Polis
A 'polis' (
πολις)— plural:
poleis (
πολεις) —is a
city, or a
city-state.
The word originates from the
ancient Greek city-states, which developed during the
Archaic period, the ancestor of both modern city and state, and persisted (though with decreasing influence) well into
Roman times, when the equivalent Latin word was
civitas, also meaning 'citizenhood', while
municipium applied to a non-sovereign local entity.
The bounds of the ancient
polis often centred around a
citadel, called the
acropolis, and would of necessity also have an
agora (market) and typically one or more temples and a
gymnasium. Note that many of a
polis' citizens would have lived in the suburbs or countryside. The Greeks did not regard the
polis as a territorial grouping so much as a religious and political association: while the
polis would control territory and colonies beyond the city itself, the
polis would not simply consist of a geographical area.
Each city was composed of several
tribes or
demes, which were in turn composed of
phratries and finally
gentes.
Metics (resident foreigners) and
slaves lay outside this organization. Birth typically determined
citizenship. Each
polis would also worship a number of patron
deities for protection and kept its own particular
festivals and customs.
In the East beyond Asia Minor a major instrument of
hellenization by Alexander the Great was the polis. He is said to have founded no less than seventy cities, destined to become centres of Greek influence; and the great majority of these were in lands in which city-life was almost unknown. In this respect his example was emulated by his successors, the
diadochi.
Derivatives of
polis are common in many modern
European languages. This is indicative of the influence of the
polis-centred Hellenic world view. Derivative words in English include
policy,
polity,
police and
politics.A number of words end in the word "-polis". Most refer to a special kind of city and/or state. Some examples are:
*
Astropolis - star-scaled city/industry area; complex space station; a european star-related festival.
*
Cosmopolis - a large urban centre with a population comprised of many different cultural backgrounds; a novel written by
Don DeLillo.
*
Ecumenopolis - a city that covers an entire
planet, usually seen in
science fiction*
Megapolis, megalopolis - an urban area resulted by merging several cities and their suburbs.
*
Metropolis can refer to the mother city of a colony, the see of a metropolitan archbishop or a
Metropolitan area - a major urban population centre.
*
Necropolis 'city of the dead' - a
graveyard.
*
Technopolis - city with high-tech industry; room full of computers; the
Internet.
Other refer to part of a city or a group of cities, such as:
*
Acropolis 'high city' - upper part of a polis, often citadel and/or site of major temple(s).
*
Decapolis a group of ten cities
*
Pentapolis a group of five cities
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Names
In
Cyprus there is a town called
Polis on the northern coast of the Republic of Cyprus, identified with the Ancient
Lampa.
Names of a number of places contain the suffix "-polis" (sometimes modernized, e.g. "-pol") since Antiquity:
*
Acropolis, Athens,
Greece*
Constantinople (Constantinopolis), now known as
Istanbul (from
is tin Poli 'to "the" city' being Byzantium)
*
Heliopolis*
Megalopolis, Greece*
Neapoli(s) 'new city' - common name for daughter foundations of older polis in ancient Greece and Rome including the modern cities of
Nablus and
Naples. The adjective
Neapolitan is often used to describe things that have their origin in Naples.
*
Persepolis*
Sevastopol,
Crimea,
Ukraine*
Seuthopolis, a ruined Thracian city now in
Bulgaria*
Simferopol, Crimea, Ukraine
*
Tiraspol,
Moldova*
Tripoli,
Libya and a namesake in LebanonIn other cases the term is hardly still regognizable, e.g.:
*
Antipolis, now Antibes, in southern France
Such names were also given later, either referring to older ones or unrelated:
*
Anápolis, Brazil*
Annapolis, MD*
Biopolis - a biological research center in
Singapore.
*
Cambysopolis, a Catholic titular see in Asia Minor, the name being a curious accidental 'creation'
*
Indianapolis, IN*
Minneapolis, MN*
Motherwell - nicknamed
Steelopolis*
Sebastopol, CA*
Sophia-Antipolis, a technology park in
FranceAnd an enterprise:
*
Micropolis Corporation - a defunct computer
hard drive manufacturer.
(incomplete)
*
*
Corinth*
apoikia*
synoecism*
ville