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PHYLE

  • Phyle
  • Ancient Greek term for tribe or clan

    Phyle (Greek: φυλή, romanized: phulē, lit. 'tribe, clan'; pl. phylai, φυλαί; derived from Greek φύεσθαι, phyesthai lit. 'to descend, to originate') is

    Phyle

    Phyle

    Phyle

  • The Diamond Age
  • 1995 novel by Neal Stephenson

    sovereign enclaves affiliated or belonging to different phyles within a single metropolis. Most phyles depicted in the novel have a global scope of sovereignty

    The Diamond Age

    The_Diamond_Age

  • Phyle (Attica)
  • Phyle (Ancient Greek: Φυλή) was a strong fortress and deme of ancient Attica, on a steep rock, commanding the narrow pass across Mount Parnes, through

    Phyle (Attica)

    Phyle_(Attica)

  • Phyle Campaign
  • Civil war in Ancient Greece

    The Phyle Campaign (404–403 BC) was an Athenian civil war that resulted in the overthrow of a Spartan imposed oligarchy on Athens (see Thirty Tyrants)

    Phyle Campaign

    Phyle_Campaign

  • Battle of Phyle
  • Military campaign in 404/403 BC

    The Battle of Phyle was fought between Athenian exiles who were seeking to restore democracy to Athens and a Spartan garrison trying to protect the oligarchic

    Battle of Phyle

    Battle of Phyle

    Battle_of_Phyle

  • Phyle Cave
  • Cave in Greece

    The Phyle Cave is a small cave on Mount Parnes near Fyli (Phyle), a suburb of Athens in Attica, Greece. In ancient Greece it was the site of a sanctuary

    Phyle Cave

    Phyle_Cave

  • Bill Phyle
  • American baseball player (1875–1953)

    William Joseph Phyle (June 25, 1875 – August 6, 1953), born in Duluth, Minnesota was a pitcher for Major League Baseball's Chicago Orphans (1898–99) and

    Bill Phyle

    Bill Phyle

    Bill_Phyle

  • Antiochis
  • Diodotus (perhaps Diodotus the physician) Antiochis (tribe), an Athenian phyle, was named Antiochis after Antiochus a mythical Attic hero. Aristides "the

    Antiochis

    Antiochis

  • Leontis
  • was a phyle (tribe) of Ancient Attica. The phyle is shown on the base of a statue made after an anthippasia to commemorate the victory of the phyle at the

    Leontis

    Leontis

    Leontis

  • Phyle (moth)
  • Genus of moths

    Phyle is a genus of moths in the family Geometridae. Natural History Museum Lepidoptera genus database v t e

    Phyle (moth)

    Phyle_(moth)

  • Deme
  • Administrative unit in ancient Athens

    Aiantis was covered by two demes of Leontis and one from Aigeis. The Egyptian Phyle XIII. Ptolemais, named after Ptolemy III Euergetes was created in 224/223

    Deme

    Deme

    Deme

  • Felder's tiger
  • Species of butterfly

    The Felder's tiger (Parantica phyle) is a species of nymphalid butterfly in the Danainae subfamily. It is endemic to the Philippines. Lepidoptera Specialist

    Felder's tiger

    Felder's tiger

    Felder's_tiger

  • Thrasybulus
  • Athenian general and politician (c. 440 – 388 BC)

    for a return to Athens. In 403 BC, he led a party of 70 exiles to seize Phyle, a defensible location on the border of Attica and Boeotia.[citation needed]

    Thrasybulus

    Thrasybulus

    Thrasybulus

  • Philistines
  • Ancient people who inhabited Canaan's southern coast

    suggests that the name Philistine represents a corruption of the Greek phyle-histia ('tribe of the hearth'), with the Ionic spelling of hestia. Stephanos

    Philistines

    Philistines

    Philistines

  • Phylarch
  • Ancient military and leadership title

    φύλαρχος, Latin: phylarchus) is a Greek title meaning "ruler of a tribe", from phyle, "tribe" + archein "to rule". In Classical Athens, a phylarch was the elected

    Phylarch

    Phylarch

  • Heracles
  • Divine hero in Greek mythology

    by Stephanus of Byzantium as the eponym of the deme Diomeia of the Attic phyle Aegeis: Heracles is said to have fallen in love with Diomus when he was

