Crossword clues for ionia
ionia
- Locale of ancient Ephesus
- Part of ancient Greece
- Old district of Asia Minor
- Where Ephesus flourished
- City or county in Mich.
- City in Michigan
- Chios, Samos, etc.
- Ancient Greek district
- Mich. city or county
- Mich. county
- District in Asia Minor
- Where Ephesus is
- Old region of Asia Minor
- Old Asia Minor region
- Where the Meander meandered
- Ancient region of present-day Turkey
- Greek peninsula
- Rival of ancient Persia
- Region of Asia Minor
- Old Aegean Sea region
- Michigan town
- Home of Heraclitus
- Ancient region of Turkey for which a sea is named
- Ancient Anatolian region
- Town near Grand Rapids
- Pythagoras' homeland
- Part of modern-day Turkey
- Part of Asia Minor
- Home to Pythagoras
- Home of the Ephesians
- Grecian region
- Ancient region south of Aeolis
- Ancient region of modern Turkey
- Where Thales taught
- Site of Ephesus and Colophon
- Setting of Smyrna and Ephesus
- Setting of Ephesus
- Region that rebelled against Persia in about 500 B.C
- Region of old Greece
- Region of ancient Turkey
- Region including Delos
- Region conquered by Alexander the Great
- Pythagoras' Greek region
- Piece of old Turkey
- Old Greek district
- Old Anatolian region
- Lydia neighbor
- Land of ancient Asia Minor
- Homeland of Pythagoras
- Greek colony of Asia Minor
- Early Greek colony
- Colophon's region
- City near Grand Rapids
- City in Mich
- Chios, Samos, etc
- Center of an ancient Greek "enlightenment"
- Asia Minor region colonized by Greek settlers
- Asia Minor region colonized by ancient Greece
- Ancient Samos' region
- Ancient region where the style of an architectural column originated
- Ancient region where Phocaea was
- Ancient region ruled by Alexander the Great
- Ancient region of Greece
- Ancient land that lent its name to an order of architecture
- Ancient Greek region that was home to Heraclitus
- Ancient Greek region for which a sea is named
- Ancient Greek region called "the birthplace of philosophy"
- Ancient Grecian colony
- Ancient coastal region in Asia Minor
- Ancient area of Turkey
- Ancient Aegean area
- A slice of old Turkey?
- Ancient land on the Aegean Sea
- Ancient region of Asia Minor
- Onetime Aegean land
- Land of ancient Ephesus
- Home of Ephesus
- Site of ancient Smyrna
- Area colonized by ancient Greeks
- Ancient part of Asia Minor
- Ancient Aegean land
- Ancient Greek colony in Asia Minor
- Home of the biblical city Ephesus
- Site of two of the Ancient Wonders
- Site of ancient Samos
- Site of ancient Ephesus
- Conquest of Croesus
- Ancient Asia Minor region
- Site of ancient Miletus
- Ancient Aegean Sea region
- Ephesus' land
- Ancient land near Lydia
- Where Ephesus was located
- Aegean region where an architectural order began
- Home of the ancient city Colophon
- Foe of ancient Lydia
- Asia Minor region of yore
- Ancient region on the Aegean Sea
- Ancient region bordering Lydia
- Ancient region with an architectural style named after it
- Land colonized by ancient Greeks
- Part of ancient Turkey
- Old Aegean region
- Michigan county or its seat
- Ancient region bordering the Aegean
- Part of ancient Asia Minor
- Region holding ancient Ephesus
- Ancient land with a sea named after it
- Land of Ephesus
- Alexander the Great conquered it ca. 335 B.C
- Ancient Aegean region west of Lydia
- Croesus conquered it
- Land bordering ancient Lydia
- Alexander the Great conquered it ca. 335 B.C.
- Ancient neighbor of Lydia
- Region of ancient Asia Minor
- Site of a noted ancient league
- Aegean Sea region
- Ephesus' region
- Land of Ephesians
- Slice of old Turkey?
