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===Korinthia===
===Messara===
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|-|Aphrodite, Adonis and Persephone=
|-|Messaran Banner=
[[File:DTAG - Myth of Adonis Altar.png|thumb|250px|Altar with the Myth of Adonis from South Italy / 425-375 BCE (Classical Greece)]]
The area of Messara is the largest plain of the island of Krete. The symbol of the region is inspired by the coins of Knossos, which bear a labyrinth on the reverse, referencing the famous Kretan Minotaur myth.
According to the myth told by Ovid, when Aphrodite met the infant Adonis, she was immediately smitten with him. She decided to take care of him by hiding him in a chest, and asked Persephone, the queen of the underworld, to educate him. However, Persephone also fell in Love with Adonis.


On the day Aphrodite descended into the underworld to retrieve the young Adonis, Persephone refused to return the boy, who had become her lover. The two women turned to Zeus to judge who should have Adonis, and Zeus asked the muse Kalliope to make the decision.
The minotaur was half-human, half-bull. King Minos of Krete made the mistake of sacrificing a bull, and thus angered Poseidon. The god then instilled "passion" for the bull into Minos' wife, who later gave birth to the minotaur.


In the end, it was decided that Adonis would spend fourth months with Aphrodite, four with Persephone, and four alone to rest. However, Adonis decided - either on his own or through Aphrodite's magical influence - to spend his four months of "rest" with Aphrodite.
The minotaur was kept in the labyrinth built by Daidalos. On a regular basis, fourteen young men and women were given to the beast in tribute, until the hero Theseus killed him.


Aphrodite and Adonis continued their passionate relationship until one day, Adonis was mortally wounded while hunting a boar. Aphrodite heard her lover's moans of pain from her flying chariot, but by the time she arrived by his side, it was too late to save him. The goddess cried tears of blood that fell onto the ground, and from them sprouted either the purple anemone flower or the rose, depending on the version of the story.
|-|The Kretan Bull=
The seventh labor of Herakles was to kill a great bull that had destroyed crops and property in Krete.


|-|Aphrodite: A Love Story=
Herakles went to King Minos of Krete, who gave him permission to get rid of the bull. Herakles managed to capture the beast, suppressing it with his hands, but he ultimately didn't kill it. Instead, he shipped the bull to Eurystheas so he could confirm that the labor was successful, and then the animal was released.
[[File:DTAG - Love of Aphrodite and Ares fresco.png|thumb|250px|Love of Aphrodite and Ares, fresco from the house of Marcus Lucretius Fronto in Pompei / 1st. cemt. CE (Roman period)]]
In mythology, Aphrodite was the wife of Hephaistos, the god of metallurgy. However, she also had an affair with Ares, the god of war.


One night, after spending too long together, Ares and Aphrodite were caught by Helios, who informed Hephaistos of his wife's infidelity. In a fit of rage, Hephaistos captured Ares and Aphrodite in an unbreakable net, then summoned the rest of the gods to bear witness to his dishonor.
|-|Kretan Hole=
Koulourai are large, stone-walled pits that can be found in a number of major sites in Krete, including Knossos, Malia, and Phaistos. All of them were constructed around 1850-1750 BCE.


Afterwards, Aphrodite went to Paphos to renew her virginity in the sea. This virginity did not last, however, as she later had a relationship with Hermes which resulted in the birth of  Hermaphroditos, a being of two sexes.
While the exact purpose of the koulourai is still debated, there are three prominent theories as to what they were used for. Arthur Evans believed they functioned as refuse or garbage pits. Conversely, Chapouthier and Pernier theorized that they were used as ancient cisterns. However, this theory is flawed since kouroulai did not have the same waterproofing as other Knossian structures of the time.


|-|Children=
The most widely accepted theory is that koulourai were used to store grain. This assumption gains even more ground when paired with the theory that Minoan palaces were not palaces at all, but massive agricultural redistribution centers.
[[File:DTAG - Terracotta Doll.jpg|thumb|250px|Terracotta doll (child's toy) / 5th cent. BCE (Classical Greece)]]
After a baby was born, it was presented to the father, who would then decide its fate. If the child was a girl or showed signs of a disability, they were occasionally abandoned and left to die.


Wealthier families could hire caretakers or employ their slaves as nurses to look after their children. This was a necessary precaution, as children were very susceptible to diseases and illnesses.
|-|Fishing=
In the "History of Animals" by Aristotle, he provides a guide to the species present in the Mediterranean: 105 fish, twenty-four shells, twenty-four marine or crustacean animals, and five cetaceans and amphibious animals.


Education in Greece was reserved for boys and young men. Rich families could hire tutors to teach their daughters skills like reading, but this was not the norm, and girls were mainly taught how to run the household.
Philosophers and moralists had little regard for fishermen. Plato deemed the activity unworthy of a well-born man. But there was solidarity between sailors, and the specificity of the trade was important enough to even become a Literary theme; it's known that Aischylos had written a piece entitled "Diktyoulkoi" (Net-Haulers), and Menander wrote a piece called "The Fishermen".


|-|Jason and Medea=
These authors were much more interested in the psychology of the fisherman than the real sociology of the profession. A fisherman is often alone, practicing his profession all year long. He has to be intelligent and cunning, but he also must be lucky.
[[File:ACOD DT - Jason and Medea.jpg|thumb|250px|Jason about the seize the Golden Fleece, stergo of the Argo to the right / 470-460 BCE (Classical Greece)]]
[[Jason]] was the legendary Greek hero who led the [[Argonauts]], a group of adventurers named after their ship, the ''[[Argo]]''. Together, they set out to steal the magical [[Shroud of Eden 1|Golden Fleece]], and eventually succeeded with the help of a sorceress named [[Medea]].


Jason married Medea, and the couple eventually settled in the city of Korinth. But the couple's happy ending was short-lived; when Jason met the king of Korinth's daughter, [[Glauke]], he abandoned Medea to seek the princess' hand in marriage.
|-|Fishing Methods=
Navigation on the Mediterranean was difficult. Most sailing depended on the winds, and was done in the summer. The storm season started in late September or early October, and ended in late February or early March. During these months, navigation was highly dangerous. In addition, the nature of the currents made certain areas dangerous. The sea monsters Charybdis and Skylla in "The Odyssey" would be the pictorial representation of the strong current of the Strait of Messina that separates the western tip of the south of Magna Graecia with Sicily.


Enraged, Medea gifted Glauke a dress that was secretly poisoned. Upon wearing the dress, Glauke was burned alive.
There were several methods of fishing in ancient Greece. Plato and Oppian discussed fishing with nets, laces, baskets, hooks or tridents, and angling. t was also possible to fish for mollusks, shellfish, crustaceans, and fish thrown from the sea to the shores.


The ending of the story varies. Either Medea's children were stoned to death as punishment for her murder of Glauke, or Medea herself killed her children as a way of getting revenge on Jason.
In some cases, the fish was caught by hand, like in octopus fishing. Fishing could also be done with lanterns - as fish were attracted to the light source - or could simply be "picked" during sleep.


The legend of Medea was later told in a {{Wiki|Medea (play)|tragedy}} by the famous playwright [[Euripides]].
There were also more unusual methods, such as the smell fishery where fish were attracted with foul food, excrement, or salted octopus. There was also the method of "poisoning fishing", where plants like hellebore or conia were used to catch fish and octopus.


|-|Korinthian Banner=
|-|Underwater=
[[File:DTAG - Stater of Korinth.png|thumb|250px|Pegasos flying left, obverse type of a stater from Korinth / 375-300 BCE (Classical Greece)]]
[[File:DTAG - Underwater BTS.png|thumb|250px|Inspired by ''The Art of Assassin's Creed Odyssey'', by Kate Lewis, with courtesy from Titan Books.]]
The banner of Korinthia was inspired by the coinage of Korinth, which depicts Pegasos.
 