    Heracles

    Heracles

    Heracles

  • Lord Byron
  • British poet (1788–1824)

    Athena, no! thy plunderer was a Scot. Ask’st thou the difference? From fair Phyle’s towers. Survey Bœotia; – Caledonia’s ours. And well I know within that

    Lord Byron

    Lord Byron

    Lord_Byron

  • Colonus (Attica)
  • Deme of the phyle Aegeis of ancient Attica

    (/kəˈloʊnəs/; Ancient Greek: Κολωνός, translit. Kolōnós) was a deme of the phyle Aegeis, of ancient Attica, celebrated as the deme of Sophocles, and the

    Colonus (Attica)

    Colonus_(Attica)

  • Fyli
  • Municipality in Greece

    A group of Athenian exiles, led by Thrasybulus, seized Phyle in the 404 BC Battle of Phyle. They went on to defeat the Spartan garrison at the Battle

    Fyli

    Fyli

    Fyli

  • Antiochis (tribe)
  • Ancient Athenian phyle (tribe)

    Map of ancient Attica. Demes belonging to the phyle of Antiochis are numbered "10."

    Antiochis (tribe)

    Antiochis (tribe)

    Antiochis_(tribe)

  • Hippothoon
  • Greek mythological prince

    the death of Cercyon. He is the Attic hero and the eponym of the Athenian phyle called Hippothoontis (Ιπποθοωντίς). Hippothoon was the son of Poseidon and

    Hippothoon

    Hippothoon

    Hippothoon

  • Greek mythology
  • Body of myths originating in ancient Greece

    migrations into the Peloponnese. Hyllus, the eponymous hero of one Dorian phyle, became the son of Heracles and one of the Heracleidae or Heraclids (the

    Greek mythology

    Greek mythology

    Greek_mythology

  • Ptolemais (tribe)
  • Ptolemais (Ancient Greek: Πτολεμαΐς) was a tribe (phyle) added by the ancient Athenians to the previous list of 12 Athenian tribes. The date of the addition

    Ptolemais (tribe)

    Ptolemais_(tribe)

  • Hippothontis
  • Map of ancient Attica. Trittyes belonging to the phyle of Hippothontis are numbered "8" and shaded pale green.

    Hippothontis

    Hippothontis

    Hippothontis

  • Phyla (genus)
  • Genus of plants in the verbena family

    verbena family, Verbenaceae. The name is derived from the Greek word φυλή (phyle), meaning "tribe", and most likely refers to the tightly clustered flowers

    Phyla (genus)

    Phyla (genus)

    Phyla_(genus)

  • Diary of Merer
  • Egyptian Great Pyramid builder's logbook

    the day with his phyle hauling stones in Tura South; spends the night at Tura South Day 26: Inspector Merer casts off with his phyle from Tura South,

    Diary of Merer

    Diary_of_Merer

  • Aigeis
  • Aigeis (Ancient Greek: Αἰγηΐς, romanized: Aigēis) was a tribe (phyle) of Ancient Athens which contained twenty demes: Lower and Upper Ankyle, Araphen

    Aigeis

    Aigeis

    Aigeis

  • Alopece
  • Ancient Athenian deme

    exterior to the city wall of Athens. Alopece belonged to the tribal group (phyle) of Antiochis. It was situated only eleven or twelve stadia from the city

    Alopece

    Alopece

    Alopece

  • Acharnae
  • Deme of ancient Athens, Greece

    Ancient Greek: Ἀχαρναί) was a deme of ancient Athens. It was part of the phyle Oineis. Acharnae, according to Thucydides, was the largest deme in Attica

    Acharnae

    Acharnae

    Acharnae

  • Classical Athens
  • City-state in ancient Greece

    The reforms of Cleisthenes replaced the traditional four Ionic "tribes" (phyle) with ten new ones, named after legendary heroes of Greece and having no

    Classical Athens

    Classical Athens

    Classical_Athens

  • Phrearrhii
  • coastal (paralia) region of ancient Attica, belonging to the Leontis tribe (phyle), with nine to ten representatives in the Boule. It was situated roughly

