Maedi

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The Maedi are visible in this regional map (as "Maidoi").

The Maedi (also Maidans, Maedans, or Medi;

Ancient Greek: Μαῖδοι or Μαιδοί) were a Thracian tribe in antiquity.[1] Their land was called Maedica (Μαιδική).[2]
In historic times, they occupied the area between
Paionia and Thrace, on the southwestern fringes of Thrace, along the middle course of the Strymon, between the Kresna Gorge and the Rupel Pass (present-day south-western Bulgaria).[3][4][5] Strabo says that the Maedi bordered eastward on the Thunatae of Dardania,[6] and that the Axius flowed through their territory.[7]

Their capital city was

Iamphorynna,[8] which lay somewhere in the southwest corner of what is now Bulgaria.[9] Some archaeologists posit it in the area between the cities of Petrich and Sandanski, but its exact location remains unknown.[10]

They were an independent tribe through much of their history, and the Thracian king

Macedon
was located to the south of Paeonia.

According to Plutarch,[11] the Maedi rebelled against their Macedonian overlords when King Philip II of Macedon was besieging Byzantium in 340 BC. The 16 year old Alexander the Great who had been left as regent by his father, led an army against the Maedi and founded his first city Alexandroplis.[12]

The ancient historian and biographer Plutarch describes Spartacus as "a Thracian of nomadic stock", in a possible reference to the Maedi.[13] Plutarch also says Spartacus' wife, a prophetess of the same tribe, was enslaved with him.

In 89–84 BC (during the

wisents
that lived in the region.

A number of Maedi emigrated to

Asia minor and were called MaedoBythini[17] (Greek
: Μαιδοβίθυνοι).

See also

  • List of Thracian tribes

References

  1. ^ The Cambridge Ancient History, Volume 3, Part 2 by Iorwerth Eiddon Stephen Edwards, 1982. p. 278, with n. 33.
  2. ^ Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities (1898), Maedica
  3. , p.31.
  4. ^ The Cambridge Ancient History: pt. 1. The prehistory of the Balkans; and the Middle East and the Aegean world, tenth to eighth centuries B.C., Cambridge University Press, 1982, p. 601.
  5. , p. 601.
  6. ^ Strabo. Geographica. Vol. vii. p. 316. Page numbers refer to those of Isaac Casaubon's edition.
  7. ^ Strabo. Geographica. Vol. vii. p. 331. Page numbers refer to those of Isaac Casaubon's edition.
  8. ^ Livy: History of Rome, VII, Books 26-27 (Loeb Classical Library No. 367) by Livy and Frank Gardner Moore, 1943, page 96: "...waste the country and to besiege the city of Iamphorynna, the capital and citadel of Maedica..."
  9. , p.162.
  10. ^ М. Манов. Ямфорина или Форуна? Опит за проблематизация и локализация. – Археология, 2004, кн.1-2, 107-112.
  11. ^ "Plutarch • Life of Alexander (Part 1 of 7)".
  12. ^ "Alexandrupolis - Livius".
  13. .
  14. , page 73: "... of 89-85, when Athens, which had sided with *Mithridates, was sacked and in part destroyed by the Roman general *Sulla [...] Greece suffered severely, both from Sulla and from the barbarian allies of Mithridates, who sacked Delphi..."
  15. ^ Titus Livius, "...into Macedonia and thence into Thrace and against the Maedi [...] that tribe had been in the habit of making raids into Macedonia, whenever it knew that the king was engaged in a foreign war and the kingdom unprotected."
  16. ^ Plutarch, Sulla, "Upon these assurances Sulla sent him away, and then himself invaded the country of the Maedi and after ravaging the most of it..."
  17. , 1992, page 601: "Earlier certain tribes of the Maedi emigrated to Asia minor where they were known by the name of the MaedoBythini..."

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainSmith, William, ed. (1854–1857). "Maedi". Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography. London: John Murray.

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