Troezen ( , ), modern:
Troizina
or
Trizina is a small town (pop.
671 in 2001) in the
northeastern Peloponnese
, located southwest of Athens
and a few
miles south of Methana
. It
is also the name of the surrounding
municipality (pop.
6,507),
with seat in Galatas
(pop.
2,592).
Troizina is part of Piraeus Prefecture(in antiquity it was
part of Argolis
). The
municipality has a land area of 190.697 km². Its largest towns
and villages are Galatás, Kalloní (pop. 751), Troizína,
Taktikoúpoli (391), Karatzás (350), Dryópi (318), Ágios Geórgios
(284), and Agía Eléni (227). There are numerous smaller
settlements.
Troezen in mythology
According to
Greek mythology,
Troezen was the place where
Aethra, a princess of Troezen,
slept with both
Aegeus and
Poseidon the same night, and fell pregnant with the
great Greek hero
Theseus. Before returning
to Athens, Aegeus left his sandals and sword under a large boulder
in Troezen, and requested that when the child was able to prove
himself by moving the boulder he must return the items to his
father in Athens; Theseus did indeed lift the boulder when he came
of age.
Troezen is also the setting of the
Euripides tragedy
Hippolytus, which recounts the story
of the eponymous son of Theseus who becomes the subject of the love
of his stepmother,
Phaedra.
While fleeing the city, Hippolytus is killed when his chariot is
attacked by a bull rising from the sea. Other plays on the same
subject have been written by
Seneca and
Jean
Racine, also set in Troezen.
The ancient city also possessed a spring, supposedly formed where
the winged horse
Pegasus once came to
ground.
Troezen in history
A cult built up in the ancient city around the legend of
Hippolytus. Troezen girls traditionally dedicated a lock of their
hair to him before marriage.
Before the
Battle of Salamis (480
BC), Athenian women and children were sent to Troezen for safety on
the instructions of the Athenian statesman
Themistocles. In 1959 a
stele was found in a coffee house in Troezen,
depicting the
Decree of
Themistocles, the order to evacuate Athens. The stele has
since been dated to some 200 years after the Battle of Salamis,
indicating that it is probably a commemorative copy of the original
order.
The temple of
Isis was built by the
Halicarnassians in Troezen, because this was
their mother-city, but the image of Isis was dedicated by the
people of Troezen.
References