    Phrearrhii

    Phrearrhii

  • Coprus
  • or Kopros (Ancient Greek: Κόπρος) was a deme of ancient Athens, of the phyle of Hippothontis, sending two delegates to the Athenian Boule. One of the

    Coprus

    Coprus

  • Themacus
  • Deme of ancient Attica

    was a deme of ancient Attica, originally of the phyle of Erechtheis but after 224/223 BCE, the phyle of Ptolemais, sending one delegate to the Athenian

    Themacus

    Themacus

  • List of ancient Greek tribes
  • populations into the Greek language and customs. Greek word for tribe was Phylē (sing.) and Phylai (pl.), the tribe was further subdivided in Demes (sing

    List of ancient Greek tribes

    List_of_ancient_Greek_tribes

  • Pergase
  • Two suburbs of ancient Attica in Greece

    (Ancient Greek: Περγασή) was a name of two demoi in ancient Attica of the phyle of Erechtheis: Upper Pergase and Lower Pergase. Aristophanes places these

    Pergase

    Pergase

  • Acamantis
  • Map of ancient Attica. Trittyes belonging to the phyle of Acamantis are numbered "5" and shaded dark grey.

    Acamantis

    Acamantis

    Acamantis

  • List of sieges conducted by Demetrius I Poliorcetes
  • List of sieges by a historical figure

    Cassander Capture of Oropos 304 Phyle Location: Greece Demetrius I Poliorcetes Garrison of Cassander Capture of Phyle 304 Panactum Location: Greece Demetrius

    List of sieges conducted by Demetrius I Poliorcetes

    List_of_sieges_conducted_by_Demetrius_I_Poliorcetes

  • Piraeus
  • Harbour of Athens and a port city in Attica, Greece

    region. In 403 BC, Munichia was seized by Thrasybulus and the exiles from Phyle, in the battle of Munichia, where the Phyleans defeated the Thirty Tyrants

    Piraeus

    Piraeus

    Piraeus

  • Genos
  • Ancient Greek word meaning "race, people"

    to be associated with hereditary priestly functions. Gana Gens Phratry Phyle γένος, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, on Perseus

    Genos

    Genos

  • Phylum
  • Taxonomic rank

    Ernst Haeckel from the Greek phylon (φῦλον, 'race, stock'), related to phyle (φυλή, 'tribe, clan'). Haeckel noted that species constantly evolved into

    Phylum

    Phylum

    Phylum

  • Battle of Munychia
  • 404/403 BC Athenian defeat of the pro-Spartan Thirty Tyrants

    Eleusis. In late 404 BC, Thrasybulus, with other Athenian exiles, had seized Phyle, a strong point on the Athenian border. He and his men resisted an abortive

    Battle of Munychia

    Battle of Munychia

    Battle_of_Munychia

  • Kekropis
  • Ancient Athenian phyle (tribe)

    Map of ancient Attica. Trittyes belonging to the phyle of Kekropis are numbered "7" and shaded pale grey.

    Kekropis

    Kekropis

    Kekropis

  • Pithus
  • Pithus or Pithos (Ancient Greek: Πίθος) was a deme in ancient Attica of the phyle of Cecropis, sending three, four, or five delegates to the Athenian Boule

    Pithus

    Pithus

  • Ancyle
  • south. Upper Ancyle passed from the phyle Aigeis to Antigonis in 307/306 BCE; Lower Ancyle remained in the Aigeis phyle. In the 3rd century, in Roman times

    Ancyle

    Ancyle

  • Adrianis
  • Ancient Athenian phyle

    Adrianis (also Hadrianis, Ancient Greek: Ἀδριανίς) was a tribe (phyle) added by the ancient Athenians to the previous list of 12 tribes in 126−127 AD

    Adrianis

    Adrianis

  • Auridae
  • Αὐρίδαι) was a deme of ancient Attica, originally of the phyle of Hippothontis, but later of the phyle of Antigonis, sending one delegate to the Boule. Its

    Auridae

    Auridae

  • Elefsina
  • City in West Attica, Greece

    455 km2 (7.126 sq mi). Eleusis was a deme of ancient Attica, belonging to the phyle Hippothoöntis. It owed its celebrity to its being the chief seat of the

