Tricca

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File:Thessaly.jpg

Tricca or Trikka ({{langx|grc|Τρίκκη}} or Τρίκκα) was a city 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/n723 707]}} of ancient Thessaly in the district Histiaeotis, standing upon the left bank of the Peneius, and near a small stream called Lethaeus.{{Cite Strabo|ix. p.438, xiv. p. 647.}} This city is said to have derived its name from Tricca, a daughter of Peneius.{{Cite Stephanus|s.v.}} The modern city of Trikala extends over the ancient site.{{Cite DARE|22786}}

History

It is mentioned in Homer as the kingdom of Machaon and Podaleirius, sons of Asclepius and physicians of the Greek army, who led the Triccaeans to the Trojan War.{{Cite Iliad|2.729, 4.202}} It possessed a temple of Asclepius, which was regarded as the most ancient and illustrious of all the temples of this god.{{Cite Strabo|ix. p.437.}} This temple was visited by the sick, whose cures were recorded there, as in the temples of Asclepius at Epidaurus and Cos.{{Cite Strabo|viii. p.374.}} There were probably physicians attached to the temple; and 19th century archaeologist William Martin Leake reports an inscription in four elegiac verses, to the memory of a "god-like physician named Cimber, by his wife Andromache," which he found upon a marble in a bridge over the ancient Lethaeus.Leake Northern Greece, vol. iv. p. 285.

In the edict published by Polysperchon and the other generals of Alexander the Great, after the death of the latter, allowing the exiles from the different Greek cities to return to their homes, those of Tricca and of the neighbouring town of Pharcadon were excepted for some reason, which is not recorded.{{Cite Diodorus|18.56}} Tricca was the first town in Thessaly at which Philip V of Macedon arrived after his defeat at the Battle of the Aous (198 BC).{{Cite Livy|32.13}} Tricca is also mentioned by Liv. 36.13; Plin. Nat. 4.8. s. 15 Ptol. 3.13.44; Them. Orat. xxvii. p. 333.

Procopius, who calls the town Tricattûs (Τρικάττους), says that it was restored by Justinian;Procopius, de Aedif. 4.3 but it is still called Tricca by Hierocles{{Cite Hierocles|642}} in the sixth century, and the form in Justinian may be a corruption. In the twelfth century it already bears its modern name Trikkala (Τρίκκαλα)

The castle occupies a hill projecting from the last falls of the mountain of Khassia; but the only traces of the ancient city which Leake could discover were some small remains of Hellenic masonry, forming part of the wall of the castle, and some squared blocks of stone of the same ages dispersed in different parts of the town.Leake Northern Greece, vol. i. p. 425, seq., vol. iv. p. 287. The remains are in a section of modern Trikala called Agios Nikolaos.{{Barrington|55}}

Tricca was Christianised early and is attested as an episcopal see since antiquity; the bishopric is now Greek Orthodox. The Roman Catholic Church claims it as a titular see.{{cite web |url=http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/diocese/d3t84.html |title=Tricca (Titular See) [Catholic-Hierarchy] |website=www.catholic-hierarchy.org |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20031123171818/http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/diocese/d3t84.html |archive-date=2003-11-23}}

References