- Ancient Anatolian land
- Area conquered by Alexander the Great
- Neighbor of Lydia
- Coastal Anatolian region
- Ancient 71-Across land in modern-day Turkey
- Ancient region of Anatolia
- Region of ancient Greece
- Ancient land in Asia Minor
- Region of western Asia Minor colonized by Ancient Greeks
- Ancient land SE of Lesbos
- Region colonized by Greeks in 11th century B.C.
- Thales's homeland
- Ancient region in Asia Minor
- Western Turkey, once
- Region in Asia Minor
- City in Mich.
- Old Greek colony
- Ancient Greek region with a column style named after it
- Ancient district of Asia Minor
- Old Greek region
- Ancient district in Asia Minor
- Ephesus's locale
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Ionia \Ionia\ n. A region of Western Asia Minor colonized by the Ancient Greeks.
Gazetteer
Housing Units (2000): 54
Land area (2000): 0.153500 sq. miles (0.397563 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.153500 sq. miles (0.397563 sq. km)
FIPS code: 35306
Located within: Missouri (MO), FIPS 29
Location: 38.503911 N, 93.324261 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 65335
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Ionia
Housing Units (2000): 135
Land area (2000): 0.558081 sq. miles (1.445424 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.558081 sq. miles (1.445424 sq. km)
FIPS code: 38460
Located within: Iowa (IA), FIPS 19
Location: 43.034493 N, 92.456606 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 50645
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Ionia
Housing Units (2000): 2621
Land area (2000): 5.042771 sq. miles (13.060717 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.162914 sq. miles (0.421946 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 5.205685 sq. miles (13.482663 sq. km)
FIPS code: 40860
Located within: Michigan (MI), FIPS 26
Location: 42.981932 N, 85.066792 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 48846
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Ionia
Housing Units (2000): 22006
Land area (2000): 573.213835 sq. miles (1484.616954 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 7.017770 sq. miles (18.175940 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 580.231605 sq. miles (1502.792894 sq. km)
Located within: Michigan (MI), FIPS 26
Location: 42.958883 N, 85.079273 W
Headwords:
Ionia, MI
Ionia County
Ionia County, MI
Wikipedia
Ionia ( Ancient Greek: Ἰωνία or Ἰωνίη) is an ancient region of central coastal Anatolia in present-day Turkey, the region nearest İzmir, which was historically Smyrna. It consisted of the northernmost territories of the Ionian League of Greek settlements. Never a unified state, it was named after the Ionian tribe who, in the Archaic Period (600–480 BC), settled mainly the shores and islands of the Aegean Sea. Ionian states were identified by tradition and by their use of Eastern Greek.
Ionia proper comprised a narrow coastal strip from Phocaea in the north near the mouth of the river Hermus (now the Gediz), to Miletus in the south near the mouth of the river Maeander, and included the islands of Chios and Samos. It was bounded by Aeolia to the north, Lydia to the east and Caria to the south. The cities within the region figured large in the strife between the Persian Empire and the Greeks.
According to Greek tradition, the cities of Ionia were founded by colonists from the other side of the Aegean. Their settlement was connected with the legendary history of the Ionic people in Attica, which asserts that the colonists were led by Neleus and Androclus, sons of Codrus, the last king of Athens. In accordance with this view the "Ionic migration", as it was called by later chronologers, was dated by them one hundred and forty years after the Trojan War, or sixty years after the return of the Heracleidae into the Peloponnese.
Ionia, known in Old Persian as Yauna, was a region within the satrapy of Sardis within the First Persian Empire. The first mention of the Yauna is at the Behistun inscription. The Ionians were conquered by Cyrus the Great and according to Herodotus, they were placed in the same tax district (the first) as the Pamphylians, Lycians, Magnesians, Aeolians, Milyans, and Carians. It is unclear to what extent the Yauna were advantaged or disadvantaged by Persian rule, and what caused the Ionian Revolt which broke out in c.499 BC and lasted until 494 BC. The main source, Herodotus, puts it down to the personal ambitions of two men of Miletus, Histiaeus and Aristagoras; modern scholars debate what the underlying reasons may have been; arguments for economic and political causes are variously put forward, but there are no clear sources which can give a definitive answer.