    Elefsina

    Elefsina

    Elefsina

  • Thorikos
  • Ancient Greek city and deme

    attributed to Theseus to form Archaic Athens. It was later a deme of the phyle of Acamantis. Near it are the mines of Laurion, where lead and silver was

    Thorikos

    Thorikos

    Thorikos

  • Mastaba
  • Type of tomb in ancient Egypt

    Larger mastabas also included a network of storerooms, which the presiding phyle would use to maintain the mortuary cult of the mastaba's owner. Generally

    Mastaba

    Mastaba

    Mastaba

  • Pericles
  • Athenian statesman and general (c.-495,-429)

    niece of the Athenian reformer Cleisthenes. Pericles belonged to the Attic phyle (clan) of Acamantis. His early years were quiet; the introverted young Pericles

    Pericles

    Pericles

    Pericles

  • Phyleus
  • Elean prince and one of the Calydonian boar hunters in Greek mythology

    Phyleus (/ˈfɪlˌjuːs/; Ancient Greek: Φυλεύς probably derived from φυλή phylē "tribe, clan, race, people") was an Elean prince and one of the Calydonian

    Phyleus

    Phyleus

  • Cydathenaeum
  • Deme in ancient Athens

    Κυδαθήναιον) was one of the demes in ancient Athens. It belonged in the phyle (tribe) Pandionis. When Cleisthenes formally established the deme system

    Cydathenaeum

    Cydathenaeum

  • Battle of Salamis
  • 480 BC naval battle of the Greco-Persian Wars

    Πεδιεὺς, Sōsiklês ho Pedieùs, 'Sosicles the plainsman or "Pedian"' (an Attic phyle or deme nowhere else attested); Friedrich Blass considered Σωκλῆς ὁ Παιανιεύς

    Battle of Salamis

    Battle of Salamis

    Battle_of_Salamis

  • Cydantidae
  • Κυδαντίδαι) was a deme in ancient Attica, originally of the phyle of Aegeis, after 224/3 BCE of the phyle of Ptolemais, sending one or two delegates to the Athenian

    Cydantidae

    Cydantidae

  • Phegaea (Aigeis)
  • Greek: Φηγαία) was a deme of ancient Attica in the phyle of Aigeis. The Suda places Phegaea in the phyle of Aeantis. Phegaea's site is tentatively located

    Phegaea (Aigeis)

    Phegaea_(Aigeis)

  • Monument of the Eponymous Heroes
  • Monument in ancient Athens

    Period I) therefore included ten statues, one for each hero designating a phyle. The late 4th century BC saw two statues added, representing Macedonian

    Monument of the Eponymous Heroes

    Monument of the Eponymous Heroes

    Monument_of_the_Eponymous_Heroes

  • Epieicidae
  • Epieikidai (Ancient Greek: Ἐπιεικίδαι) was a deme in ancient Attica of the phyle of Cecropis, sending one delegate to the Athenian Boule. In 303/2 BCE and

    Epieicidae

    Epieicidae

  • Attica
  • Historical region of Greece, including the city of Athens

    which is preserved well. Other fortresses are those of Oenoe, Decelea, Phyle and Aphidnae. To protect the mines at Laurium, on the coast, Athens was

    Attica

    Attica

    Attica

  • Erechtheis
  • Greek: Ἐρεχθηΐς) was a phyle (tribe) of ancient Athens with fourteen demes, named for the legendary king Erechtheus. The phyle was created in the reforms

    Erechtheis

    Erechtheis

    Erechtheis

  • Antiochus (mythology)
  • and his own son bore the name Phylas. He was the eponym of the Athenian phyle Antiochis. Antiochus, one of the Aetolian eight sons of Melas who were killed

    Antiochus (mythology)

    Antiochus_(mythology)

  • Phylogeny (psychoanalysis)
  • Psychoanalysis of the whole family

    pre-history of an organism. The term phylogeny derives from the Greek terms phyle (φυλή) and phylon (φῦλον), denoting “tribe” and “race”; and the term genetikos

    Phylogeny (psychoanalysis)

    Phylogeny_(psychoanalysis)

