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Subject Item
n2:
rdfs:label
Pontus
rdfs:comment
Pontus is the name which was applied, in ancient times, to extensive tracts of country in the northeast of Asia Minor (modern Turkey) bordering on the Euxine (Black Sea), which was often called simply Pontos (the main), by the Greeks, after the colonisation of the Anatolian shores by the Ionian Greeks. It became a Roman province in 64 BC Pontus was short, stocky, and grim. Her hair was a sickly brown when her first accounts were made, and she appeared to be of severe age. Some of the members of Thanatus often called her "All mother" for she greatly influenced all around her. She was very fond of swimming, and loved fish.
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n15:
Pontos
n23:
The sea
n21:
God of the Sea
n26:
Ouranus, The Ourea and more
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n5:abstract
Pontus was short, stocky, and grim. Her hair was a sickly brown when her first accounts were made, and she appeared to be of severe age. Some of the members of Thanatus often called her "All mother" for she greatly influenced all around her. She was very fond of swimming, and loved fish. Pontus is the name which was applied, in ancient times, to extensive tracts of country in the northeast of Asia Minor (modern Turkey) bordering on the Euxine (Black Sea), which was often called simply Pontos (the main), by the Greeks, after the colonisation of the Anatolian shores by the Ionian Greeks. It became a Roman province in 64 BC The exact signification of this purely territorial name varied greatly at different times. The Greeks used it loosely to denote various parts of the shores of the Euxine, and the term did not get a definite connotation of being a separate state until after the establishment of the kingdom of Pontus, founded beyond the Halys during the troubled period following the death of Alexander the Great, shortly after 302 BC, by Mithradates I Ktistes, son of Mithridates II of Kios (Mysia) a Persian ruler in the service of Antigonus, one of Alexander's successors. The kingdom of Pontus was henceforth ruled by a succession of kings, mostly bearing the same name, till 64 BC. As the greater part of this kingdom lay within the immense region of Cappadocia, which in early ages extended from the borders of Cilicia to the Euxine, the kingdom as a whole was at first called "Cappadocia towards the Pontus", but afterwards simply "Pontus," the name Cappadocia being henceforth restricted to the southern half of the region previously included under that title. Under the last king, Mithradates Eupator, commonly called the Great, the realm of Pontus included not only Pontic Cappadocia but also the seaboard from the Bithynian frontier to Colchis, part of inland Paphlagonia, and Lesser Armenia.