Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- List of abbreviations
- List of illustrations
- Chapter 1 Introduction
- Chapter 2 Delimiting the Messenians
- Chapter 3 The return of the Heraclids and the mythical birth of Messenia
- Chapter 4 The conquest of Messenia through the ages
- Chapter 5 Messenia from the Dark Ages to the Peloponnesian War
- Chapter 6 The Western Messenians
- Chapter 7 The earthquake and the revolt: from Ithome to Naupaktos
- Chapter 8 The liberation of Messene
- Chapter 9 Being Messenian from Philip to Augustus
- Chapter 10 Messenians in the Empire
- Chapter 11 Conclusions
- Bibliography
- Index locorum
- Index of inscriptions
- Archaeological sites
- General index
Chapter 6 - The Western Messenians
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- List of abbreviations
- List of illustrations
- Chapter 1 Introduction
- Chapter 2 Delimiting the Messenians
- Chapter 3 The return of the Heraclids and the mythical birth of Messenia
- Chapter 4 The conquest of Messenia through the ages
- Chapter 5 Messenia from the Dark Ages to the Peloponnesian War
- Chapter 6 The Western Messenians
- Chapter 7 The earthquake and the revolt: from Ithome to Naupaktos
- Chapter 8 The liberation of Messene
- Chapter 9 Being Messenian from Philip to Augustus
- Chapter 10 Messenians in the Empire
- Chapter 11 Conclusions
- Bibliography
- Index locorum
- Index of inscriptions
- Archaeological sites
- General index
Summary
After the disappearance of their predecessors sometime during the archaic period, the fifth century saw the return of the Messenians to the political landscape of Greece. Unexpectedly, however, they did not reappear at first in the area they were most closely associated with, the southwestern Peloponnese. Instead, the first polity that called itself “the Messenians” arose in Sicily, on the site of the ancient Chalcidian colony of Zankle, which was founded anew around 490 BC by the tyrant of Rhegion Anaxilaos and called Messene. The name of the new colony reflected the fact that the tyrant considered himself to be of Messenian descent. Participation of Messenians coming directly from the Peloponnese to the foundation of Sicilian Messene is controversial and ultimately unlikely, but almost a century later for a short while a large contingent of Messenians from Naupaktos was indeed settled in the city, whence it went on to found the city of Tyndaris, on the northeastern coast of Sicily. In spite of their name and traditions of origin, the nature of the relationship of the Western Messenians to the Messenians of the Peloponnese turns out to be unclear and possibly ambivalent, and a scrutiny of the little we know about the Messenian diaspora on the Strait of Messina may shed interesting light on the development of the Messenian identity as a whole.
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- The Ancient MesseniansConstructions of Ethnicity and Memory, pp. 147 - 172Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008