The Dorians were one of the ancient Hellenic tribes acknowledged by Greek writers. Traditional accounts place their origins in the north, north-eastern regions of Greece, ancient Macedonia and Epirus, whence obscure circumstances drove them south into Attica and the Peloponnesos, to certain Aegean islands, and to the coast of Asia Minor. Late mythology gave them an eponymous founder, a certain "Dorus", son of "Hellenas", the mythological patriarch of the Hellenes.
Beginning about 1150 BC, there was much destruction in the Peloponnessus, Crete and other places throughout the Mediterranean, involving the destruction of the Bronze Age Mycenaean civilization and the beginning of the Greek Dark Ages. Peloponnesian cities burned or destroyed include Corinth, Olympia, Sparta and Mycenae. Even cities not burned, such as Athens, went into a prolonged period of decline. Many cities were reduced to villages or abandoned. The written record for this period is nonexistent, due to the abandonment of the Linear B script. Traditionally, this has been attributed to an invasion by the Dorians, but more recently, there is evidence that they migrated south into the Peloponnessus and the Agean during the Dark Ages instead of invading at the beginning of this period.
Though most of the Doric invaders settled in the Peloponesse, they also settled on Rhodes and in Asia Minor, where in later times the Dorian Hexapolis (the six Dorian cities) would arise: Halicarnassus, Cos, Cnidos (Asia Minor); Lindos, Kameiros (Camiros), and Ialyssos (in Rhodes). These six cities would later become rivals with the Ionian cities of Asia Minor. The Dorians also invaded Crete. These origin traditions remained strong into classical times: Thucydides saw the Peloponnesian War in part as "Ionians fighting against Dorians" and reported the tradition that the Syracusans in Sicily were of Dorian descent (Thucydides, 7.57). Other such "Dorian" colonies, originally from Corinth, Megara, and the Dorian islands, dotted the southern coasts of Sicily from Syracuse to Selinus. Culturally, in addition to their Doric dialect of Greek, these colonies retained their characteristic Doric calendar revolving round a cycle of festivals of which the Hyacinthia and the Carneia were especially important (EB 1911).
The Dorians are also credited with the introduction of formalized pederasty into the Greek arena. Some have postulated this to have taken place at the time of their original migration, others much later, around 630 BCE, starting in Crete and spreading to Sparta and the rest of the Greek city states.
The Doric dialect was spoken along the coast of the Peloponnese, in Crete and southwest Asia Minor. A close relationship between Doric, North-Western Greek and ancient Macedonian has been postulated. In later periods other dialects predominated, most notably the Attic, upon which the Koine or common Greek language of the Hellenistic period was based. The main characteristic of Doric was the preservation of Indoeuropean long <α>, which in Attic-Ionic became [ɛː, <η>. Tsakonian Greek, a descendant of Doric Greek and source of great interest to linguists, is extraordinarily still spoken in some regions of the Southern Argolid coast of the Peloponnese, on the coast of the modern prefecture of Arcadia.
History of Greece | Ancient Greece | Crete
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