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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ionic_GreekIonic Greek - Wikipedia

    Ionic or Ionian Greek (Ancient Greek: Ἰωνική, romanized: Iōnikḗ) was a subdialect of the Eastern or AtticIonic dialect group of Ancient Greek. The Ionic group traditionally comprises three dialectal varieties that were spoken in Euboea (West Ionic), the northern Cyclades (Central Ionic), and from c. 1000 BC onward in ...

  2. The Ionian school of pre-Socratic philosophy refers to Ancient Greek philosophers, or a school of thought, in Ionia in the 6th century B.C, the first in the Western tradition. The Ionian school included such thinkers as Thales, Anaximander, Anaximenes, Heraclitus, Anaxagoras, and Archelaus. [1] .

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › IoniansIonians - Wikipedia

    Ionic Greek was a subdialect of the AtticIonic or Eastern dialect group of Ancient Greek. Pre-Ionic Ionians. The literary evidence of the Ionians leads back to mainland Greece in Mycenaean times before there was an Ionia. The classical sources seem determined that they were to be called Ionians along with other names even then.

  4. Ionian, any member of an important eastern division of the ancient Greek people, who gave their name to a district on the western coast of Anatolia (now Turkey ). The Ionian dialect of Greek was closely related to Attic and was spoken in Ionia and on many of the Aegean islands.

  5. Ionic dialect, any of several Ancient Greek dialects spoken in Euboea, in the Northern Cyclades, and from approximately 1000 bc in Asiatic Ionia, where Ionian colonists from Athens founded their cities. Attic and Ionic dialects together form a dialect group.

  6. Article History. Ionia, ancient Anatolia. Major Events: Greco-Persian Wars. Ionian revolt. Key People: Anacreon. Hecataeus of Miletus. Tissaphernes. Related Places: Turkey. ancient Greece. Anatolia. Ephesus. ancient Middle East. Ionia, ancient region comprising the central sector of the western coast of Anatolia (now in Turkey).

  7. static.hlt.bme.hu › semantics › externalIonic Greek - Wikipedia

    The Ionic dialect appears to have originally spread from the Greek mainland across the Aegean at the time of the Dorian invasions, around the 11th century BC during the early Greek Dark Ages. By the end of Archaic Greece and early Classical Greece in the 5th-century BC, the central west coast of Asia Minor , along with the islands of Chios and Samos , formed the heartland of Ionia proper.