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CROTO See also: Cotrone) a See also: Greek See also: town on the E. See also: coast of the territory of the See also: Bruttii (mod
.
See also: Calabria), on a promontory 7 M
.
N.W. of the Lacinian promontory
.
It was founded by a colony of See also: Achaeans led by Myscellus in 710 B.C
.
Its name was, according to the See also: legend, that of a See also: local See also: prince who afforded hospitality to Heracles, but was accidentally killed by him and buried on the spot
.
Like See also: Sybaris, it soon became a city of power and See also: wealth
.
It was especially celebrated for its successes in the Olympic See also: games from 588 B.C. onwards, See also: Milo being the most famous of its athletes
.
Pythagoras established himself here between 540 and 530 B.C. and formed a society of 300 disciples (among whom was Milo), who acquired considerable influence with the supreme council of l000 by which the city was ruled
.
In 510 B.C
.
See also: Crotona was strong enough to defeat the Sybarites, with whom it had
previously been on friendly terms, and raze their city to the ground
.
Shortly afterwards, however, an insurrection took place, by which the disciples of Pythagoras were driven out, and a democracy established . The victory of the Locrians and Phlegians over Crotona in 480 B.C. marked the beginning of its decline . It suffered after this from the attacks ofSee also: Dionysius I., who became its master for twelve years, of the Bruttii, and of See also: Agathocles, and even more from the invasion of See also: Pyrrhus, after which in 277 the See also: Romans obtained possession of it
.
See also: Livy states that the walls had a length of 12 M. and that about See also: half the See also: area within them had at that See also: time ceased to be inhabited
.
After the See also: battle of See also: Cannae Crotona revolted from See also: Rome, and Hannibal made it his winter quarters for three years
.
It was made a colony by the Romans at the end of the war (194 B.C.)
.
After that time but little is heard of it, though See also: Petronius mentions the corrupt morals of its inhabitants; but it continues to be mentioned down to the See also: Gothic See also: wars
.
The importance of the city was mainly due to its harbour, which, though not a See also: good one, was the only See also: port between See also: Tarentum and Rhegium
.
The See also: original See also: settlement occupied the See also: hill above it (143 ft.) and later became the acropolis
.
Its healthy situation was famous in antiquity, and to this was ascribed its superiority in athletics; it was the seat also of a medical school which in the days of
See also: Herodotus was considered the first in See also: Greece
.
Of the exact site of the See also: ancient city and its remains practically nothing is known; a few fragments of the productions of its See also: art preserved in private hands at Cotrone are described by F. von Duhn in Notizie degli scavi, 1897, 343 seq
.
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