Pegasos, the mythical winged horse, was captured in Korinth by Bellerophon near the Peirene fountain. The hero then rode him to defeat the monstrous creature Chimera. When Bellerophon fell from Pegasos while trying to reach Mount Olympos, Zeus gave Pegasos the task of carrying thunderbolts. The god later granted Pegasos the honor of becoming a constellation.
 
|-|Merchant Boat=
[[File:DTAG - Merchant Boat BTS.png|thumb|250px|Inspired by ''The Art of Assassin's Creed Odyssey'', by Kate Lewis, with courtesy from Titan Books.]]
(Behind the scenes)
(Behind the scenes)


"To produce our Merchant Boat, we were really pleased to be able to use as reference the remains of the very well preserved "Kyrenia Ship" found in 1965. Having this boat replicated with the highest historic fidelity helped us to give life to our beautiful world and to show that there was not only war ships sailing in the great ancient Greek Sea." - David Therrien
The seventh biome of the game, the Hero explores the underwater world of the Aegen Sea looking for treasure and artifacts. The sea teems with all manner of life including dangerous sharks and beautiful corals. "By exploring the depths of the ocean the player can choose to take a dive amongst long forgotten ruins. Here they can take on fights with deadly sharks as they search for hidden treasures," adds Benjamin Hall. Featuring shipwrecks, ruins and remnants of ancient civilizations as shown in these concept arts by Hugo Puzzuoli, this biome is just as diverse and intricate as the rest.
 
|-|The Belt of Hippolyta=
[[File:DTAG - Amphora scene of Herakles and Amazons.png|thumb|250px|Herakles in combat against Amazons, fighting to capture the belt of Hippolyta, the queen of Amazons. Scene from a black-figure amphora / 520 BCE (Archaic Greece)]]
Eurystheas asked Herakles to bring him the belt of Hippolyta for the ninth labor; it would be offered to his daughter Admete.
 
The belt was a gift from the god Ares to his daughter Hippolyta, the queen of Amazons - a tribe of women-warriors. With a group of companions, Herakles reached Themiskyra, the city in the Black Sea were Hippolyta lived, and convinced the Amazon to give him the belt. However, Hera had spread rumors amongst the Amazons, so they attacked him. Herakles had no choice but to kill Hippolyta. He then brought the belt back to Eurystheas.
 
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===Kythera===
===Messenia===
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|-|Aphrodite and Salt=
|-|Charcoal=
[[File:DTAG - Salt gathering drawing.png|thumb|250px|Salt gathering in Croisic (France) in the 17th cent. CE. Drawing by Lambert Doomer (1624-1700) / 1645-1646]]
Charcoal is the solid residue that remains when wood - or other organic matter - is "carbonized" under controlled
Aphrodite, the goddess of love, was born from salty sea foam, and that is why she is sometimes called Haligeneous ("salt-born"). The myth tells us that this foam came from the genitals of Ouranos (the sky). They fell near the island of Kythera, and this is where and how Aphrodite was born.
conditions in a closed space. Very Little air is allowed to come into contact with the fuel during the carbonization process. If this condition is not observed, the wood (or other raw material) is simply reduced to ash and its fuel value is lost.


As you can see, salt and Aphrodite go together. Salt was associated with fertility and reproduction. For instance,
This means that transport costs are much lower for locally produced charcoal than for Locally gathered wood - an important consideration for a product whose production cost consists almost exclusively of the labor invested in it. It's also noteworthy that charcoal creates a much hotter, more even, and more easily controlled heat than wood, which means that itis much better suited for domestic cooking and grilling and a virtual "sine qua non" for blacksmithing and particularly ironworking.
Plutarch wrote in his Symposiakon that "salt encourages remarkably generation", reshaping Aristotle's notes in the
"History of Animals" that "if they merely lick salt, mice get pregnant".


Aphrodite is sometimes shown holding a small salt bag in her hand, and those who attended the Aphrodisia - the sacred festivals of Aphrodite - were required to bring and carry a salt bag to honor the salt-born goddess.
|-|Messenian Banner=
Messenia's history was linked closely with Sparta's. The region was long-occupied by the Spartans - its population was enslaved as helots.


|-|Hue Variations=
Independent cities emerged only after the Theban invasion of the Peloponnese in the 4th century BCE. After the defeat of the Spartan army at the battle of Leuktra in 371 BCE, the helots of Messenia revolted against Sparta. Epaminondas, the Theban general, supported the building of the fortified city of Messene.
[[File:DTAG - Glass alabastron.png|thumb|250px|Glass alabastron with dark purple nets and zigzags, Eastern Mediterranean / Late 6th-5th cent. BCE (Archaic Greece)]]
Different types of murex secrete different types of purple. The purple is influenced by the chemical composition of their sacs, but also their sex and size. Sunlight, temperature, humidity and salinity can also influence the color's brightness, tone, and intensity.


Dyers could obtain a greater variety of color shades by mixing different types of shellfish, controlling the fermentation process, or adding other ingredients such as honey or flour.
The banner of Messenia is inspired by the coins of Messene, showing Zeus brandishing his thunderbolt. Zeus had an important sanctuary on Mount Ithome, which was included in the walls of Messene.


|-|Kytheran Banner=
|-|Sea Battles=
[[File:DTAG - Bronze coin of Kythera.png|thumb|250px|Dove flying right, reverse type of a rare bronze coin of Kythera / 100-50 BCE (Hellenistic Greece)]]
[[File:DTAG - Sea Battles.png|thumb|250px|Inspired by ''The Art of Assassin's Creed Odyssey'', by Kate Lewis, with courtesy from Titan Books.]]
Kythera is the name of an island as well as a city. The strategic position of the island - just south of the Peloponnese - made it a target for the Athenians during the Peloponnesian War. Athens occupied it during most of the war and used it to support trade and to raid Lakonia.
(Behind the scenes)


Kythera's banner was inspired by its coinage. Both featured the dove, which is sacred to Aphrodite, who had a sanctuary in Kythera. According to mythology, this island was the goddess's birthplace.
Waging war in the ocean was a brutal affair in Ancient Greece, The ships, mostly triremes, were simply designed and unstable, especially in high seas and adverse weather. The development team looked at historical accounts of naval warfare from the period to recreate the drama and danger in game.


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Blue-clad Athenians have their ship cleaved in two in concept art by Hugo Puzzuoli.


===Lakonia===
|-|Thucydides=
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Thucydides was an Athenian aristocrat, general, and historian who chronicled the history of the Peloponnesian War. While he does not mention his predecessor Herodotos directly, it is probable that Thucydides was influenced by the so-called "Father of History".
|-|Archaeology and Sparta=
[[File:DTAG - Sanctuary of Athena Chalkioikos ruins.png|thumb|250px|Sanctuary of Athena Chalkioikos on the Akropolis of Sparta / 2016]]
Compared to Athens, Sparta has been subjected to far less archaeological work, and its akropolis and agora have not yet been excavated. As a result, it's difficult to put together a complete picture of ancient Sparta.


The Athenian general and historian Thucydides gives the earliest description of Sparta, but it is Pausanias's visit to the city in the 2nd century CE that provides most of the knowledge we have today.
Thucydides's account of history, however, focused less on the mythic origins of the Greeks, and instead provided a perspective on how much the Greek world had evolved since its beginning - and how much it would continue to evolve into the future. His work also provided insight into the educational and cultural development of Athens. Thucydides was a skilled orator trained by some of the best speakers of his time. Because of this, many of the most important moments in his historical writings are presented as speeches.


