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TYNDARIS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V27, Page 500 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TYNDARIS  , an

ancient city on the
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northern coast of Sicily, about 13 M . W.S.W. of Mylae (mod . Milazzo) and 5 M . E. of the
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modern
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town of Patti . It was founded by Dionysius the Elder in 395 B.C., who settled there 600 Peloponnesian Messenians on a site cut out of the territory of Abacaenum (1 m. north of the modern Tripi) . It was thus almost the last Greek city founded in Sicily . It was one of the earliest allies of Timoleon . In the First Punic War it was dependent on Carthage, but expelled the garrison in 254 B.C. and joined the Romans, under whom it seems to have flourished .
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Cicero calls it " nobilissima civitas," though it seems to have suffered especially under Verres . It was one of the points occupied by Sextus Pompeius, but was later on taken by Agrippa, who used it as a
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base of operations . Augustus probably made it a colonia . Pliny mentions that
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half of it was swallowed upby the sea, though he does not give the date of this event (Hist. nat. ii .

206) . It was probably, however, due to a

fault in the
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limestone rock of which it is composed, and the
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action of the sea . The site is a remarkably
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fine one, and it is surprising that it was not occupied sooner . It is an isolated hill (920 ft.) with projecting spurs, rising abruptly on the seaward side, and connected by a comparatively narrow isthmus with the
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lower ground inland . It thus commands a magnificent view, including even the
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summit of Etna, while opposite to it on the north are the Lipari Islands . Considerable remains of the city walls, built of rectangular blocks of stone, exist on the south side; on the west their
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foundations are traceable . Remains of several towers may be seen, and the, site of the main
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gate, which was in a recess on the south (the
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land) side, is clearly traceable, the walls defending it on each side being well preserved . Outside it are several tombs of the
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Roman period . The walls follow the upper edge of the plateau, and do not seem to have included the spurs to seaward . Their remains indicate that it was the north and north-east portion of the city that fell . This fact renders it doubtful whether the church of the Madonna di Tindari, at the east extremity, marks the site of the acropolis . Along parts of the north side, where the
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line of the wall should run, is a line of debris, which may belong to a reconstruction after the catastrophe described by Pliny .

Within the walls are considerable remains of a

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building generally known (though not correctly) as the gymnasium, constructed of
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masonry, with three narrow halls, each about 90 ft. long, the central hall being 21 ft. wide, the other two 14 ft . Below it to the north are remains of a building with several mosaic pavements, and to the west is a small theatre, the
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internal diameter of which is 212 It., and the length of the stage 8o ft . There are traces of many other buildings within the city
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area, including a consider-able number of underground cisterns An important collection of
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objects found on the site is preserved in the
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Villa della Scala (12 m. to the west), belonging to Baron
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Sciacca, the owner of the site itself . See R . V . Scaffidi, Tyndaris (Palermo, 1895) . (T .

End of Article: TYNDARIS
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