© 1998 Bernard SUZANNE | Last updated November 28, 1998 |
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This page is part of the "tools" section of a site, Plato and his dialogues, dedicated to developing a new interpretation of Plato's dialogues. The "tools" section provides historical and geographical context (chronology, maps, entries on characters and locations) for Socrates, Plato and their time. By clicking on the minimap at the beginning of the entry, you can go to a full size map in which the city or location appears. For more information on the structure of entries and links available from them, read the notice at the beginning of the index of persons and locations.
Region of central Greece north of the gulf of Calydon
(area 2).
Ætolia owes its name to the mythological hero Ætolus, a son of the
Æolian Endymion, king of Elis.
Endymion had three sons, Pæon, Epeius and Ætolus. In order to decide
which one would succeed him, he organized a race between them in Olympia.
Epeius won and became king of Elis, and Pæon fled to Macedon,
while Ætolus stayed around and eventually succeeded his brother at his
death. But later, Ætolus killed Apis, a son of Phoroneus
(the first man according to Peloponnesian legends) who was then king of all
Peloponnese but acted as a tyrant. As a result, Ætolus had to flee and
he moved across the gulf of Corinth, where he was
greeted by the local kings, Dorus (the eponym of the Dorians, who, in other
traditions, is presented as one of the sons of Hellen and a grandson of Deucalion),
Laodocus and Polypoetes, the three sons of Apollo and Phthia (the eponym of
the region of Phthia). But Ætolus killed the
three of them, expelled local residents, the Couretes, and reigned over the
country, that took his name. He had two sons, Pleuron
and Calydon, who gave their names to two cities of
Ætolia.