Site
History
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Sicyon
(Sikyon), Greece
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- Also spelled
Secyon, Modern Greek
Sikión, an ancient Greek city
in the northern Peloponnese about 11 miles (18 km)
northwest of Corinth. Inhabited in Mycenaean times and
later invaded by Dorians, Sicyon was subject to Argos for
several centuries. In the 7th century BC, Sicyonian
independence was established by non-Dorian tyrants, the
Orthagorids. Under the Orthagorid ruler Cleisthenes
(grandfather of the Athenian statesman of the same name),
in the 6th century, the city gained its greatest power.
After the fall of the tyranny, Sicyon joined the
Peloponnesian League and remained a loyal ally of Sparta
for about a century and a half; its plentiful coinage
attests to its prosperity in this period. Theban
intervention in 369 or 368 led to intermittent civil
strife and tyrannies. During the 4th century BC, Sicyon
was celebrated for its school of painters and sculptors,
which included the master Lysippus. Aratus, the most
distinguished statesman of Sicyon, freed it from a
tyranny (251) and brought it into the Achaean League, in
which it played a leading role until his death (213).
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- "Sicyon."
Encyclopædia Britannica. 2007. Encyclopædia
Britannica Online. 28 July 2007
<http://www.search.eb.com/eb/article-9067628>.
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- Also see:
- The Princeton
Encyclopedia of Classical Sites (Eds. Richard Stillwell,
William L. MacDonald, Marian Holland
McAllister)
- http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0006&layout=&loc=sikyon
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