After the revolt was put down, the Ionian cities were subdued by some pragmatic and enlightened measures by the Persian satrap of Sardis, Artaphrenes. The Ionians are reported to have served with the Persian forces which were defeated at Marathon by the Athenians and Plataeans in 490, while they also fought on the Persian side during Xerxes' great invasion of 480-479. It was only after the Persians were defeated at Plataea in 479 that the Ionian cities had the confidence to revolt again, defeating the Persian forces at Cape Mycale in the same year. Soon afterwards, they signed up to a common defence league led by Athens, known today as the Delian League. However, these cities soon came under the domination of Athens. After the Peloponnesian War and the destruction of Athenian power, Sparta ceded them back to Persia in the peace of Antalcidas. Ionia remained under Persian rule until the campaigns of Alexander the Great.
Beside to Yaunas of the plain and sea, there are also mentioned Yauna paradraya (Ionians beyond or across the sea such as Naxos, Thasos and Byzantium) as well the Yauna takabara (Ionians with sunhats, the Macedonians) in Skudra satrapy.
Ionia: Land of Wise Men and Fair Women is an 1898 utopian novel written by Alexander Craig. It is one work in the major wave of utopian and dystopian fiction that characterized the final decades of the nineteenth century and the start of the twentieth.
Virtually nothing is known of the book's author, Alexander Craig. Though his novel was published in the United States, the story has a strong English setting and ambience.
Ionia was an ancient region of southwestern coastal Anatolia (in present-day Turkey).
Ionia may also refer to:
In Greece:
- Ionian Islands, west of Greece
- Ionia, Chios
In Asia Minor:
- Ionia (satrapy), satrapy of the Achaemenid Empire
In the United States:
- Ionia, Iowa
- Ionia, Kansas
- Ionia Township, Jewell County, Kansas
- Ionia, Michigan
- Ionia County, Michigan
- Ionia Township, Michigan
- Ionia, Missouri
- Ionia, Nebraska
- Ionia, New York (disambiguation), multiple locations
Ionia is the second studio album by the American Dark Wave band Lycia, released in 1991 by Projekt Records.
Ionia is a frame house near Trevilians, Virginia, that was the centerpiece of a large plantation in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Built around 1775, Ionia was the home of the Watson family. It was built as Clover Plains by Major James Watson, the son of a Scottish immigrant, in a fertile area of Louisa County, Virginia that is now a National Historic Landmark District, the Green Springs National Historic Landmark District. The plantation was the third largest in Louisa County in the late 18th century, leading to the nickname "Wheat Stacks" for Watson as a result of his prosperity. After Major Watson's death in 1845 the house passed to his son, Dr. George Watson, who renamed the house "Ionia" and, since he lived in Richmond, used it as a summer residence. George Watson died in 1854, leaving Ionia to his widow, who lived there until the 1870s. Following her death in 1879 the property was subdivided. The Watson family went on to build a number of houses in the Green Springs area.
The house is a 1-1/2-story frame structure, covered with wood clapboards. One-story wings flank the main block on either side, with an ell to the rear. The house retains much of its original woodwork. The property includes several dependencies, including a dairy house, smoke house, kitchen, slave quarters and an early barn.
Ionia was placed on the National Register of Historic Places on June 30, 1972.
Usage examples of "ionia".
I lately picked up in Ionia and Achaia, from several historians, who gave accounts of this war.
Not only was it the time of Thales, Anaximander, Pythagoras and others in Ionia, but also the time of the Egyptian Pharaoh Necho who caused Africa to be circumnavigated, of Zoroaster in Persia, Confucius and Lao-tse in China, the Jewish prophets in Israel, Egypt and Babylon, and Gautama Buddha in India.
The Ionia, a miscellaneous dictionary of history and fable, was compiled by another empress of the name of Eudocia, who lived in the eleventh century: and the work is still extant in manuscript.
From his retirement in the happy country of Ionia, he was conveyed under a strong guard to the court of Milan.
In Ionia, the Phoenician alphabet was first adapted to Greek usage and widespread literacy became possible.