644
rOLEMONIUM.
much to their efTert. Dante sjicaks of the environs
■of Pola, as in liis time remarkable fur the numerous
sarcoi)har;i and ancient tombs with which they were
almost wholly occupied. These have now disap-
peared. (Dante, Inf. ix. 13.)
The anti(iuities of Pola have been repeatedly de-
scribed, and illustrated with figures; among others,
in the fourth volume of Stuart and Revett's Athens^
fol. Lond. 1816, and in the Voyage. Pittoresque de
ristrie et de la Dalmatk, fol. Paris, 1802; also in
Allasou's Antiquities of Pola, fob, Lond. 1819.
The harbour of Pola is completely landlocked, so
as to have the appearance of a small basin-shaped
lake, communicating by a narrow cliannel with the
sea. Oif its entrance lies a group of small islands
called the Isole Brioni, which are pi-obabiy those
called by Pliny Cissa and Pullaria. (Plin. iii. 26.
s. 30.) The southernmost promontory of Istria,
about 10 miles distant from Pola, derived from it the
name of Polaticum Promontorium. It is now called
Capo Promoniore. [E. H. B.j
POLEMO'XIUM (UoXitJLoiviov), a town on the
coast of Pontus, at the mouth of the small river Si-
denus, 10 stadia from Phadisane, and 130 from Cape
lasonium. (Arrian, Peripl. p. 16; Anonym. Peripl.
p. 11, &c.; Ptol. V. 6. § 4; Steph. B. s. v.) Phny
(vi. 4) places the town 120 Roman miles from Ami-
sus, which seems to be too great a distance. (Comp.
Amm. Marc. xxii. 8; Hierocl. p. 702, where it is er-
roneously called ToAeixufiov; Tab. Peuting.) Neither
Strabo nor any writer before him mentions this town,
and it is therefore generally believed that it was built
on the site of the town of Side, which is not noticed by
any writer after Strabo. Its name intimates that it
was founded, or at all events was named, after one
Polemon, perhaps the one who was made king of that
part of Pontus, about B. C. 36, by M. Antonius. It
had a harbour, and seems to have in the course
of time become a place of considerable import-
ance, as the part of Pontus in which it was situated
received from it the name of Pontus Polemoniacus.
The town was situated on the western bank of the
Sidenus, where its existence is still attested by the
ruins of an octagon church, and the remains of a
massive wall; but the ancient name of the place is
preserved by the village of Pouleman, on the opposite
side of the river. (Hamilton, Researches, vol. i.
T.. 270.) [L. S.]
I'OLICHNA (noA.i'xJ'a). 1. A town of Laconia,
mentioned only by Polybius (iv. 36), is placed by
Leake in the interior of the country on the eastern
slope of Mt. Parnon at Rtonda (ra "Piovro.), where,
among the ruins of a fortified town of the lower
empire, are some remains of Hellenic walls. ^Leake,
Peloponnesiaca, p. 364.)
2. A town in the NW. of Me.ssenia on the road
from Andania to Dorium and Cyparissia. (Paus.
iv. 33. § 6.) [Dorium.]
3. A town of Megaris, mentioned only in a line
of Homer, quoted by Strabo, tor which the Athenians
substituted another to prove that Salamis at the
time of the Trojan War was a dejjendency of
Athens. (Strab. ix. p. 394.)
4. (Eth. (language characters)), a town of Crete, whose
territory bordered upon that of Cydcnia. (Time,
ii. 85.) In u. c. 429 the Athenians assisted the
inhabitants of Policlma in making war upon the
Cydonians. (Thuc. I. c.) Herodotus also mentions
the Polichnitae, and says that this people and the
Praesii were the onl- people in Crete who did not
join the other Cretans in the expedition against
POLITORIUJI,
Camicus in Sicily in order to revenge the death of
Minos (vii. 170; Steph. B. s. v.). Cramer (^Ancient
Greece, vol. iii. p. 380) sujjposes the ruins at Polis S.
of Armyro to be those of Policlma, which Pashley,
however, regards as those of Lappa or Lampa.
{Crete, vol. i. p. 83.)
POLICHNE (noAtxcTj), a small town in the upper
valley of the Aesepus in Troas (Strab. xiii. p. 603;
Plin. V. 32; Steph. B. s. v.; Hierocl. p. 662.) Re-
specting a place bearing the same name near Clazo-
menae, .see Clazomenae. [L. S.]
POLIMA'RTIUM {Bomarzo), a town of Etruiia,
not far from the right bank of the Tiber, and about
12 miles E. of Viterho. The name is not found in
any writer earlier than Paulus Diaconus {Hist. Lang.
iv. 8), and there is therefore no evidence of its an-
tiquity: but it is certain that there existed an an-
cient Etruscan city about 2 miles N. of the jiresent
village of Bomarzo. Some ruins and other slight
vestiges of ancient buildings still remain, and nume-
rous sepulchres have been discovered, some of which
have yielded various objects of interest. One of
them is adorned with paintings in the Etruscan
style, but apparently not of early date. (Dennis's
Etruria, vol. i. p. 214—226.) [E. H. B.]
POLIS (IIoAis), a village of the Hyaea in Locris
Ozolis, which Leake supposes occupied the site of
Karutes, where he found an inscription. (Thuc. iii.
101; Leake, Northern Greece, vol. ii. p. 620.)
POLISiMA (ndAicr^a), a small place on the river
Simoeis in Troas, was originally called Polion; but
it was situated in an unsuitable locality, and soon
decayed. (Strab. xiii. p. 601.) [L. S.]
P'OLITOTvlUM {UoMrupiov : Eth. UoAiruplvos,
Steph. B.), an ancient city of Latium, destroyed at a
very early period of the Roman history. The account
of its capture and destruction by Ancus Marcius
comprises indeed all we know concerning it; for the
statement cited from Cato (Serv. ad A en. v. 564),
which ascribed its foundation to Polites, the son of
Priam, is evidently a mere etymological fiction.
According to Livy and Dionysius, it was a city of
the Prisci Latini, and was the first which was at-
tacked by the Roman king, who made himself
master of it with little difficidty, and transported
the inhabitants to Rome, where he settled them
upon the Aventine. But the Latins having soon
after recolonised the deserted city, Ancus attacked
it again, and having taken it a second time, entirely
destroyed it, that it might not for the future afford
a shelter to his enemies. (Liv. i. 33; Dionys. iii.
37, 38, 43.) The destruction appears to have been
complete, for the name of Politorium never again
occure, except in Pliny's list of the cities of Latium
that were utterly extinct. (Plin. iii. 5. s. 9.) Its
site is consequently involved in the greatest obscu-
rity; the only clue we have is the circumstance
that it appears in the above narrative associated
with Tellenae, which is equ.ally uncertain, and with
Ficana, the position of which at Dragoncello, on the
Via Ostiensis, may be considered as well established.
[Ficana.] Nibby would place Politorium at a spot
called Lu Torretta near Becimo, on the Via Lau-
rentina; while Cell considers the remains of an
ancient city that have been discovered at a place
called La Giostra, on the right of the Via Appia,
about a mile and a half from Fiorano and 10 miles
from Rome, as those of Politorium. There can be
no doubt that the ruins at La Giostra — consisting
of considerable fragments of walls, built in a very
massive and ancient style, and enclosing a long and
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