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THESPIAE

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Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 840 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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THESPIAE  , an

ancient Greek city of
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Boeotia . It stood on level ground commanded by the low range of hills which runs eastward from the
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foot of Mount Helicon to Thebes . The deity most worshipped at Thespiae, according to
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Pausanias, was
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Eros, whose
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primitive image was an unwrought stone . The
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town contained many
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works of
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art, among them the Eros of
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Praxiteles, dedicated by
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Phryne in her native place; it was one of the most famous statues in the ancient
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world, and drew crowds of
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people to Thespiae . It was carried off to Rome by Caligula, restored by Claudius, and again carried off by
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Nero . There was also a
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bronze statue of Eros by
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Lysippus . The Thespians also worshipped the Muses, and celebrated a festival in their honour in the sacred grove on Mount Helicon . Remains of what was probably the ancient citadel are still to be seen, consisting of an oblong or oval
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line of fortification, solidly and regularly built . The adjacent ground to the east and south is covered with
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foundations, bearing witness to the extent of the ancient city . The neighbouring
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village Eremokastro, on higher ground, was thought by Ulrichs to be probably the site of the ancient Ceressus . In 1882 there were discovered, about 1200 yds. east of Eremokastro, on the road to Arkopodi (
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Leuctra), the remains of a polyandrion, including a
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colossal stone lion . The tomb
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dates from the 5th century B.C., and is probably that of the Thespians who fell at Plataea, for those who fell at Thermopylae were buried on the field .

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History.—Thespiae figures chiefly in historj as an enemy of Thebes, whose centralizing policy it had all the more to fear because of the proximity of the two towns . During the Persian invasion of 48o B.C. it stood almost alone 'among Boeotian cities in rejecting the example of treason set by the Thebans, and served the
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national cause with splendid devotion . Seven
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hundred Thespians accompanied
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Leonidas to Thermopylae and of their own
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free will shared his last stand and destruction . The remaining inhabitants, after seeing their city burnt down by Xerxes, furnished a force of 1800 men to the confederate Greek army at Plataea . In 424 B.C. the contingent which the Thespians had been compelled to furnish sustained heavy losses at Delium, and in the next
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year the Thebans took
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advantage of this temporary enfeeblement to accuse their neighbours of friendship towards Athens and to dismantle their walls . In 414 they interfered again to suppress a democratic rising . In the Corinthian war Thespiae sided with Sparta, and between 379 and 372 repeatedly served the Spartans as a
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base against Thebes . In the latter year they were reduced by the Thebans and compelled to send a contingent to Leuctra (371) . It was probably shortly after this
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battle that the Thebans used their new predominance to destroy Thespiae and drive its people into exile . The town was rebuilt at some later time . In 171 B.C., true to its policy of opposing Thebes, it sought the friendship of Rome . It is subsequently mentioned by Strabo as a place of some
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size, and by Pliny as a free city .

See

Herodotus, v . 79, vii . 132-ix . 30; Thucydides, iv . 93, 133, vi . 95;
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Xenophon, Hellenica, iv. vi.; Pausanias, ix . 13 . 8–14, 2, 26–27; Strabo, ix. pp . 409–10; B . V . Head, Historia Numorum (Oxford, 1887), pp . 479–80; Leake, Travels in
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Northern
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Greece, ii .

479 sq.;

Dodwell, Tour through Greece, i . 253; Bursian, Geogr. von Griechenland, i . 237 sq.; Ulrichs, Reisen u . Forschungen in Griechenland, ii . 84 sq.; Milted. d. deutsch. archaol . Inst. in Athen (1879), pp . 190 sq., 273 sq.; llpaKruch rits hpx . 'Eratptas (1882), PP . 65-74 .

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