The original layout of Sparta is difficult to map because in Thucydides's time, the city did not have any defensive walls. This is partially because Spartans viewed fortifications as frivolous, expensive, and unnecessary - they felt their men could do a better job defending the city than any walls could.
|-|War Machines=
Several Greek authors have left us works on siege tactics or on how to build war machines. However, artillery such as catapults were not yet invented at the time of the Peloponnesian War - it would take another century for them to appear.


|-|Archidamos=
The main war machines used at this time, called mechanai, were mostly scaling-ladders, battering rams, and tortoises. There are two known instances of incendiary machines, but we don't know exactly how they worked. The Thebans used one against the Athenians at Delium in 424 BCE, and the Spartans at Torone in 423 BCE.
[[File:ACOD Archidamos II - Concept Art.png|thumb|250px|King Archidamos II, as imagined by character artists Ashley Sparing & Stephanie Chafe / 2018]]
In one of the Athenian general Thucydides's historical writings, he described a debate between the Spartan king
Archidamos and one of Sparta's ephors over whether or not the city should engage Athens and the Delian League in what would later become the Peloponnesian War.


Surprisingly, Archidamos argued for a more cautious approach, stating that their enemies were numerous, well-funded, and more skilled when it came to naval engagements. He believed that Sparta should not be so hasty in picking a fight until it was more prepared.
|-|Woodworking=
Woodcutting and charcoal making typically took place in the forest. Charcoals were then bagged and transported to private homes or presumably nearby markets. In wood-rich areas, local production of wood for common use appears to have been either in the hands of individuais, or potentially middlemen who might collect wood from various sources, then reselLit at the local agora. The elite's access to such wood may have been outside the market if their landholdings provided suitable material), except for the purchase of exotic materials.


The ephor, meanwhile, appealed to the city's honor, and said that the only response worthy of strong Spartans was to vote for war.
The full range of woodworking tools and techniques employed by wood workers of the ancient Mediterranean and the practical knowledge concerning wood species and their most valuable applications attest to the importance of wood technologies for agriculture and hunting, domestic life, trade, warfare, and leisure activities. It is worth mentioning that the tools and the techniques employed by the end of the Classical and Roman period would show little change until the appearance of the Industrial Revolution fifteen centuries later.
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Despite being the king, Archidamos's efforts to postpone the war were eventually overruled.
===Naxos===
 
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|-|Artemis Orthia=
|-|Honey Offerings=
[[File:DTAG - Lead figure of Artemis Orthia.png|thumb|250px|Lead figure of a winged goddess, perhaps Artemis Orthia, found in sanctuaries in Lakonia / Late 7th-6th cent. BCE (Archaic Greece)]]
The ancients often made bees and honey into symbols related to the deities. Honey was considered heavenly since it never expired, and was a typical offering placed on altars for the gods. These offerings were given to rustic deities such as Pan and Priape, who were protectors of beekeepers, but also to Chthonian deities worshiped in mystery cults such as Hermes, Dionysos, and Demeter. Honey and bees were also a symbol of resurrection.
Artemis was the daughter of Zeus and Leto, and Apollo's twin sister. A virgin and a huntress, she was one of the most
important Olympian deities, and presided over crucial aspects of life: girls' transition to womanhood, childbirth, the rearing of children, but also Spartan boys" rites of transition to manhood, and certain aspects of war. She was most commonly depicted with a bow and arrow, and associated with deer.
 
Artemis had several cults in Sparta, and the most important of them was Artemis Orthia. This cult was closely associated to the Spartan education system, the agoge.
 
Many dedications to Eileithyia - the goddess associated with good deliveries - were found in the sanctuary, showing the two deities' roles were closely related.


|-|Dionysos Kolonatas=
Honey was considered a gift - a remnant of the Golden Age - that the gods kindly gave to men. It guaranteed long life and good health. In this way, it was connected to nectar and ambrosia - drinks of the immortal gods. In childhood, Zeus was nourished with honey and milk. Mead was seen as a substitute for these divine drinks. Honey's religious symbolism was all the more important since it could be food for newborns - a young Plato was said to be fed with honey - but also for the dead.
[[File:DTAG - Running girl bronze figure.png|thumb|250px|Bronze figure of a running girl / 520-500 BCE (Archaic Greece)]]
Dionysos was the Greek god associated with wine, ritual madness, and theater. This temple was set on a hill opposite
the Spartan Akropolis. The site was called Kotona ["the hill"), which gave the god his epithet Kolonatas. The temple seems to have been a place of worship for women. When approaching adulthood, girls may have been initiated into the mysteries of Dionysos linked to this temple.


During the god's annual feast, Pausanias tells of a footrace involving eleven girls, the "Dionysiades"; this custom would have come from Delphi.
|-|Naxos Banner=
Naxos was the largest island in the Kyklades. lts protective deity was Dionysos, god of wine, who was born on the island according to mythology. The money of Naxos served as model for the banner, and is linked with the god as the coins show a kantharos - a wine cup.


|-|Dromos=
Naxos produced wine, but was more famous for its marble. It was exported and widely used. For example, it was used in Olympia and on the Akropolis in Athens. Its craftsmen were pioneers in the development of monumental marble sculptures and architecture.
[[File:DTAG - Amphora runners scene.png|thumb|250px|Runners, scene from a Panathenaic red-figure amphora / 333-332 BCE (Classical Greece)]]
According to Pausanias, the Dromos was used as a place for footraces, and contained gymnasia as well. It was open to Sparta's citizens, who could also offer sacrifices on the nearby statue of Herakles.


{{-}}
|-|Marble=
Greek soil contains great geological diversity. Since the beginning of the Early Cycladic period, the Greeks used marble in architecture, sculpture, figurines, and more. The word marble, from the Greek term marmaros, means "resplendent stone". It quickly became a luxury furniture in Greek cities, and it played a big part in the Greek economy. Some regions stand out for their marble-related wealth, including Naxos, Paros, Thasos, Attika, the Peloponnese, and Euboea Island.


|-|Encampments=
Marble is made up of different colors (red, pink, yellow), and each has a different texture (translucent, wavy, streaked, swirly, etc.). For example, Peloponnesian marble was red with touches of black. Pentelic marble, found near Athens, was greenish with a grainy pattern. The most prestigious marble of the time came from Paros, and was greyish white.
[[File:DTAG - BTS Encampments.png|thumb|250px|Inspired by ''The Art of Assassin's Creed Odyssey'', by Kate Lewis, with courtesy from Titan Books.]]
(Behind the scenes)


The Spartan army encampment in Megaris sprawls across the landscape. Tents house weary soldiers, shields and spears neatly arranged, to be quickly grabbed if the Athenians should attack. These camps are a maze of tents and low buildings, temples and houses overtaken by war and generals, and are always well guarded.
|-|Extraction=
In Naxos, ancient quarries were located on the Ágios loannis hill on the north side of the island, with another one in the central region, Melanes.


"The layout of the locations needs to feel credible as though it could be lived in and at the same time needs to fit within the game metrics of fight and stealth," explains world director, Benjamin Hall. "Anywhere in the world where the player finds themselves against enemies are designed to be a homogeneous blend between art and design."
In general, the quarrymen exploited natural fissures and applied pressure to extract massive blocks. They then drilled holes into the marble, drove wooden shafts into the holes, and poured water over the wood so it swelled and split off the desired blocks of stone.


|-|Kastor and Pollux=
In Naxos, whiter parts of the stone were preferred during the quarrying process, which had a direct impact on the price of this marble. Around 5000 m<sup>3</sup> of the most prestigious Naxian marble was exported annually.
[[File:DTAG - Bronze coin of Lakedaimon.png|thumb|250px|Jugate heads of the Dioskouroi (Castor and Pollux) from a bronze coin of Lakedaimon (Sparta) / 35-31 BCE (Hellenistic Greece)]]
Kastor and Pollux, the Dioskouroi, were divine twins, sons of Zeus and Leda, and brothers of Helen and Klytemnestra. One of them human and the other divine, they were linked to Sparta, as myth stated they were born on Mount Taygetos. The Dioskouroi were the protectors of the Spartan kings, and took turns in their royal duty. They helped the Spartans in battle, and they were associated with horsemanship as well as with athletic contests. In art, they were often represented with their sister Helen. An important number of marble reliefs of the Dioskouroi have been found in excavations of the Spartan area, and are now kept in the Sparta Museum.


