- Greece. In antiquity, the city-state was
known as
Lacedaemon (Λακεδαίμων,
Lakedaímōn),
while the name
Sparta referred to its main
settlement on the
banks of...
-
Lacaedemon (/læsɪˈdiːmən/;
Ancient Gr****: Λακεδαίμων
Lakedaímōn) or
Lacaedemon was the
eponymous king of
Lacedaemon (i.e. Sparta) in
classical Gr**** mythology...
-
temple in Akriai,
Lakedaimon, was said to be her
oldest sanctuary in the Peloponnese: Well
worth seeing here [at Akriai,
Lakedaimon,] are a
temple and...
-
Aphidna had been
captured by the
Dioskouroi and
Helen was
being brought to
Lakedaimon. For it is said that she was with child, was
delivered in Argos, and founded...
-
Cinaethon of
Sparta (Gr****: Κιναίθων ὁ Λακεδαιμόνιος
Kinaithon ho Lakedaimonios) was a
legendary Gr**** poet to whom
different sources ascribe the lost...
- at the end of the 5th
century BC
Cinaethon of
Sparta or
Kinaithon of
Lakedaimon, a
legendary early Gr**** poet
sometimes called the
author of the lost...
-
Changes in
taste and
lifestyle have made this an
uncommon dish. In
ancient Lakedaimon, the Gr**** city-state of Sparta, the
black broth was common: a soup with...
-
abandoned Apollonia Sparta southern part of the Peloponnese,
Greece Sparti Lakedaimon (Λακεδαίμων),
Lakedaimonia (Λακεδαιμωνία), Σπάρτα, Σπάρτη, Spartē. Stagirus...
- as well as
Maximus the Philosopher. His
signature was
Maximus Grecus Lakedaimon (lit.
Maximus the Gr**** of, and
originating from, Lakedaimonia) and his...
- with the same name.
Laconia (also
called Lacedaemon; Gr****: Λακεδαίμων,
Lakedaimōn),
occupied the south-eastern part of the Peloponnese. Its prin****l boundaries...