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LOCRI

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 857 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LOCRI  , an

ancient city of Magna Graecia, Italy . The
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original settlers took possession of the Zephyrian promontory (
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Capo Bruzzano some 12 M . N. of Capo Spartivento), and though after three or four years they transplanted themselves to a site 12 M. farther north, still near the coast, 2 M . S. of Gerace Marina below the
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modern Gerace, they still retained the name of Locri Epizephyrii (Aoicpol of itrq'eg5upcoc), which served to distinguish them from the Ozolian and Opuntian Locri of
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Greece itself (see preceding article) . The foundation of Locri goes back to about 683 B.C . It was the first of all Greek communities to have a written code of
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laws given by
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Zaleucus in 664 B.C . From Locri were founded the colonies of Meisma and Heiponium (Hipponium) . It succeeded in repelling the attacks of Croton (
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battle on the
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river Sagras, perhaps sometime in the 6th century), and found in Syracuse a support against Rhegium: it was thus an active adversary or Athenian aggrandisement in the west . Pindar extolls its uprightness and love of the heroic muse of beauty, of wisdom, and of war, in the loth and zzth Olympian Odes . Stesichorus (q.v.) was indeed of Locrian origin . But it owed its greatest
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external prosperity to the fact that Dionysius I. of Syracuse selected his wife from Locri: its territory was then increased, and the circuit of its walls was doubled, but it lost its freedom . In 356 B.C. it was ruled by Dionysius II .

From the battle of

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Heraclea to the
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year 205 (when it was captured by P . Cornelius Scipio Africanus Maior, and placed under the control of his legate Q . Pleminius), Locri was continually changing its allegiance between Rome and her enemies; but it remained an ally, and was only obliged like other Greek coast towns to furnish
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ships . In later
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Roman times it is often mentioned, but was apparently of no
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great importance . It is mentioned incidentally until the 6th century A.D., but was destroyed by the
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Saracens in 915 . Excavations in 1889–1890 led to the
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discovery of an Ionic temple (the Doric style being usual in Magna Graecia) at the north-west angle of the town—originally a
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cella with two naves, a closed pronaos on the E. and an
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adytum at the back (W.), later converted into a hexastyle peripheral temple with 34 painted terra-cotta columns . This was then destroyed about 400 B.C. and a new temple built on the ruins, heptastyle peripteral, with no intermediate columns in the cella and opisthodomos, and with 44 columns in all . The figures from the pediment of the twin Dioscuri, who according to the legend assisted Locri against Crotona, are in the Naples museum(see R . Koldewey and O . Puchstein, Griechische Tempel in Unteritalien and Sicilien, Berlin, 1899, pp . 1 sqq.) . Subsequent excavations in 1890–1891 were of the greatest importance, but the results remained unpublished up to 1908 .

From a

short account by P . Orsi in Atli del Congresso Storico, vol. v.'(Archeologia) Rome, 1004, p . 201, we learn that the exploration of the environs of the temple led to the discovery of a large number of archaic terra-cottas, and of some large trenches, covered with tiles, containing some 14,000 scyphoi arranged in rows . The plan of the city was also traced; the walls, the length of which was nearly 5 m., consisted of three parts—the fortified castles (Opoi'pia) with large towers, on three different hills, the city proper, and the
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lower town—the latter enclosed by long walls
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running down to the sea . In the Roman period the city was restricted to the plain near the sea . Since these excavations, a certain amount of unauthorized
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work has gone on, and some of the remains have been destroyed . In the course of these excavations some prehistoric
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objects have been discovered, which confirm the accounts of Thucydides and Polybius that the Greek settlers found the
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Siculi here before them . (T .

End of Article: LOCRI
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