The workers carried the marble with cranes and rails. They moved it around with pullies, cranes, levers, rails, and inclined planes.
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|-|Kings of the Peloponnesian War=
[[File:DTAG - Attic grave stele.png|thumb|250px|Attic grave stele with hoplite battle scene / 390 BCE (Classical Greece)]]
Four Spartan kings played important roles in the Peloponnesian War: Archidamos II, his elder son Agis II, Pleistoanax, and his son Pausanias.
In 464 BCE, Archidamos Il managed to quell a helot revolt following an earthquake that shook the city to its core. A few years later in 445 BCE, his double in kingship, Pleistoanax, was exiled for presumably taking a bribe from the Athenian statesman Perikles - someone Archidamos had previously been on friendly terms with.


During the first part of the Peloponnesian War, which was named the Archidamian War after Archidamos, the king marched against Attika in 431 BCE, 430 BCE, and 428 BCE. He was succeeded by his son Agis II in 427/6 BCE, who was appointed a guardian because of his young of age. Agis did not manage to invade Attika, but together with Pleistoanax, who had returned from exile, they signed a treaty with the Athenians in 421 BCE known as the Peace of Nikias.
===Obsidian Islands===
 
During the third part of the war, it was Agis's decision to occupy Dekeleia and control Athens's countryside, as well as access to the Laurion mines. This move was crucial, because Athens lost the possibility to mint coins with Laurion silver, restricting the city's ability to finance the war and pay for mercenaries and contributing to Athens's eventual surrender in 404 BCE.
 
Pausanias, meanwhile, was the king of Sparta who laid siege to Athens in collaboration with the admiral Lysander, which culminated in Sparta's decisive victory in Aigos Potamoi in 405 BCE.
 
|-|Mothakes=
[[File:DTAG - Kylix scene of a hoplite shield with peltast depiction.png|thumb|250px|Peltast depicted on shield of a hoplite, scene from an attic red-figure kylix / 520-490 BCE (Archaic Greece)]]
The mothakes are one of the less well-known classes of Ancient Spartan society. Most of what is known of them is the stuff of hypotheses and theories: they were either illegitimate children of Spartan fathers and helot or períoikoi mothers, orphans whose training was sponsored by guardians, or poor people whose training was paid for by wealthier Spartan families.
 
Mothakes accompanied Spartan boys in the agoge as their companions, or syntrophoi. Though they did not share the same rights as citizens, they could eventually join the Spartan elite if they completed their training, or if their patron bought them a unit of land known as a kleros. Fulfilling these conditions granted them citizenship, and allowed them to join the Spartan military.
 
Written sources attest that some mothakes, such as Gylippos, became accomplished military leaders during the Peloponnesian War. In fact, it's been suggested that Lysander, the famous Spartan admiral instrumental in winning the aforementioned war, was a mothax as well.
 
|-|Non-Citizen Soldiers=
[[File:DTAG - Nomos of Taras.png|thumb|250px|Warrior on horseback from a nomos of Taras, a Spartan colony / 344-340 BCE (Classical Greece)]]
The Lakedaimonian army was not exclusively made up of official Spartan citizens.
 
The army was composed of all male Lakedaimonians aged twenty to sixty [and occasionally even older], regardless of social class. Because of this, Helots and Perioikoi often fought alongside Spartan homoioi (citizens).
 
{{-}}
 
|-|Períoikoi and Commerce=
[[File:DTAG - Amphora with scene of merchandise weighing.png|thumb|250px|Men weighing merchandise with a large scale, scene from a black-figure amphora / 540-530 BCE (Archaic Greece)]]
The períoikoi were indigenous non-Spartan freemen who lived in the periphery of Sparta, but did not have political rights. They formed autonomous communities and developed local economies because, unlike the Spartans, they engaged in commerce and manufacturing.
 
In other words, while Spartans concentrated on war, the períoikoi focused on everything else. They could be carpenters, merchants, farmers, and fishermen, among many other professions.
 
Their dependency on Sparta did now allow them to develop a proper economy, but at the same time they aided the Spartans by allowing them to concentrate on military matters. It is also believed that the períoikoi procured of the metals and crafted the arms the Spartans used in battle.
 
|-|Persian Pillars=
[[File:DTAG - Amphora scene of warrior against Persian archer.png|thumb|250px|Red-figure amphora depicting a warrior fighting against a Persian archer / 480-470 BCE (Classical Greece)]]
When Pausanias visited Sparta's agora, he described the imposing Persian Stoa, a structure built to commemorate the Greeks' decisive victory over the Persians in the Greco-Persian Wars:
 
"The most prominent building in the market place is the Persian Stoa, so called because it was built from the spoils of the Medes. In time they embellished it to the size and ornamentation which It now has. The columns are Persians of white stone, Mardonios son of Gobryas and others."
 
|-|Rivers=
[[File:DTAG BHS - Rivers.png|thumb|250px|Inspired by ''The Art of Assassin's Creed Odyssey'', by Kate Lewis, with courtesy from Titan Books.]]
(Behind the scenes)
 
"A dedicated river tool has been developed in order to render believable river layouts in a Greek mountainous landscape. Here is an in-game image of a spring river." - Vincent Lamontagne, assistant art director and lead biome artist.
 
</tabber>
<tabber>
<tabber>
|-|Spartan Banner=
|-|Melos Banner=
[[File:DTAG - Bronze coin of Lakedaimon.png|thumb|250px|Initials of Lakedaimon within wreath, from a Spartan bronze coin / 35-31 BCE (Hellenistic Greece)]]
[[File:DTAG - Melos Stater.PNG|thumb|250px|Triskeles (which means three legs) from the reverse type of a stater of Melos / c. 600 BCE - 200 CE (Ancient Greece)]]
The Spartan banner bears the letter "lambda", standing for Lakedaimon, the other name of Sparta. On their coins, the initials were lambda and alpha: "LA".
The banner of [[Melos]] is derived from a coin of the city, depicting the symbol of the triskeles; the name of this symbol literally means "three legs". It was sometimes used on coins, but more often on shields.
 
This emblem is inspired by Spartan shields bearing the lambda. While there's no archaeological evidence of these shields' decoration, they're known from textual evidence. A fragment of a comedy by Eupolis tells that the sight alone of the lambdas on Spartans' shields was enough to frighten Kleon.
 
On other occasions, shields were decorated by varied iconographies, as shown on numerous vases depicting warriors.
 
|-|Spartans=
[[File:DTAG - BTS Spartans.png|thumb|250px|Inspired by ''The Art of Assassin's Creed Odyssey'', by Kate Lewis, with courtesy from Titan Books.]]
(Behind the scenes)
 
Fearsome and formidable, these warriors are unmatched throughout Greece and the known world. These character studies by artist Fred Rambaud show the different types of warriors the Hero will encounter in Sparta, from the heavily armored brute, to the more nimble, spear-wielding fighter, and the brawler, replete in gold armor and a heavy ram's- head hammer.
 
|-|Storyboards=
[[File:DTAG - BTS Storyboards.png|thumb|250px|Inspired by ''The Art of Assassin's Creed Odyssey'', by Kate Lewis, with courtesy from Titan Books.]]
(Behind the scenes)
 
Storyboards are crucial to mapping out a sequence of events. These storyboards by Miguel Bouchard show the Hero's family sharing some dramatic moments at the top of the treacherous Mount Taygetos. This storyboard demonstrates the terrible decision made by Nikolaos.
 
|-|The Akropolis of Sparta=
[[File:DTAG - Akropolis of Sparta theater remains.png|thumb|250px|Remains of the theater of the Akropolis of Sparta with view of Taygetos mountains / 2016]]
The Akropolis of Sparta consisted of several buildings that date from different chronological periods - from the Archaic to the Byzantine era.
 
