Kolonos Hill
Kolonos Hill (/kəˈloʊnɒs/; Greek: Λόφος Κολωνού) is a hill in Central Greece. It is located in the narrow coastal passage known as Thermopylae, and is near the city of Lamia.
![](../I/Thermopiles_memorial_epitaph.jpg.webp)
Commemorative stone with Simonides' epigram
History
The hill is best known as the site of the final stand of the 300 Spartans during the Battle of Thermopylae in 480 BC.[1] In 1939, Spyridon Marinatos, a Greek archaeologist found large numbers of Persian arrows around the hill, which changed the hitherto accepted identification of the site where the Greeks had fallen, slain by Persian arrows.[1][2]
A commemorative stone was placed on the site in Antiquity, but the original stone has not survived. In 1955, a new stone was erected, with Simonides' epigram engraved on it.[3]
References
- Crawford, Osbert Guy Stanhope (1955). Said and Done: The Autobiography of an Archaeologist. Weidenfeld and Nicolson, p. 302
- "Thermopylae". Retrieved 1 May 2014.
- Herodotus VII, 228
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