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Neapolis and with
In a description of a painting in Neapolis, the Greek rhetorician Philostratus the Elder describes them as sisters and wives of the male centaurs who live on Mount Pelion with their children.
Lazio – together with the present region of Campania immediately to the southeast of Lazio and the seat of Neapolis – became Region I.
Eventually, this gifted student became dissatisfied with the level of philosophical instruction available in Alexandria, and went to Athens, the preeminent philosophical center of the day, in 431 to study at the Neoplatonic successor of the famous Academy founded 800 years ( in 387 BC ) before by Plato ; there he was taught by Plutarch of Athens ( not to be confused with Plutarch of Chaeronea ), Syrianus, and Asclepigenia ; he succeeded Syrianus as head of the Academy, and would in turn be succeeded on his death by Marinus of Neapolis.
The Roman consul Quintus Publilius Filo recaptured Neapolis by 326 BC and allowed it to remain a Greek city with some autonomy as a civitas foederata while strongly aligned with Rome.
The Romans, who are meanwhile moving south while the Samnites are occupied with Tarentum, take the opportunity to recover Neapolis and, after a long siege, evict the Samnite garrison from the city and make it an ally of Rome.
The ancient necropolis remained in use with inhumations and cremations, possibly Greek and indigenous from the Neapolis.
In 636, Neapolis, along with most of Palestine, came under the rule of the Islamic Arab Caliphate of Umar ibn al-Khattab ; its name Arabicized to Nablus.
Neapolis ' bishop Ammonas was murdered and the city's priests were hacked into pieces and then burned together with the relics of saints.
Neapolis, along with most of Palestine, was conquered by the Muslims under Khaled ibn al-Walid — a general of the Rashidun army of Umar ibn al-Khattab — in 636 after the Battle of Yarmouk.
At the end of the 6th century BC Neapolis claimed its independence from Thassos and cut its own silver coins with the head of Gorgo ( γοργὀνειο ) at the one side as a symbol.
There is also a special room with the findings of Neapolis, such as remnants of the temple of Athena Parthenos ( Athina the Virgin ), archaic and classical black-figure vases and figurines.
* Verres is a major character in the novel Spartacus: Swords and Ashes by Jonathan Clements, which is set on the eve of his governorship of Sicily and concerns an undocumented dispute with a young Cicero in Neapolis.
The site of Shechem in patristic sources is almost invariably identified with or located close to the town of Nablus / Flavia Neapolis.
By this time Rome was familiar with coinage, as it had been introduced to Italy in the Greek colonies of Metapontum, Croton, and Sybaris before 500 BC and Neapolis ca 450 BC.
Returned from Hades, Derkyllis comes with their companions and Keryllos Astraios for " grave of the Siren ", which, according to Rohde at the Neapolis tomb located the siren Parthenope is understood.

Neapolis and by
The objective of founding the town was to take control of the neighbouring gold mines and to establish a garrison at a strategic passage: the site controlled the route between Amphipolis and Neapolis, part of the great royal route which crosses Macedonia from the east to the west and which was reconstructed later by the Roman Empire as the Via Egnatia.
The major remaining independent Greek settlement was Neapolis, and when the town was eventually captured by the Samnites, the Neapolitans were in need of help.
According to the Council of Chalcedon which took place in 451, the local bishop as well as the bishops of Amathus and Arsinoe were involved in the foundation of the city, which would be known by the names of Theodosiana and Neapolis.
Founded by the Roman Emperor Vespasian in 72 CE as Flavia Neapolis, Nablus has been ruled by many empires over the course of its almost 2, 000-year-long history.
Flavia Neapolis (" new city of the emperor Flavius ") was founded in 72 CE by the Roman emperor Vespasian over an older Samaritan village, Mabartha (" the passage ").
Samaritans reacted by entering the cathedral of Neapolis, killing the Christians inside and severing the fingers of the bishop Terebinthus.
The city was founded by settlers from Thassos about at the end of the 7th century BC, who called it Neapolis ( Νεάπολις ; " new city " in Greek ).
In 411 BC, during the Peloponnesian War, Neapolis was sieged by the allied armies of the Spartans and the Thassians, but remained faithful to Athens.
During the First Jewish – Roman War, Shechem was destroyed and a Neapolis or " new city " was built nearby by Vespasian in 72.
In A. D. 72, a new city, Flavia Neapolis, was built by Vespasian a 2 kilometers to the west of the old one.
A biography was written by his contemporary Leontios of Neapolis.
* Neapolis Public Stadium, a stadium used by Greek club Ionikos FC
Neapolis was destroyed halfway through the 3rd century AD by the Goths.

Neapolis and .
He was born at Flavia Neapolis ( today Nablus ) in Palestine into a pagan family, and defined himself as a Gentile.
His grandfather, Bacchius, had a Greek name, while his father, Priscus bore a Latin name, which has led to speculations that his ancestors may have settled in Neapolis soon after its establishment or that they may have descended from a Roman ' diplomatic ' community that had been sent there.
# A passage in Statius describing the repairs of the Via Domitiana, a branch road of the Via Appia, leading to Neapolis.
Justin wrote that nearly all the Samaritans in his time were adherents of a certain Simon of Gitta, a village not far from Flavia Neapolis.
Gelo himself became the despot of the city, and moved many inhabitants of Gela, Kamarina and Megera to Syracuse, building the new quarters of Tyche and Neapolis outside the walls.
* Neapolis ( present day Nablus ) is founded in Iudaea Province.
He also performed in Napoli on 15 July, at Neapolis Festival.
Dense populations of sovereign Samnites remained in the mountains north of Capua, which is just north of the Greek city of Neapolis.
A tortuous coastal road wound between Ostia at the mouth of the Tiber and Neapolis.
The Samnites, now a major power after defeating the Greeks of Tarentum, occupied Neapolis to try to ensure its loyalty.
The Neapolitans appealed to Rome, which sent an army and expelled the Samnites from Neapolis.
Leptis Magna () also known as Lectis Magna ( or Lepcis Magna as it is sometimes spelled ), also called Lpqy, Neapolis, Lebida or Lebda to modern-day residents of Libya, was a prominent city of the Roman Empire.
Their capital city, Scythian Neapolis, stood on the outskirts of modern Simferopol.
Bishop Leontios of Neapolis was an important church writer in the 7th century.
Other roads ran to Puteoli and Cumae ( the so-called Via Campana ) and to Neapolis, and as we have seen the Via Appia passed through Capua, which was thus the most important road centre of Campania.

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