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CYZICUS , an See also: ancient See also: town of See also: Mysia in See also: Asia Minor, situated on the shoreward See also: side of the See also: present peninsula of Kapu-Dagh (Arctonnesus), which is said to have been originally an See also: island in the See also: Sea of Marmora, and to have been artificially connected with the mainland in historic times
.
It was, according to tradition, occupied by Thessalian settlers at the coming of the Argonauts, and in 756 B.C. the town was founded by Greeks from See also: Miletus
.
Owing to its advantageous position it speedily acquired commercial importance, and the gold staters of Cyzicus were a See also: staple currency in the ancient See also: world till they were superseded by those of See also: Philip of Macedon
.
During the Peloponnesian War (431–404 B.C.) Cyzicus was subject to the Athenians and Lacedaemonians alternately, and at the
See also: peace of See also: Antalcidas (387 B.C.), like the other See also: Greek cities in Asia, it was made over to See also: Persia
.
The See also: history of the town in Hellenistic times is closely connected with that of the dynasts of See also: Pergamum, with whose extinction it came into See also: direct relations with See also: Rome
.
Cyzicus was held for the See also: Romans against See also: Mithradates in 74 B.C. till the siege was raised by See also: Lucullus: the See also: loyalty of the city was rewarded by an extension of territory and other privileges
.
Still a flourishing centre in Imperial times, the place appears to have been ruined by a series of earthquakes—the last in A.D
.
1063—and the population was transferred to Artaki at least as early as the 13th century, when the peninsula was occupied by the Crusaders
.
The site is now known as Bal-Kiz (IIaXaia Kbrucos?) and entirely uninhabited, though under cultivation
.
The See also: principal extant ruins are: the walls, which are traceable for nearly their whole extent, a picturesque amphitheatre intersected by a stream, and the substructures of the See also: temple of See also: Hadrian
.
Of this magnificent See also: building, sometimes ranked among the seven wonders of the ancient world, See also: thirty-one immense columns still stood erect in 1444
.
These have since been carried away piece-See also: meal for building purposes by the See also: Turks
.
See J . See also: Marquardt, Cyzicus (Berlin, 183o) ; G
.
See also: Perrot, Exploration de la Galatie (See also: Paris, 1862) ; F
.
W
.
Hasluck and A
.
E
.
See also: Henderson in Journal of Hellenic Studies (1904), 135-143
.
(F
.
W
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