Cinyps (Libya)
Ka'am, Wadi Caam or Wadi Ka'am (Cinyps) is a small river in Tripolitana, site of a failed Greek attempt to build a city under the leadership of Spartan Dorieus.[1]
Sources
The source of the river are in the 80 km long Wadi Taraglat but they are all located at the coastal end of the Wadi in a part of the Wadi called Wadi Caam, whereas Herodotus had erroneously claimed that the source was near the Hill of Graces some 260 km inland.[2]
History
The river was called at the ancient times Cinyps (Template:Lang-grc) or Cinyphus (Κίνυφος). There was a town of the same name at its mouth.[3]
The Greeks under Dorieus of Sparta who was said to be angry because Cleomenes was chosen to be king of Sparta ahead of him left the Peloponnese with other Spartans to found his own colony with people from Thera as his guides around 515/514 BC. He found his colony at the mouth of the Cinyps. After around three years, they were expelled by the Carthaginians in alliance with the local of Macae.[4] The Greek colony was close to the Phoenician colony of Leptis Magna and was probably seen as a threat.[5]
The local Libyan tribe of the Macae who were living in the area were used as mercenaries by the Carthaginians.[6]
The springs in Wadi Caam were the source of the water used in the Hadrianic baths of Leptis Magna with the water diversion scheme using the aqueduct built by Quintus Servillius Candidus in 119-120A.D.[2]
Mythology
In Greek mythology one of the combatants in the Trojan War, Guneus went to Libya after the war where he settled near the Cinyps River, although other myths have Guneus drowning at sea.[7]
Archaeology
Archaeologists have uncovered a Greek necropolis in Wadi Caam which dates to the 3rd century BC, it consists of a series of stone, box-shaped urns with the lids in the shape of a sloping roof and containing ashes and bones, as well as various types of ceramics.[1]
References
- ^ a b "Wadi Caam: The Greeks in Tripolitania!". Temehu. Retrieved 10 May 2012.
- ^ a b G. Cifani; M. Munzi (2003). "Alle sorgenti del Cynips Tripolitania Libya". Libyan Studies. 34: 85–99.
- ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Cinyps
- ^ "Histories". A.D. Godley. Retrieved 2016-11-27.
- ^ Cinyps (Wadi Qaam)
- ^ Andrea Salimbeti; Raffaele D’Amato (2014). The Carthaginians 6th–2nd Century BC. Bloomsbury. p. 21. ISBN 1782007776.
- ^ Bibliotheca, Epitome of Book 4, 3.11ff.; 6.15. Tzetzes on Lycophron, 899