spring of 200 ]{{sfn|Traill|1975|p=30}} (just a few months earlier the "Macedonian" tribes ] were dissolved).{{sfn|Traill|1975|p=xvi}} The tribe was named after ] of ]. | '''Attalis''' ({{langx|grc|Ἀτταλίς}}) was a tribe (]) added by the ] to the previous list of 11 Athenian tribes (consisting of ] and ]s) in the spring of 200 ]{{sfn|Traill|1975|p=30}} (just a few months earlier the "Macedonian" tribes ] were dissolved).{{sfn|Traill|1975|p=xvi}} The tribe was named after ] of ]. | ||
Revision as of 03:52, 14 January 2025
Attalis (Ancient Greek: Ἀτταλίς) was a tribe (phyle) added by the ancient Athenians to the previous list of 11 Athenian tribes (consisting of trittyes and demes) in the spring of 200 B.C. (just a few months earlier the "Macedonian" tribes Antigonis and Demetrias were dissolved). The tribe was named after Attalos I of Pergamon.
The Monument of the Eponymous Heroes had two statues removed and one added, starting the so-called Period IV.
Modern researchers use the Roman numeral XIV to designate Attalis.
The 12 demes that formed Attalis were collected from all 11 old phylai ("rule-of-one"), with the 12th, Appolonieis, newly created and named after Apollonis of Cyzicus, wife of Attalos I.
References
- Traill 1975, p. 30.
- Traill 1975, p. xvi.
- Traill 1975, p. 31.
Sources
- Bates, F.O. (1898). The Five Post-Kleisthenean Tribes. Cornell studies in classical philology. Vol. VIII. Press of Andrus & Church. Retrieved 2025-01-13.
- Traill, John S. (1975). The Political Organization of Attica: A Study of the Demes, Trittyes, and Phylai, and Their Representation in the Athenian Council. Hesperia Supplements. Vol. 14. doi:10.2307/1353928. JSTOR 1353928.
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