Pelasgic wall

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search

The Pelasgic wall or Pelasgian fortress or Enneapylon (nine-gated) was a monument supposed to have been built by the Pelasgians, after levelling the summit of the rock on the Acropolis of Athens. Thucydides[1] and Aristophanes[2] call it "Pelargikon", "Stork wall or place". The Parian Chronicle[3] mentions that the Athenians expelled the Peisistratids from the "Pelasgikon teichos". Herodotus[4] relates that before the expulsion of the Pelasgians from Attica, the land under Hymettus had been given to them as a dwelling-place in reward for the wall that had once been built around the Acropolis.

References

  1. Thuc 2.17.1
  2. The Birds (play) 832
  3. line 60
  4. Hdt 6.137.1

External links

  • The story of Athens: the fragments of the local chronicles of Attika by Phillip Harding Page 26 ISBN 978-0-415-33809-7 (2008)
  • The topography of Athens: with some remarks on its antiquities by William Martin Leake Page 420 (1831)

<templatestyles src="Asbox/styles.css"></templatestyles>