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Farsala (Gr****: Φάρσαλα),
known in
Antiquity as
Pharsalos (Ancient Gr****: Φάρσαλος, Latin: Pharsālus), is a city in
southern Thessaly, in Greece. Farsala...
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offered to Sol
Indiges on August 9 to
commemorate Caesar's
victory at
Pharsala (48 BCE). The
Roman ritual calendars or
fasti also
mention a
feast for...
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sources as
Peter and John
Sebastopoulos controlled the
small towns of
Pharsala and Domokos. In 1348,
Thessaly was
invaded and
occupied by the Serbian...
- the
battle of 48 BC
south of the
Enipeus or
close to
Pharsalos (today's
Pharsala).
Among the
scholars arguing for the
south side are Béquignon (1928), Bruère...
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fought in 48 BC
between Julius Caesar and Pompey.
Battle of Pharsalus,
Pharsala or
Farsala may also
refer to:
Battle of
Pharsalus (1277),
between a Byzantine...
-
sources as
Peter and John
Sebastopoulos controlled the
small towns of
Pharsala and Domokos.
Ottoman control began in the late 14th
century with the capture...
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after 809
eastern Central Greece and
Thessaly (after 809) Athens, Larissa,
Pharsala, Lamia, Thermopylae, Plataeae, Euripus, Demetrias,
Stagoi Koloneia§ (thema...
- his
troops in
Velestino (which was the
theatre of a battle) and most in
Pharsala. But
there was a
momentary pause after the
second battle of Valestino....
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Macedonia and
Thrace Phanariion at Icaria,
North Aegean Phaistos,
Crete Pharsala,
Thessaly Pheneos,
Peloponnese Philippi, East
Macedonia and
Thrace Phourni...
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established during the
Fourth Crusade.
Lamia and
Neopatria were
captured and
Pharsala and
Domokos were
abandoned by the Serbs,
whose leader was Jacob's brother-in-law...