Pontus

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Author: Laxman Burdak, IFS (R).
Map of Anatolia ancient regions

Pontus is a region on the southern coast of the Black Sea, located in the modern-day eastern Black Sea (Eúxinos Póntos) Region of Turkey.

Variants

Origin

The name was applied to the coastal region and its mountainous hinterland (rising to the Pontic Alps in the east) by the Greeks who colonized the area in the Archaic period and derived from the Greek name of the Black Sea: Εύξεινος Πόντος (Eúxinos Póntos), "Hospitable Sea",[2] or simply Pontos (ὁ Πόντος) as early as the Aeschylean Persians (472 BC) and Herodotus' Histories (circa 440 BC).

History

Having originally no specific name, the region east of the river Halys was spoken of as the country Ἐν Πόντῳ (En Póntō), lit. "on the Euxinos Pontos", and hence it acquired the name of Pontus, which is first found in Xenophon's Anabasis (c. 370 BC). The extent of the region varied through the ages but generally extended from the borders of Colchis (modern western Georgia) until well into Paphlagonia in the west, with varying amounts of hinterland. Several states and provinces bearing the name of Pontus or variants thereof were established in the region in the Hellenistic, Roman and Byzantine periods, culminating in the late Byzantine Empire of Trebizond.

Pontus is sometimes considered as the original home of the Amazons, in ancient Greek mythology and historiography (e. g. by Herodotus and Strabo).

External links

References

  1. πόντος, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, on Perseus.
  2. Εὔξεινος, William J. Slater, Lexicon to Pindar, on Perseus.