From the Mieza (Macedonia) entry in Wikipedia:

Mieza, "shrine of the Nymphs", was a town in ancient Macedonia, where Aristotle taught the boy Alexander the Great between 343 and 340 BCE. Ptolemy classifies Mieza among the cities of Emathia. Stephanus of Byzantium, on the other hand, deriving his information apparently from Theagenes, alludes to it as "τόπος Στρυμόνος", and adds that it was sometimes called Strymonium. The site where Mieza once stood is the modern Lefkadia, near the modern town Náousa, Imathia, Central Macedonia, Greece, and has been the subject of archaeological excavations since 1954.

Mieza was named for Mieza, in ancient Macedonian mythology, the daughter of Beres and sister of Olganos and Beroia. It was the home of Alexander's companion Peucestas. Aristotle was hired by Alexander's father, Philip II of Macedon, to teach his son, and was given the Temple of the Nymphs (Nymphaeum) as a classroom. In return, Philip re-built and freed the citizens of Stagira, Aristotle's hometown, which he had razed in a previous conquest across Greece and Macedon.

Students educated at Mieza include Hephaestion, Ptolemy I Soter, Cassander, and Cleitus the Black.

All pictures are © Dr. Günther Eichhorn, unless otherwise noted.

Mieza

Macedonian Tomb Kinch Mieza
Macedonian Tomb of Kinch in Mieza. (1432k)
West Side Right South
West side (right) and south side of the Nymphaeum. (1.7M)
South Part Nymphaeum
South part of the Nymphaeum. (1.9M)
South Wall Nymphaeum
South wall of the Nymphaeum. (1.7M)
Northwest Side Nymphaeum
Northwest side of the Nymphaeum. (2M)
Statue Aristotle
Statue of Aristotle. (883k)

This page contains 6 pictures

Here are the links to the other main pages on Greece:

Recent Greece
Recent Greece
Greece
Greece
Mythology in Greece
Mythology

Page last updated on Fri Jul 8 18:54:57 2022 (Mountain Standard Time)


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