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ARCADIA , a See also: district of See also: Greece, forming the central See also: plateau of See also: Peloponnesus
.
Shut off from the See also: coast lands on all sides by See also: mountain barriers, which rise in the See also: northern peaks of Erymanthus (mod
.
Olonos) to 7400, of See also: Cyllene (Ziria) to 7900, in the See also: southern corner buttresses of Parthenium and Lycaeum to more than 5000 ft., this inland plateau is again divided by numerous subsidiary ranges
.
In eastern or " locked " Arcadia these heights run in parallel courses intersected by See also: cross-ridges, enclosing a series of upland plains whose See also: waters have no See also: egress save by underground channels or zerethra
.
The western country is more open, with isolated mountain-See also: groups and winding valleys, where the See also: Alpheus with its tributaries the Ladon and Erymanthus drains off in a complex See also: river-See also: system the overflow from all Arcadia
.
The See also: ancient inhabitants were a nation of shepherds and huntsmen, worshipping See also: Pan, See also: Hermes and See also: Artemis, See also: primitive nature-deities
.
The difficulties of communication and especially the lack of a seaboard seriously hindered intercourse with the rest of Greece
.
Consequently the same population, whose origins See also: Greek tradition removed back into the See also: world's earliest days, held the See also: land throughout historic times, without even an admixture of Dorian immigrants
.
Their customs and dialect persisted, the latter maintaining a See also: peculiar resemblance to that of the equally conservative Cypriotes
.
Thus Arcadia lagged behind the general development of Greece, and its See also: political importance was small owing to chronic feuds between the townships (notably between See also: Mantineia and See also: Tegea) and the readiness of its youth for mercenary service abroad
.
The importance of Arcadia in Greek See also: history was due to its position between See also: Sparta and the See also: Isthmus
.
Unable to force their way through Argolis, the Lacedaemonians early set them-selves to secure the passage through the central plateau
.
The resistance of single cities, and the temporary union of the Arcadians during the second Messenian war, did not defer theSee also: complete subjugation of the land beyond the 6th century
.
In later times revolts were easily stirred up among individual cities, but a See also: united See also: national See also: movement was rarely concerted
.
Most of these rebellions were easily quelled by Sparta, though in 469 and again in 420 the disaffected cities, backed by See also: Argos, formed a dangerous coalition and came near to establishing their inde-
See also: ARCADIUS 341
pendence
.
A more whole-hearted attempt at union in 371 after the See also: battle of See also: Leuctra resulted in the formation of a political See also: league out of an old religious See also: synod, and the foundation of a federal capital in a commanding strategic position (see MEGALO-voL1s)
.
But a severe defeat at the hands of Sparta in 368 (the " tearless battle ") and the recrudescence of See also: internal discord soon paralysed this movement
.
The new fortress of See also: Megalopolis, instead of supplying a centre of national See also: life, merely accentuated the mutual jealousy of the cities
.
During the Hellenistic age Megalopolis stood staunchly by See also: Macedonia; the rest of Arcadia rebelled against See also: Antipater (330, 323) and Antigonus Gonatas (266)
.
Similarly the various cities were divided in their allegiance between the Achaean and the Aetolian leagues, with the result that Arcadia became the battleground of these confederacies, or See also: fell a prey to Sparta and Macedonia
.
These conflicts seem to have worn out the land, which already in See also: Roman times had fallen into decay
.
An influx of See also: Slavonic settlers in the 8th century A.D. checked the depopulation for a while, but Arcadia suffered severely from the See also: constant quarrels of its Frankish barons (1205–1460)
.
The succeeding centuries of See also: Turkish See also: rule, combined with an Albanian immigration, raised the prosperity of the land, but in the See also: Wars of Independence the strategic importance of Arcadia once more made it a centre of conflict
.
In See also: modern times the population remains sparse, and pending the complete restoration of the See also: water conduits the See also: soil is unproductive
.
The modern department of Arcadia extends to the Gulf ofSee also: Nauplia with a See also: sea-coast of about 40 M
.
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