  • Dikastes
  • official scribe, each of whom drew the names of six hundred members of their phyle. The 6,000 drawn were then sorted, again randomly, into eleven sections:

    Dikastes

    Dikastes

  • Leuconoe (Attica)
  • (Λευκόνοιον), or Leukonefs (Λευκονοιεύς) was a deme of ancient Attica of the phyle of Leontis. Its site is tentatively located near modern Peristeri. Demochares

    Leuconoe (Attica)

    Leuconoe_(Attica)

  • History of Athens
  • Historical summary of ancient Athens

    traditional four phyle ('tribes') with ten new ones, named after legendary heroes and having no class basis; they were in fact electorates. Each phyle was in turn

    History of Athens

    History of Athens

    History_of_Athens

  • Hadrian
  • Roman emperor from 117 to 138

    request, he revised their constitution – among other things, he added a new phyle (tribe), which was named after him. Hadrian combined active, hands-on interventions

    Hadrian

    Hadrian

    Hadrian

  • Dyskolos
  • Comic play by Menander (c. 317–316 BCE)

    temple, and explains the background to the play. The scene is the village of Phyle (some 13 miles north-west of Athens). He says that in the house next door

    Dyskolos

    Dyskolos

  • Eitea (Acamantis)
  • (Ancient Greek: Εἰτέα) was a deme of ancient Attica, originally of the phyle of Acamantis, between 307/6 BCE and 201/0 BCE of Antigonis, and after 126/7 CE

    Eitea (Acamantis)

    Eitea_(Acamantis)

  • Eitea
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    Attica: Eitea (Acamantis), of the phyle of Acamantis, and later of Antigonis and Hadrianis Eitea (Antiochis), of the phyle of Antiochis This disambiguation

    Eitea

    Eitea

  • Anagyrous
  • Anagyrountos (Ἀναγυροῦντος), was a deme of ancient Attica, belonging to the phyle Erechtheis, situated in the south of Attica near the promontory Zoster.

    Anagyrous

    Anagyrous

    Anagyrous

  • Hellenistic Greece
  • Historical period of Greece following Classical Greece

    Athens rewarded the Ptolemaic Kingdom in 224/223 BC by naming the 13th phyle Ptolemais and establishing a religious cult called the Ptolemaia. Hellenistic

    Hellenistic Greece

    Hellenistic Greece

    Hellenistic_Greece

  • Battle of Piraeus
  • Battle over the government of Athens in 403 BC

    command of Thrasybulus entered Attica and seized the border strong point of Phyle. These exiles were seeking to dislodge the repressive oligarchic government

    Battle of Piraeus

    Battle of Piraeus

    Battle_of_Piraeus

  • Otryne
  • Otryne (Ancient Greek: Ὀτρύνη) was a deme of ancient Attica, of the phyle of Aegeis, sending one delegate to the Athenian Boule. Its site is unlocated

    Otryne

    Otryne

  • Erchia
  • Ancient Athenian deme

    Ἐρχία; also spelled Ἔρχεια and Ἑρχιά) was a deme of ancient Attica, of the phyle of Aegeis, sending six or seven delegates to the Athenian Boule, but eleven

    Erchia

    Erchia

  • Coele
  • Deme of ancient Attica

    Greek: Κοίλη or Κοιλή) was a deme of ancient Attica, originally of the phyle of Hippothontis, and between 307/6 BCE and 201/200 BCE of Demetrias (tribe) [el]

    Coele

    Coele

    Coele

  • Ptelea (Attica)
  • Greek Attica

    Ptelea (Ancient Greek: Πτελέα) was a deme of ancient Attica of the phyle Oineis, sending one delegate to the Athenian Boule. It is the setting for Menander's

    Ptelea (Attica)

    Ptelea_(Attica)

  • List of conflicts in Europe
  • War 440–439 BC Samian War 431–404 BC Second Peloponnesian War 404–403 BC Phyle Campaign 401-400 BC Elean War 395–387 BC Corinthian War 390–387 BC Celtic

