Gomphi
{{Short description|Town and polis (city-state) of Histiaeotis in ancient Thessaly}}
{{for|the modern village|Gomfoi}}
Gomphi ({{langx|grc|Γόμφοι}}){{Cite Stephanus|s.v.}} was a town and polis (city-state){{cite book|author= Mogens Herman Hansen & Thomas Heine Nielsen |title= An inventory of archaic and classical poleis|url= https://archive.org/details/inventoryarchaic00hans |url-access= limited |year= 2004|publisher= Oxford University Press|location=New York|isbn= 0-19-814099-1|chapter= Thessaly and Adjacent Regions|page= [https://archive.org/details/inventoryarchaic00hans/page/n708 692]}} of Histiaeotis in ancient Thessaly, situated upon a tributary of the Peneius, and near the frontiers of Athamania and Dolopia.{{Cite Strabo|ix. p.437}} Its position made it a place of historical importance, since it guarded two of the chief passes into the Thessalian plains: "that of Musáki, distant two miles [three km], which was the exit from Dolopia, and the pass of Portes, at a distance of four miles [six km], which led into Athamania, and through that province to Ambracia."William Martin Leake, Travels in Northern Greece, vol. iv., p. 521.
In the war against Philip V of Macedon, Amynander of Athamania, king of the Athamanes, in co-operation with the Roman consul Titus Quinctius Flamininus, having descended from the latter pass, first took Pheca, a town lying between the pass and Gomphi, and then Gomphi itself, 198 BCE. The possession of this place was of great importance to Flamininus, since it secured him a communication with the Ambracian Gulf, from which he derived his supplies. The route from Gomphi to Ambracia is described by Livy as very short but extremely difficult. The capture of Gomphi was followed by the surrender of the towns named Argenta, Pherinium, Timarum, Ligynae, Strymon, and Lampsus, the position of which is quite uncertain.{{Cite Livy|32.14 - 32.15}} When Athamania revolted from Philip in 189 BCE, he marched into their country by the above-mentioned pass, but was obliged to retire with heavy loss.{{Cite Livy|38.2}} There can be no doubt that it was by the same route that the Roman consul Quintus Marcius Philippus marched from Ambracia into Thessaly in 169 BCE.{{Cite Livy|44.1}}
In the campaign between Julius Caesar and Pompey in 48 BCE, the inhabitants of Gomphi, having heard of Caesar's repulse at Dyrrhachium, shut their gates against him, when he arrived at the place from Aeginium; but he took the place by assault in a few hours. Caesar, in his account of these events, describes Gomphi as the "first town in Thessaly to those coming from Epirus."Caes. B.C. 3.80; Appian, Civil Wars, 2.64; D. C. 41.51. Coins minted at Gomphi survive.
The Byzantine author Hierocles notes that Gomphi was a bishopric in later times.{{Cite Hierocles|p. 642}} No longer a resident bishopric, it remains a titular see of the Roman Catholic Church.[http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/diocese/d2g51.html Catholic Hierarchy]
The site of the ancient town is near Mouzaki.{{Cite Barrington|55}}{{Cite DARE|22807}}
References
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{{Coord|39.446177|N|21.672674|E|format=dms|display=title|http://dare.ht.lu.se/places/22807.html}}
Category:Cities in ancient Greece
Category:Catholic titular sees in Europe
Category:Populated places in ancient Thessaly
Category:Former populated places in Greece
Category:Thessalian city-states
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