Aegina (Greek Αίγινα): main island in the Saronic Gulf, south of Athens and east of Corinth.
Early History
Aegina, Tombstone of a young man, holding a bird
Aegina is a stony, infertile island with a surface of just over eighty square kilometers, south of Athens and east of Corinth in the Saronic Gulf. There is little water.
Occupied in the Neolithic; perhaps from the east, because the name Aegina looks Anatolian
Becomes independent from Epidaurosnote[Herodotus, Histories 5.83.]
Early naval power; trade network to Andalusianote[Herodotus, Histories 4.152.] and Naucratis in Egypt;note[Herodotus,Histories 2.178.] early silver coins (turtle)
The real city in the west; double harbor
Aeacus believed to be the founder of the city
Grain imported from Athens; Solon's laws against grain trade may have been direct against Aegina, which becomes an entrepôt of the Pontic grain trade
Aegina appears to have become Athenian in some way, because the emperor Augustus gave the island its independence again.note[Cassius Dio, Roman History 54.7.1.]
267 CE Invasion of the Heruli; wall; temple of Apollo becomes fort
sIII: Jewish settlement
First half fourth century: Christian community
Joint bishopric with Ceos
The temple for Zeus Hellanios on the highest mountain became a small church for the prophet Eliah.
Plundered by the Arabs; refuge for Corinthians in the age of the Slavic invasions of Greece