Pheidon

Pheidon

▪ king of Argos

flourished 7th century BC

      king of Argos, Argolis, who made his city an important power in the Peloponnese, Greece.

      The ancient Greek historian Herodotus implied that Pheidon flourished about 600 BC, but at this time Corinth and Sicyon, not the Argives, were in the ascendance. Although some later writers assigned Pheidon to the 8th century BC, most modern scholars place him in the early 7th century. He was said to have been the 10th successor to Temenus, the founder of Argos, and ruler of the whole Argolid peninsula in the northeast Peloponnese. Pheidon united this region (the “lot of Temenus”), marched across the Peloponnese, and seized Olympia (perhaps in 672 or 668).

      The system of standard measures that was instituted by Pheidon remained in effect in the Peloponnese long after his death; the system was also employed in Athens before the reforms of Solon (6th century BC). The statement of the 4th-century Greek historian Ephorus that Pheidon was the first to coin silver money cannot be accurate, because the beginning of coinage in mainland Greece is today generally ascribed to the late 7th century. In general the king made use of his royal power more effectively than was usual in an age when the aristocracy was in control. The Argive recovery that Pheidon instigated did not endure for long against the alliance of Sparta and Elis, and the northeastern cities were soon independent under their own tyrants.

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Universalium. 2010.

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  • Pheidon — (8th or 7th century BC, gr. Φειδων) was king of Argos. At that time, the monarch was purely a traditional figurehead with almost no genuine power. Pheidon seized the throne from the reigning aristocracy. We see him in the tradition of other… …   Wikipedia

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  • Pheidon —   König von Argos (wohl um die Mitte des 7. Jahrhunderts v. Chr.); galt wegen der gewaltsamen Ausdehnung seiner Macht über die Grenzen der Argolis hinaus wodurch der spartanischen Expansion Einhalt geboten wurde und seines Eingreifens in die… …   Universal-Lexikon

  • Pheidon (Athen) — Pheidon war einer der Dreißig Tyrannen, die in Athen nach dem Ende des Peloponnesischen Krieges mit Sparta (431–404 v. Chr.) vom August 404 v. Chr. bis zum März 403 v. Chr. eine oligarchische Schreckensherrschaft errichteten und mehrere Monate –… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Pheidon (Argos) — Pheidon (griechisch Φείδων), auch Phaidon, der Sohn des Aristodamidas, war nach der griechischen Mythologie König von Argos. Nach dem Tod seines Vaters verjagte er seinen Bruder Karanos aus Argos und bestieg den Thron. Er vergrößerte die… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

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  • Phaidon (Begriffsklärung) — Als Phaidon (griechisch Φαίδων, latinisiert Phaedo, ältere deutsche Schreibweise Phädon) werden bezeichnet: Phaidon, auch Pheidon, ein mythischer König von Argos, siehe Pheidon (Argos) Phaidon von Elis, ein Philosoph des 5./4. Jahrhunderts v. Chr …   Deutsch Wikipedia

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  • Battle of Hysiae — The term Battle of Hysiae refers to two battles at the ancient location of Hysiae (Polytonic|Ὑσιαί), located to the southwest of Argos, near the modern village of Achladokampos. The first battle took place in 669/8 BC, another in 417 BC. Both… …   Wikipedia

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