At the top of the Akropolis was the sanctuary of Athena Chalkioikos, dated to the óth century BCE. It was originally a sanctuary of Pitane, as confirmed by archaeological discoveries dating as early as the Mycenaean period.
 
Near the sanctuary of Athena was the ancient theater of Sparta. The theater seen in-game is based on a structure dated to the Roman period. The theater probably had a wooden stage; a fact supported by several inscriptions from the 2nd century CE. Excavations next to the theater also revealed connected shops.
 
The Akropolis of Sparta also held visible traces of the Skias, the semi-circular building of the archaic-classical periods - but with visible repairs from the Roman period.
 
|-|The Temple of Athena Chalkiokos=
[[File:DTAG - Sanctuary of Athena Chalkioikos ruins.png|thumb|250px|Sanctuary of Athena Chalkioikos on the Akropolis of Sparta / 2016]]
According to Pausanias, the two most important Spartan temples were the temple of Artemis Orthia, and the temple of Athena Chalkioikos.
 
Pausanias describes the building of the sanctuary of Athena Chalkioikos in great detail. It was Located on the Akropolis of Sparta, west of the agora. Its construction was started by the mythical king of Sparta, Tyndareos, but was completed by the Spartan sculptor Gitiadas in the 6th century BCE.


The epithet Chalkioikos [house from bronze] was attached to this temple due to the bronze and copper decorations on its walls. These embossed sheets depicted mythological scenes like Herakles's labors, achievements of the sons of Tyndareos, the Legend of Perseus and Medusa, and the birth of Athena. The bronze decorations and the bronze statue of Athena were the works of Gitiadas, who also composed a hymn to the goddess.
The larger meaning of this symbol is not clear, but an ancient epigram speaks of a triskeles on a shield that is supposed to frighten opponents—the bearer of this shield supposedly ran very fast.


|-|Women in Sparta=
This symbol is still in use today on the {{Wiki|Sicily|Sicilian}} flag, and that of the {{Wiki|Isle of Man}}.
[[File:DTAG Courage of Spartan Women - Jean-Jacques-François Le Barbier.jpg|thumb|250px|Courage of Spartan women defending against Messenians. Oil painting by {{Wiki|Jean-Jacques-François Le Barbier}} (1738-1826)]]
According to many ancient authors, Spartan women were an exception among other Greek women; authors from Athens were both fascinated and afraid of these figures, and presented them as both powerful and licentious.


In the warfare state of Sparta, girls were educated with a eugenic perspective to become the future wives and mothers of warriors. According to Queen Gorgo, they were the only Greek women who gave birth to real men, and were the only ones who "commanded to men". This famous sentence showed the authority of Spartan women in their city.
|-|The Golden Apples of the Hesperides=
[[File:DTAG - Amphora of Herakles stealing apples.PNG|thumb|250px|Herakles taking apples from the garden of the Hesperides. Scene from a black-figure amphora / 540 BCE (Archaic Greece)]]
The eleventh and twelfth labors of Herakles were tacked on at the end, since [[Eurystheas]] didn't recognize Herakles killing the [[Lernaean Hydra|Hydra]] as a labor because [[Iolaos]] helped him. Cleaning the [[Stable of Augeias|stables]] was also ignored because Herakles was paid, and it was the rivers that did the actual cleaning work.


In addition to the desire for strength, gymnastics and sports were also emphasized in education to make the young women attractive enough to marry. This included being well-versed in music, dancing, singing, and poetry. Spartan women dedicated themselves to intensive physical exercise and led very different lives from their Athenian counterparts. They were more autonomous, and more free than many Greek women of ancient times.
The eleventh labor required Herakles to steal [[Apples of Eden|apples]] from the [[Garden of the Hesperides|garden]] of the [[Hesperides]], the three [[nymph]]s of the evening. The garden was situated in the west of the world, in Northern [[Africa]], and produced golden apples.


They also may have trained themselves to wrestle. One purpose of this training could've been for the defense of the city and of their children in the event of an attack on Spartan territory.
There, Herakles tricked [[Atlas]] into retrieving the apples for him. Although he proposed to hold up the heavens for a while in Atlas' stead, Herakles tricked the [[Titan]] and walked away with the fruit himself.
</tabber>
</tabber>


===Lokris===
===Pephka===
<tabber>
<tabber>
|-|Salt=
|-|Armor and Weapons=
[[File:DTAG - Salt Cellar.png|thumb|250px|Ancient Greek small terracotta salt cellar (6cm height) / 5th cent. BCE Classical Greece)]]
The source material concerning weapon manufacturing in Ancient Greece is not prolific. However, we do know that as early as the 7th century BCE, more specialized-production centers emerged in regions already known for their metallurgical activities.
Salt harvesting was known to humankind at least from the Neolithic age, on account of the considerable quantities of fragmented ceramic molds accumulated around salt springs. There were two main ways of collecting salt.
 
The first one was to simply harvest it where it was accessible - that is, near salt lakes, marshes, or near the sea. Pans were used to let collected water evaporate in the sun and then harvest the resulting salt.
 
The other method was extracting it from the earth. This was - difficult in mainland Greece since the soil did not provide much yield in this fashion. Collecting salt from water was therefore the more utilized method.


We know for sure that salt played a role in magic. For example, eating salty cakes on a special day was thought to allow young girls to dream of their future husbands. It was also used in some religious practices. Even in Homeric times, salt was offered to the gods and used when sacrificing animals and making libations. Furthermore, salt played an important part in some Greek festivals - such as the Eleusinian Mysteries, celebrated in the town of Eleusis in Attika to honor Demeter, the goddess of the crops, and her daughter, Persephone.
Chalkis, in Euboea, specialized in the production of swords, while Korinth was renowned for its bronze helmets - both crucially important elements of hoplite equipment. Sykyon, in the Peloponnese peninsula, provided the iron for the manufacture of Spartan weapons. Athens, famous especially for its cuirass workshops, was also an important location in the world of Greek weapons production.


|-|Lokris Banner=
During what's called the "Dark Ages" in Greek history [1200-800 BCE), a transition took place in weaponry. The material used switched from bronze to iron - a substance that was lighter, tougher, and able to take a sharper edge. Swords became shorter and larger than the preceding bronze specimens. Both conical helmets with ornamented crests and all shapes of shields may have also been made of that metal.
[[File:DTAG - Stater of Lokris depicting Ajax.png|thumb|250px|Stater of Lokris depicting the Trojan War hero Ajax holding a sword, a shield decorated with a griffin on the interior]]
The banner of Lokris shows a griffin - a mythological creature with the body, legs, and tail of a lion, and the head and wings of an eagle.


The griffin is inspired by the Lokris Opuntii coinage which depicted Ajax, the Lokrian hero of the Trojan War. His shield bore a griffin on the interior side.
Around the 7th century BCE, a new tactical formation, the phalanx, gradually made its appearance in Greece. It marked the return of the use of bronze in weaponry. The new infantryman, the hoplite, was required to pay for his panoply, a set of weapons and pieces of equipment including a cuirass, greaves, helmet with cheek plates, shield, spear, and sword. Bronze was used to make all or some parts of the body armor, shield, and helmet, while the sword and spearhead were crafted with iron.