    List of conflicts in Europe

    List_of_conflicts_in_Europe

  • Phylogenetics
  • Study of evolutionary relationships between organisms

    com Dictionary. Merriam-Webster. OCLC 1032680871. from Greek φυλή/φῦλον [phylé/phylon] "tribe, clan, race", and γενετικός [genetikós] "origin, source,

    Phylogenetics

    Phylogenetics

    Phylogenetics

  • Aiantis
  • Aiantis (Ancient Greek: Αἰαντίς) was a phyle of ancient Attica with six demes: Aphidna, Marathon, Oenoe, Rhamnous, Tricorythus and Phalerum. It was named

    Aiantis

    Aiantis

    Aiantis

  • Conthyle
  • Deme of ancient Attica

    was a deme of ancient Attica, originally of the phyle of Pandionis, but after 224/3 BCE of the phyle of Ptolemais, sending one delegate to the Athenian

    Conthyle

    Conthyle

  • Lower Ancyle
  • south. Upper Ancyle passed from the phyle Aigeis to Antigonis in 307/306 BCE; Lower Ancyle remained in the Aigeis phyle. In the 3rd century, in Roman times

    Lower Ancyle

    Lower_Ancyle

  • Solon
  • Athenian statesman (c. 630 – c. 560 BC)

    influence on events in archaic Athens. An Athenian belonged not only to a phyle or tribe and one of its subdivisions, the phratry or brotherhood, but also

    Solon

    Solon

    Solon

  • Attalis
  • Attalis (Ancient Greek: Ἀτταλίς) was a tribe (phyle) added by the ancient Athenians to the previous list of 11 Athenian tribes in the spring of 200 B

    Attalis

    Attalis

  • Battle of Plataea
  • Land battle during the second Persian invasion of Greece (479 BC)

    Isthmus of Corinth. Pausanias chose Euryanax to be his deputy commander. Each phyle of the Athenians had its own strategos (commander). The historian Nicholas

    Battle of Plataea

    Battle of Plataea

    Battle_of_Plataea

  • Wars of Alexander the Great
  • Conflicts of Alexander the Great (336–323 BC)

    Peloponnesian War Second Sacred War Samian War Second Peloponnesian War Phyle Campaign Corinthian War Bosporan–Heracleote War Boeotian War Wars of the

    Wars of Alexander the Great

    Wars of Alexander the Great

    Wars_of_Alexander_the_Great

  • Sounion
  • Greek cape at the southernmost tip of the Attic peninsula

    to the cape in a sacred boat. Sounion was a deme of the Leontis tribe (phyle) even before its fortification in the Peloponnesian War. It sent four men

    Sounion

    Sounion

    Sounion

  • Hippotomadae
  • Hippotomadai (Ancient Greek: Ἱπποτομάδαι) was a deme of ancient Attica, of the phyle Oeneis, and between 307/6 BCE and 201/200 BCE of Demetrias, sending one

    Hippotomadae

    Hippotomadae

  • Tyrmeidae
  • Ancient Athenian deme

    Tyrmeidai (Ancient Greek: Τυρμεῖδαι) was a deme of ancient Attica of the phyle Oineis, sending one or two delegates to the Boule. It did not send representatives

    Tyrmeidae

    Tyrmeidae

  • Demetrius I Poliorcetes
  • King of Macedon (294–288 BC)

    of months; for example, in 304-303 BC, he successively seized Panactum, Phyle, Kechries, Epidaurus, Sicyon, Corinth, Bura, Scirus (Arcadia), Argos, and

    Demetrius I Poliorcetes

    Demetrius I Poliorcetes

    Demetrius_I_Poliorcetes

  • Trittys
  • Ancient Athenian subdivision

    reforms of Cleisthenes. The trittyes were the larger denomination of tribes (Phyle) in Ancient Attica, and were formed by the demes that were near each other

    Trittys

    Trittys

    Trittys

  • May 6 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics)
  • Day in the Eastern Orthodox liturgical calendar

    Calendarist Metropolitan of Óropos and Phylé), Abbot of the Holy Monastery of Sts. Cyprian and Justina in Phyle, Áttica (Athens), Greece. Serving as her

    May 6 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics)

    May 6 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics)

    May_6_(Eastern_Orthodox_liturgics)

