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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: SAC-SAR |
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SAMOTHRACE (Turk. Semadrek) , an island in the N. of the Aegean Sea, nearly opposite the mouth of the Hebrus, and lying N. of Imbros and N.E. of Lemnos. The island is a kaza of the Lemnos sanjak, and has a population of 3500, nearly all Greek. It is still called Samothraki, and though of small extent is, next to Mount
great
great
worship of the CABEIRI (q.v.), a mysterious triad of divinities, concerning whom very little is known, but who appear, like all the similar deities venerated in different parts of Greece
Xerxes (B.C. 480), when the Samothracians sent a contingent to the Persian fleet
Herod
After visits by travellers, including Cyriac of Ancona (1444), Richter (1822), and Kiepert (1842), Samothrace was explored in 1857 by Conze, who published an account of it, as well as the larger neighbouring islands, in 1860. The Victory of Samothrace," set up by Demetrius PoIiorcetes c. 305 B.C., was discovered in the island in 1863, and is now in the Louvre. The ancient city, of which the ruins are called Palaeopoli, was situated on the N. side of the island close to the sea; its site is clearly marked, and considerable remains still exist of the ancient walls, which were built in massive Cyclopean style, as well as of the sanctuary of the Cabeiri, and other temples and edifices of Ptolemaic and later date. The modern village
coast
sulphur
Conze, Reise auf den Inseln des Thrakischen Meeres (Hanover, 186o) ; Conze, Hauser and Niemann, Archaologische Untersuchungen auf Samothrake (Vienna, 1875 and r88o) ; H. F. Tozer, Islands of the Aegean (London, 189o). End of Article: SAMOTHRACE (Turk. Semadrek) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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