- Tfd›Gr****: Θούρῐοι, translit. Thoúrioi),
called also by some
Latin writers Thūrium (compare ‹See Tfd›Gr****: Θούρῐον, translit. Thoúrion, in Ptolemy), and...
- (apparently the wife of Pythagoras)
addressed a
certain Hippodamus of
Thurium (presumably this same man) that her work
contains the
doctrine of the golden...
-
Copia (or Copiae), the
ancient city and
bishopric also
called Thurii or
Thurium, now a
Latin Catholic titular COPIA, a
metal band from Melbourne, Australia...
-
Aristotle refers to a
version of the
Histories written by "Herodotus of
Thurium", and some p****ages in the
Histories have been
interpreted as
proof that...
-
Alexis (‹See Tfd›Gr****: Ἄλεξις; fl. 350s – 288 BC) was a Gr****
comic poet of the
Middle Comedy period. He was born in
Thurii (in present-day Calabria,...
-
defend the town of
Chaeronea and
having Murena retreat back onto
Mount Thurium,
while he
himself marched alongside the
right bank of the
river Cephisus...
-
Kroton (Croto in Latin) in 194 BC,
Copiae in the
territory of
Thurii (
Thurium in Latin) in 193 BC, and Vibo
Valentia in the
territory of
Hipponion in...
- or
Thyrion (Ancient Gr****: Θύριον), or
Thyreum or
Thyreon (Θύρεον), or
Thurium or
Thourion (Θούριον), or
Thyrreium or
Thyrreion (Θύρρειον), was a city...
-
abandoned Thorico Thurii (Θούριοι)
Magna Graecia,
southern Italy abandoned Thurium (Θούριον), Copia, Copiae, Turios,
Thurio Magna Graecia Thyreum Thyria South...
-
Mount Thourion or
Thurium Mons was the name of a
conical hill in
Ancient Greece. A
temple to the cult of the
Muses may have been
situated here. The location...