Griffins were known for guarding treasure - especially if it belonged to the gods - and were a symbol of strength and vigilance.
The costliness of the panoply made it difficult or altogether impossible for lower-class citizens to purchase one. Therefore, only members of the elite could afford the entire set.
</tabber>
</tabber>


===Makedonia===
===Petrified Islands===
<tabber>
<tabber>
|-|Makedonian Banner=
|-|Lesbos Banner and Coinage=
[[File:DTAG - Hemidrachm of Pharsalos.png|thumb|250px|Head and neck of horse from the reverse type of an hemidrachm of Pharsalos / 400 BCE (Classical Greece)]]
The banner of Lesbos, home of the famous poet Sappho, was inspired by one of the most interesting monetary types in antiquity.
[[Makedonia]]'s banner features the head of a [[horse]]. In northern Greece—especially in [[Thessaly]] and Makedonia—horse breeding was an important activity and a major source of wealth.


When Makedonia increased its power under King [[Philip II of Macedon|Phillip II]]—the father of [[Alexander the Great]]—horses played a crucial role in the army. Companion cavalry, the elite cavalry of the Makedonians, has been regarded as the best of the ancient world.
Unlike others cities, Lesbos changed monetary types from one issuance to another. This provided great variety - notably this unusual depiction of two female heads overlapping.


The inspiration of the banner came from a coin from {{Wiki|Farsala|Pharsalos}} in Thessaly depicting an artistic-rendering of a horse's head. Horses are very common in iconography, especially in coinage.
Lesbos's cities were members of the Delian league from the start. They provided ships to the alliance, but then revolted in 428 BCE and the victorious Athenians sent clerouchs (settlers) to occupy the island.


|-|Potidaia=
|-|Fortified Camps=
[[File:DTAG - Dying Greek warrior sculpture.png|thumb|250px|Greek warrior dying, from the temple of Athena-Aphaia in Aegina / 490 BCE (Classical Greece)]]
Field camps were built at the end of a day's march to provide protection in case of a surprise enemy attack.
The [[Peloponnesian War]] began over two main stories. One is the Athenians having entered into conflict with an ally of Sparta, the great city of [[Korinth]], which had tried to take over one of Athens' allies, the city of [[Potidaia]]. The other is the so-called "[[Megara|Megarian]] decree" which was passed by Athens in order to forbid all trade between [[Megaris]] and the Athenian empire.


As a result, the Spartans called for a great congress in Sparta where they conferred with their allies. The Megarians were pushing towards war, since they were greatly affected by the decree, and so were the Korinthians. The king of Sparta, [[Archidamos of Sparta|Archidamos II]], advised for a more cautious policy, trying to prevent the outbreak of the war, or at least to make sure that Sparta was better prepared to face the Athenians who ruled the seas in an open confrontation.
They were widely-used when attacking cities during sieges. The camps are where soldiers would eat, sleep, and store their weapons, food rations and spoils - often for months at a time. It's also where a soldier would take refuge when and if things went badly in battle.


The war that would ensue pit two essentially different powers and styles of warfare against each other. Sparta and their [[Peloponnesian League|allies]] were based mainly in the [[Peloponnese]], and their force consisted especially of land armies of [[hoplite]]s—the only maritime power of this League was Korinth. The Athenians, on the other hand, had become a maritime power during the struggle against [[Iran|Persia]], and remained so in the aftermath.
Building a good fortified camp or fortifying a village or small city in the enemy's territory may have meant the difference between victory and defeat.


|-|Athens' Wood Supplies=
As sieges would stretch on, a good fortified camp meant that an army could safely remain in unfriendly lands and exert pressure on the enemy. This could be done by burning or taking their crops, by preventing resupply, or simply by exerting their demoralizing presence.
[[File:DTAG - Silver drachm of Amphipolis.png|thumb|250px|Silver drachm of Amphipolis in Makedonia / 369-368 BCE (Classical Greece)]]
In providing for their fleet and for the public building program, the main problem the Athenians faced was finding timber of first-class quality, and particularly timber of long lengths. From the late 5th century BCE at least, and throughout the 4th century BCE, there is ample evidence that Athens relied primarily on Makedonia for her ship-timber.


As for the timber needed for housing, the rich, who were more concerned with quality, possibly preferred the greater variety and finer quality materials available from Makedonia, Italy, or Asia Minor. In addition, what Attika was unabl
Establishing a fortified position in enemy lands in order to constantly raid it was a common tactic in the Peloponnesian War. Athens employed it at Pylos from 425 to 409 BCE, and so did the Spartans with a more devastating effect over a weakened Athens when they fortified Dekeleia from 413 to 404 BCE.


|-|The Mares of Diomedes=
|-|A Soldier's Life=
[[File:DTAG - Bronze coin of Alexandria depicting Herakles and Diomides's mares.png|thumb|250px|Herakles holding the mane of one of Diomedes' mares and preparing to strike it with his club while Diomedes lies prostate before him on the ground. Scene from a reverse of a bronze coin of Alexandria / 142-143 CE (Roman period)]]
Soldiers on the move mostly slept under the sky on beds of reeds, for in most cases tent materials were too great a burden.
The eighth labor of Herakles was to bring back the mares of Diomedes. Diomedes, the king of Thrace and son of Ares and Cyrene, fed his horses human flesh. This drove the horses mad, making them wild.


Herakles captured the beasts with the help of his young companion Abderos, and left the horses with him while he chased down Diomedes. In Herakles's absence, the crazed horses ate the young boy. Seeking revenge, Herakles then fed Diomedes to the horses, and founded the city of Abdera nearby in his friend's honor. When Eurystheas received the horses, he dedicated them to Hera.
They ate two meals a day - one at mid-day [except when battle was expected), and then dinner. They usually cooked these meatls themselves. In most cases, the meal consisted of maza, a sort of barley porridge. The Spartans did things differently; they had dedicated cooks in their armies.


|-|Armor=
When the soldiers need to relieve themselves, they simply went wherever they could outside of camp, as there was no special location for this act.
[[File:DTAG - Articulated Apulian bronze cuirass.png|thumb|250px|Articulated Apulian bronze cuirass. Southern Italian models did not feature shoulder protection / 4th cent. BCE (Classical Greece)]]
In the Classical era, metal armor coexisted alongside lighter cuirasses (corselets) called "linothoraxes". This was because procuring an actual set of bronze armor was beyond the means of many citizens - especially in poorer cities. Linothoraxes were also sometimes preferred in situations where hoplites had to be Lighter and more mobile.


The linothorax consisted of a linen breastplate that could be strengthened with shoulder pieces, bronze scales, or bronze-sheeted mantling. To protect the Lower abdomen and the groin, two layers of pteruges - "wings" in ancient Greek — were attached to the bottom edge of the armor.
There was little in the way of entertainment in military camps. The Spartans, however, did have some techniques for avoiding boredom. After their regular practice and exercise, they had a sort of contest of singing songs by the poet Tyrtaios, and the winner received a prize in meat.


