- Corinth, 3 km (2 mi) west of the
mouth of the
river Mornos. It is
named for
Naupaktos (Ναύπακτος,
Latinized as Naupactus), an
important Athenian naval station...
-
metropolitan see of the
Church of Greece. Its seat is the town of
Nafpaktos (
Naupaktos or Naupactus, in the late
Middle Ages
known as Lepanto) in southeastern...
-
under the
general command of Demosthenes. However, they
failed to
regain Naupaktos,
which had
meanwhile been
conquered by the
Corinthians with the aid of...
-
smelts including Atherina boyeri.
Around 900 A.D, the
Byzantine fleet from
Naupaktos (Lepanto) at the Gulf of
Corinth became the
capital and was
named Nikopolis...
- 1797,
finally being ceded by the
British to Ali
Pasha in 1819.
Lepanto (
Naupaktos), port in Aetolia,
briefly seized by a
Venetian captain in 1390, in 1394...
- road with
Eurytania and Phthiotida. In the late-1980s, the by-p**** of
Naupaktos began construction but
after paving the road, the
signs did not appear...
-
theme became Naupaktos further south. The
extent of the new
province is unclear, but
probably matched the
extent of the
Metropolis of
Naupaktos, established...
-
statesman and
orator (d. 314 BC) Merker,
Irwin L. (1989). "The
Achaians in
Naupaktos and
Kalydon in the
Fourth Century". Hesperia: The
Journal of the American...
-
Venetian campaign with
Sultan Bayezid. He died in the
military camp near
Naupaktos. He had two sons
named Hüseyin and İsa who
served to
Selim I and Suleyman...
- name
derives from its capital, Inebahti/Aynabahti, the
Turkish name for
Naupaktos,
better known in
English with its
Italian name, Lepanto. The province...