TheCadmea,orCadmeia(Greek:Καδμεία,Kadmía), was thecitadelof ancientThebes, Greece,which was named afterCadmus,the legendary founder of Thebes.[1]The area is thought to have been settled since at least the earlyBronze Age,although the history of settlement can only be reliably dated from the lateMycenaeanperiod (c. 1400 BC).

Ruins of the Cadmea.

Classical period

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Map of the Topography of Ancient Thebes showing the location of the Cadmea
Site of the Cadmea in 2016

In the classical and the early Hellenistic periods, the Cadmea served a similar purpose to theAcropolisofAthens;many public buildings were situated there, and the assemblies of Thebes and the Boeotian Confederacy are thought to have met there. During theSpartan(382–379/2 BC) andMacedonianoccupations of Thebes, foreign garrisons were stationed on the Cadmea.Phoebidaswas the Spartan general responsible for the unauthorized seizure of the citadel of Cadmea in 382 BC, in violation of thePeace of Antalcidasin place then.

TheSacred Band of Thebeswas stationed in Cadmea as a standing force after it was recaptured from the Spartans in 379 BC, likely as defense against future attempts by foreign forces to take the citadel.[2][3][4]

Destruction and rebuilding

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The Cadmea wasdestroyedin 335 BC byAlexander the Great,who razed the city of Thebes as a warning to other Greek cities contemplating revolt against his rule.Cassander,the Macedonian general who inherited the Greek territorial possessions of Alexander after his death, rebuilt the Cadmea in 316 BC.

Alternative meaning of cadmea

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Cadmea is also an ancient name forcalamineor zinc carbonate. Combined with copper, it was used in ancient times for the production of brass, as mentioned, for instance, by the Roman author,Pliny the Elder.The element,cadmium(Cd), was, in 1817, first isolated from an impurity in calamine; hence, the name, cadmium.

Excavation

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The Cadmea was rediscovered by the Greek archaeologistAntonios Keramopoulos.[5]

References

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  1. ^Rockwell, Nicholas (2017-06-26).Thebes: A History.Taylor & Francis. p. 16.ISBN978-1-317-21829-6.
  2. ^Nicholas Ryan Rockwell (2008).The Boeotian Army: The Convergence of Warfare, Politics, Society, and Culture in the Classical Age of Greece.University of California.ISBN978-1-109-02125-7.[permanent dead link]
  3. ^Arthur Ferrill (1996)."Elite Forces in the Ancient World".In A. Hamish Ion; Keith Neilson (eds.).Elite Military Formations in War and Peace.Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 38–41.ISBN978-0-275-94640-1.
  4. ^James R. Ashley (2004).The Macedonian Empire: The Era of Warfare Under Philip II and Alexander the Great, 359-323 B.C.McFarland. p. 434.ISBN978-0-7864-1918-0.
  5. ^Carpenter, Rhys (1935)."Letters of Cadmus".The American Journal of Philology.56(1): 5–13.doi:10.2307/289704.ISSN0002-9475.JSTOR289704.

38°19′10″N23°19′00″E/ 38.3194°N 23.3167°E/38.3194; 23.3167