Halisarna
{{short description|Town of ancient Mysia}}
{{for|the ancient town on the Greek island of Cos|Halisarna (Cos)}}
Halisarna ({{langx|grc|Ἁλίσαρνα}}) was a town of ancient Mysia on the north bank of the river Caïcus.{{Cite Strabo|14.2.19}}{{Cite DGRG|title=Halisarna}} The nearby towns of Halisarna, Pergamum, and Teuthrania had been given by the Persian king Darius I to the Spartan king Demaratus about the year 486 BCE for his help in the expedition against Greece. Demaratus's descendants continued to rule these cities at the beginning of the 4th century BCE.{{Cite Hellenica|3.1.6}}{{Cite Herodotus|6.70}} During the withdrawal of Pergamum from The March of the Ten Thousand, it was attacked by, among others, troops from Halisarna and Teuthrania under command of Procles, son of Demaratus.Xenophon, Anabasis 7.8.17. In the Hellenica, Xenophon relates that Halisarna, together with Pergamum, Teuthrania, Gambrium, Palaegambrium, Myrina and Gryneium were delivered by their rulers to the army that, under the command of the Spartan Thimbron, around the year 399 BCE, had come to the area to try to liberate the Greek colonies from the Persian domain.
Its site is located near modern Eğrigöltepe, in Asiatic Turkey.{{Cite Barrington|56}}{{Cite DARE|29040}}
References
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{{coord|39.045111|N|27.114997|E|display=title|format=dms|source:http://dare.ht.lu.se/places/29040}}
{{Former settlements in Turkey}}
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Category:Populated places in ancient Mysia
Category:Populated places in ancient Aeolis
Category:Former populated places in Turkey
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