Linen armor was one of the oldest types of armor in Greece. It even appears in "The Iliad" - a story that is believed to have taken place long before the Classical period.
Even in a war camp, the gods had to be honored. Whenever possible, sacrifices were made and seers were consulted, often about the tides of battle.


|-|Swords=
|-|Petrified Forest of Lesbos=
[[File:DTAG - Kopis.png|thumb|250px|Iron macharai, also known as a kopis / 5th-4th cent. BCE (Classical Greece)]]
[[File:DTAG - BTS Petrified Forest of Lesbos.png|thumb|250px|Inspired by ''The Art of Assassin's Creed Odyssey'', by Kate Lewis, with courtesy from Titan Books.]]
If a hoplite's spear broke or if he had to fight hand to hand - as was the case for the 300 Spartans in the final stages of the battle of Thermopylai - he could always fall back on his sword.
(Behind the scenes)


In the 4th century BCE, the most common sword had a thick cruciform hilt with a blade that swelled near the tip. Hoplites carried their sword in a sheath under their Left arm, enabling them to quickly seize their weapon with their right hand. Ancient Greeks had specific names to refer to different types of swords, but it's difficult for modern historians to match these names with their corresponding weapon. While "xiphos" was the standard name for swords in ancient Greek, words like "machaira" and "kopis" were also used. It is believed that the previous two words may have referred to recurved swords, while xiphos described straight-bladed weapons.
Lesbos is an island situated in the north-east of the Aegean Sea. Lesbos rebelled against the Athenians, leading to its eventual surrender to Athens. Lesbos is notable in real life for
its 18-million-year-old petrified forest, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, home to fossilized remains of a once vast swathe of vegetation and forest. The art team used their artistic license to grow the trees into dense forests of tangled roots and branches, a maze for our hero to navigate. The atmosphere of the forest is oppressive, with temple ruins appearing from the murky background, and a sense of dread lingering behind every corner.


|-|Panoply=
Finished concepts by Hugo Puzzuoli show the red and yellow accents in the rock of the petrified trees, caused by intense volcanic activity millions of years ago.
[[File:DTAG - Calpis depicting hoplite equipment.png|thumb|250px|Red-figure calpis depicting the arms of an hoplite: helmet, shield, sword and cuirass / 500-475 BCE (Classical Greece)]]
A hoplite's equipment consisted of a bronze cuirass (or lighter armor], bronze greaves, a spear, and a sword.


Although the comic playwright Aristophanes was probably exaggerating when he wrote that crafted armor cost 1,000 drachmae - about ten times the monthly wages of a skilled craftsman - the bronze-muscle cuirass was one of the costliest pieces of a hoplite's equipment. As such, only the wealthiest individuals could afford it.
|-|Medusa=
 
[[File:DTAG - BTS Medusa.png|thumb|250px|Inspired by ''The Art of Assassin's Creed Odyssey'', by Kate Lewis, with courtesy from Titan Books.]]
A soldier's body armor could be completed by a pair of greaves to protect their shins. The greaves were made of hammered bronze, and had to be well-adjusted to the hoplite's legs. They also had to be made thin so as not to weigh the soldier down. Since shin greaves were also expensive, many lower-class citizens opted not to buy them, instead purchasing armor that covered more vital parts of their body.
(Behind the scenes)
 
Altogether, an entire set of armor was known as a "panoply".
 
|-|Hoplite Equipment=
[[File:DTAG - Panoply of warriors scene.png|thumb|250px|Panoply of warriors, from the arming of the Seven before attacking Thebes, red-figure kylix attributed to Makron (5th cent. BCE) / c. 480 BCE (Classical Greece)]]
Hoplites were heavily armored infantrymen. Their most important piece of equipment was arguably the "aspis", a round shield large enough to protect both its wearer and the man to the left of him. The aspis was light and could effectively parry spear and sword thrusts. However, according to its depiction on ancient vases, it was ineffective against javelins and arrows.
 
Hoplite helmets were similarly designed to be light, but they could endure direct blows and offered a reasonable amount of protection. There were many varieties of helmet, but the most widespread seems to have been the Korinthian helmet.
 
Made of a single sheet of bronze that covered much of the head and neck, the Korinthian helmet offered only a small, t-shaped opening at the front to allow soldiers to see and breathe. Because the helmet was closed in on itself, it most likely impaired the sight and hearing of the soldiers who wore it.
 
Helmets could also be adorned with crests of dyed horsehair to make the hoplites wearing them look more imposing.
 
|-|Spears=
[[File:DTAG - Cup scene of men holding shields.png|thumb|250px|Men holding shields on a red-figure cup / 5th cent. BCE (Classical Greece)]]
Hoplites mainly fought using spears.
 
Called "dory" in ancient Greek, the spear was a wooden shaft with a Length of up to three meters. It was probably made from the wood of ash trees, since the trees provided strong material that was also light enough to be handled with ease. The spear-head and butt were manufactured in metal workshops. The spear-head was usually made of iron - but could also be made of bronze - and was fixed to the slender end of the wooden shaft with pitch or nails. The spear-butt allowed the weapon to be planted in the ground when not being used. It's possible that the spear-butt could also have served as a spare head, but there's little evidence to support this theory.
 
The spear also had a hand grip which may have been made of leather.
</tabber>
 
===Megaris===
<tabber>
|-|Bandit Banner=
[[File:DTAG - Tetrobol of Halikarnassos.png|thumb|250px|Head of Ketos, from the obverse of a tetrobol of Halikarnassos / 500-495 BCE (Archaic Greece)]]
This banner is inspired by the coins from {{Wiki|Halicarnassus|Halikarnassos}}. [[Bandit]]s and [[Piracy|pirates]] have been associated with a [[ketos]]—a sea monster associated with [[Poseidon]]—which is often depicted on their coins from 500-495 BCE.
 
Bandits and piracy were a harsh realities (sic) in antiquity—so much so, that it wasn't unheard of to be killed or [[Slavery|enslaved]] by them.


A ketos looks like a serpent fish with a dragon head. When he needed to send punishment, Poseidon would unleash a ketos. He sent one to [[Troy]] to punish King {{Wiki|Laomedon}}, and sent another attack [[Ethiopia]] to punish King {{Wiki|Cepheus (father of Andromeda)|Cepheus}} and Queen {{Wiki|Cassiopeia (mother of Andromeda)|Cassiopeia}}. However, the latter ketos was killed by [[Perseus]] when he rescued [[Andromeda]].
The Medusa has been portrayed in many different ways over the years, from a beautiful young woman, to a monstrous creature with a serpent's body and tail. The art team decided to move away from these depictions, concentrating on the details of her appearance. The snakes are based on actual Greek species found on the islands and mainland Greece. Her dress is made from targe swathes of snake skin, suggesting even bigger serpents once existed. "Medusa is represented in her Greek form, as a humanoid woman, rather than in the Roman version that would follow," explains art director Thierry Dansereau. She is, after all, a woman transformed by an ancient artifact, rather than the will of the gods.


|-|Megaris Banner=
|-|Medusa and Perseus=
[[File:DTAG - Stater of Lyttos.png|thumb|250px|Head of boar right, from the reverse of a stater of Lyttos / 320-270 BCE (Hellenistic Greece)]]
Perseus was the Greek hero who ultimately killed Medusa. He was the son of Zeus and Danai, and he promised to obtain the head of Medusa to King Polydektes. Medusa was a gorgon, a female monster that had living snakes on her head instead of locks of hair. Her gaze petrified all who locked eyes with her, and turned them to stone.
The region of [[Megaris]] is the link between central Greece and the [[Peloponnese]], located on the [[Isthmus of Poseidon|Isthmus of Korinth]].


The area was well-suited for agriculture and animal husbandry.
Perseus went to the Hesperides to acquire the weapon that would help him defeat Medusa. They also gave him a sack to hold her head (kibisis). He received a sword [harpe) from Zeus, winged sandals from Hermes, a shiny shield from Athena, and the ability to hide from Hades.


The name of the city derived from "megarizein", the appellation of a ritual in honor of [[Demeter]] and [[Persephone|Kore]] where [[Pig|piglets]] and other offerings were thrown into ground cavities (megara).
When Perseus entered Medusa's cave, he used the shield's reflection to avoid eye contact, and successfully decapitated her.


