39°59′09″N 22°04′57″E / 39.98591°N 22.08256°E
Azorus or Azoros ( Ancient Greek: Ἄζωρος or Ἀζώριον [1]) was a town and polis (city-state) [2] in Perrhaebia in ancient Thessaly situated at the foot of Mount Olympus. Azorus, with the two neighbouring towns of Pythium and Doliche, formed a Tripolis. [3]
During the Roman–Seleucid War, the Tripolis was ravaged by an army of the Aetolian League in the year 191 BCE. [4] During the Third Macedonian War the three towns surrendered to the army of Perseus of Macedon in the year 171 BCE, [5] but that same year the Romans reconquered the three. [6] In the year 169 BCE troops arrived from the Roman consul Quintus Marcius Philippus who camped between Azorus and Doliche. [7] [8]
The three cities minted a common coin with the inscription "ΤΡΙΠΟΛΙΤΑΝ". [2]
The site of Azorus is the palaiokastro (old fort) at the modern village of Azoros. [9] [10]
39°59′09″N 22°04′57″E / 39.98591°N 22.08256°E
Azorus or Azoros ( Ancient Greek: Ἄζωρος or Ἀζώριον [1]) was a town and polis (city-state) [2] in Perrhaebia in ancient Thessaly situated at the foot of Mount Olympus. Azorus, with the two neighbouring towns of Pythium and Doliche, formed a Tripolis. [3]
During the Roman–Seleucid War, the Tripolis was ravaged by an army of the Aetolian League in the year 191 BCE. [4] During the Third Macedonian War the three towns surrendered to the army of Perseus of Macedon in the year 171 BCE, [5] but that same year the Romans reconquered the three. [6] In the year 169 BCE troops arrived from the Roman consul Quintus Marcius Philippus who camped between Azorus and Doliche. [7] [8]
The three cities minted a common coin with the inscription "ΤΡΙΠΟΛΙΤΑΝ". [2]
The site of Azorus is the palaiokastro (old fort) at the modern village of Azoros. [9] [10]