  • Oa (Attica)
  • Subdivision of ancient Attica, Greece

    was a deme of ancient Attica, originally of the phyle of Pandionis, but after 127/8 AD, of the phyle of Hadrianis, sending four delegates to the Athenian

    Oa (Attica)

    Oa_(Attica)

  • Ionidae
  • (Ancient Greek: Ἰωνίδαι) was a deme (suburb) in ancient Attica, of the phyle of Aegeis, sending two delegates to the Athenian Boule. This deme, along

    Ionidae

    Ionidae

  • Cave of Pan
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    Davelis Cave on Mount Penteli near Athens in Attica The Phyle Cave on Mount Parnes near Fyli (Phyle) in Attica The Vari Cave on Mount Hymettus near Vari

    Cave of Pan

    Cave_of_Pan

  • Cedi (Attica)
  • Deme (suburb) of ancient Attica

    Cedi or Kedoi (Ancient Greek: Κηδοί) was a deme of ancient Attica, of the phyle of Erechtheis, sending two delegates to the Boule. Its site is tentatively

    Cedi (Attica)

    Cedi_(Attica)

  • Phegaea
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    Attica: Phegaea (Aigeis), a deme of the Aigeis phyle Phegaea (Pandionis), a deme of the Pandionis phyle This disambiguation page lists articles about distinct

    Phegaea

    Phegaea

  • Aristophanes
  • Classical Athenian comic playwright (c. 446 – c. 386 BC)

    came from the deme of Kydathenaion, which was part of the Attic tribe (phyle) of Pandionis. His father was Philippus and his mother was Zenodora. In

    Aristophanes

    Aristophanes

    Aristophanes

  • Pandionis
  • Pandionis (Ancient Greek: Πανδιονίς) was an ancient phyle (tribe or clan) of Attica. It was one of the original ten tribes in which Athenian citizens

    Pandionis

    Pandionis

    Pandionis

  • Keratea
  • Municipal unit in Greece

    antiquity, the area of present Keratea was part of the deme Cephale, of the phyle Acamantis in Mesogeia area of Ancient Athens. The municipal unit Keratea

    Keratea

    Keratea

    Keratea

  • First Sacred War
  • Ancient military conflict

    Peloponnesian War Second Sacred War Samian War Second Peloponnesian War Phyle Campaign Corinthian War Bosporan–Heracleote War Boeotian War Wars of the

    First Sacred War

    First_Sacred_War

  • Polis
  • Ancient Greek social and political organisation

    phratry, a group of families, was the Italic curia. Corresponding to Greek phyle, a tribe of multiple phratries, was the tribus. The comparison of IE cultures

    Polis

    Polis

    Polis

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PHYLE

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PHYLE

Online names & meanings

  • Carew
  • Boy/Male

    Celtic

    Carew

    From the fortress.

  • Moudy
  • Surname or Lastname

    English or Irish

    Moudy

    English or Irish : variant of Moody.

  • Araj
  • Boy/Male

    Indian, Punjabi, Sikh

    Araj

    Pray

  • Sanch
  • Girl/Female

    Indian, Punjabi, Sikh

    Sanch

    Truth; Righteous

  • Wafic
  • Boy/Male

    Arabic, Lebanese

    Wafic

    Arbitrator

  • Abednego
  • Boy/Male

    Biblical

    Abednego

    Servant of light; shining.

  • Zareena
  • Girl/Female

    Muslim/Islamic

    Zareena

    Gold

  • Iliana
  • Girl/Female

    Spanish American

    Iliana

  • Adhitha
  • Girl/Female

    Indian, Telugu

    Adhitha

    From the Beginning

  • Ajala
  • Boy/Male

    African, Indian, Sanskrit

    Ajala

    Believer of Allah; Eternal

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PHYLE

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PHYLE

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PHYLE

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Other words and meanings similar to

PHYLE

AI search in online dictionary sources & meanings containing PHYLE

PHYLE

  • Phylae
  • pl.

    of Phyle

  • Phyle
  • n.

    A local division of the people in ancient Athens; a clan; a tribe.

  • Phratry
  • n.

    A subdivision of a phyle, or tribe, in Athens.

  • Phylarch
  • n.

    The chief of a phyle, or tribe.