Pigs and [[Wild boar|boars]] were often depicted on coins, and one coin of {{Wiki|Lyctus|Lyttos}} in [[Krete]] was chosen as the model for the banner.
Perseus used the head of Medusa as a weapon, but later gave it as a gift to Athena, who placed the head of the gorgon (gorgoneion) on her shield, or the Aegis.


Pigs served as both food and sacrifices, but on some occasions they were used in war. When [[Megara]] was besieged by the [[Makedonia]]n King {{Wiki|Antigonus II Gonatas|Antigonos Gonatas}}, the Megarians sent burning pigs to defeat his [[elephant]]s.
|-|Medusa's Temple=
[[File:DTAG - BTS Medusa's Temple.png|thumb|250px|Inspired by ''The Art of Assassin's Creed Odyssey'', by Kate Lewis, with courtesy from Titan Books.]]
(Behind the Scenes)


Where better to have the home of the notorious Medusa, famous for turning her victims to stone, than in a petrified forest. As one of the most well-known creatures from Greek myth, featuring in countless books, movies, and historical records, it was a challenge for the development team to strip away the previous incarnations and start fresh. In mythology, Medusa was one of the three Gorgons, sisters with wings and snakes for hair, able to petrify onlookers. The Medusa in Assassin's Creed Odyssey is a woman, transformed by a First Civilization artifact into a creature of great power. As such, her temple features the classic geometry and architecture of First Civilization constructions, and is the only open-air First Civilization temple in game.
</tabber>
</tabber>

Revision as of 13:47, 12 November 2022

Messara

The area of Messara is the largest plain of the island of Krete. The symbol of the region is inspired by the coins of Knossos, which bear a labyrinth on the reverse, referencing the famous Kretan Minotaur myth.

The minotaur was half-human, half-bull. King Minos of Krete made the mistake of sacrificing a bull, and thus angered Poseidon. The god then instilled "passion" for the bull into Minos' wife, who later gave birth to the minotaur.

The minotaur was kept in the labyrinth built by Daidalos. On a regular basis, fourteen young men and women were given to the beast in tribute, until the hero Theseus killed him.

The seventh labor of Herakles was to kill a great bull that had destroyed crops and property in Krete. Herakles went to King Minos of Krete, who gave him permission to get rid of the bull. Herakles managed to capture the beast, suppressing it with his hands, but he ultimately didn't kill it. Instead, he shipped the bull to Eurystheas so he could confirm that the labor was successful, and then the animal was released.

Koulourai are large, stone-walled pits that can be found in a number of major sites in Krete, including Knossos, Malia, and Phaistos. All of them were constructed around 1850-1750 BCE. While the exact purpose of the koulourai is still debated, there are three prominent theories as to what they were used for. Arthur Evans believed they functioned as refuse or garbage pits. Conversely, Chapouthier and Pernier theorized that they were used as ancient cisterns. However, this theory is flawed since kouroulai did not have the same waterproofing as other Knossian structures of the time. The most widely accepted theory is that koulourai were used to store grain. This assumption gains even more ground when paired with the theory that Minoan palaces were not palaces at all, but massive agricultural redistribution centers.

In the "History of Animals" by Aristotle, he provides a guide to the species present in the Mediterranean: 105 fish, twenty-four shells, twenty-four marine or crustacean animals, and five cetaceans and amphibious animals. Philosophers and moralists had little regard for fishermen. Plato deemed the activity unworthy of a well-born man. But there was solidarity between sailors, and the specificity of the trade was important enough to even become a Literary theme; it's known that Aischylos had written a piece entitled "Diktyoulkoi" (Net-Haulers), and Menander wrote a piece called "The Fishermen". These authors were much more interested in the psychology of the fisherman than the real sociology of the profession. A fisherman is often alone, practicing his profession all year long. He has to be intelligent and cunning, but he also must be lucky.

Navigation on the Mediterranean was difficult. Most sailing depended on the winds, and was done in the summer. The storm season started in late September or early October, and ended in late February or early March. During these months, navigation was highly dangerous. In addition, the nature of the currents made certain areas dangerous. The sea monsters Charybdis and Skylla in "The Odyssey" would be the pictorial representation of the strong current of the Strait of Messina that separates the western tip of the south of Magna Graecia with Sicily. There were several methods of fishing in ancient Greece. Plato and Oppian discussed fishing with nets, laces, baskets, hooks or tridents, and angling. t was also possible to fish for mollusks, shellfish, crustaceans, and fish thrown from the sea to the shores. In some cases, the fish was caught by hand, like in octopus fishing. Fishing could also be done with lanterns - as fish were attracted to the light source - or could simply be "picked" during sleep. There were also more unusual methods, such as the smell fishery where fish were attracted with foul food, excrement, or salted octopus. There was also the method of "poisoning fishing", where plants like hellebore or conia were used to catch fish and octopus.

Inspired by The Art of Assassin's Creed Odyssey, by Kate Lewis, with courtesy from Titan Books.

(Behind the scenes)

The seventh biome of the game, the Hero explores the underwater world of the Aegen Sea looking for treasure and artifacts. The sea teems with all manner of life including dangerous sharks and beautiful corals. "By exploring the depths of the ocean the player can choose to take a dive amongst long forgotten ruins. Here they can take on fights with deadly sharks as they search for hidden treasures," adds Benjamin Hall. Featuring shipwrecks, ruins and remnants of ancient civilizations as shown in these concept arts by Hugo Puzzuoli, this biome is just as diverse and intricate as the rest.

Messenia

Charcoal is the solid residue that remains when wood - or other organic matter - is "carbonized" under controlled

conditions in a closed space. Very Little air is allowed to come into contact with the fuel during the carbonization process. If this condition is not observed, the wood (or other raw material) is simply reduced to ash and its fuel value is lost.

This means that transport costs are much lower for locally produced charcoal than for Locally gathered wood - an important consideration for a product whose production cost consists almost exclusively of the labor invested in it. It's also noteworthy that charcoal creates a much hotter, more even, and more easily controlled heat than wood, which means that itis much better suited for domestic cooking and grilling and a virtual "sine qua non" for blacksmithing and particularly ironworking.

Messenia's history was linked closely with Sparta's. The region was long-occupied by the Spartans - its population was enslaved as helots. Independent cities emerged only after the Theban invasion of the Peloponnese in the 4th century BCE. After the defeat of the Spartan army at the battle of Leuktra in 371 BCE, the helots of Messenia revolted against Sparta. Epaminondas, the Theban general, supported the building of the fortified city of Messene. The banner of Messenia is inspired by the coins of Messene, showing Zeus brandishing his thunderbolt. Zeus had an important sanctuary on Mount Ithome, which was included in the walls of Messene.

Inspired by The Art of Assassin's Creed Odyssey, by Kate Lewis, with courtesy from Titan Books.

(Behind the scenes)

Waging war in the ocean was a brutal affair in Ancient Greece, The ships, mostly triremes, were simply designed and unstable, especially in high seas and adverse weather. The development team looked at historical accounts of naval warfare from the period to recreate the drama and danger in game.

Blue-clad Athenians have their ship cleaved in two in concept art by Hugo Puzzuoli.

Thucydides was an Athenian aristocrat, general, and historian who chronicled the history of the Peloponnesian War. While he does not mention his predecessor Herodotos directly, it is probable that Thucydides was influenced by the so-called "Father of History". Thucydides's account of history, however, focused less on the mythic origins of the Greeks, and instead provided a perspective on how much the Greek world had evolved since its beginning - and how much it would continue to evolve into the future. His work also provided insight into the educational and cultural development of Athens. Thucydides was a skilled orator trained by some of the best speakers of his time. Because of this, many of the most important moments in his historical writings are presented as speeches.

Several Greek authors have left us works on siege tactics or on how to build war machines. However, artillery such as catapults were not yet invented at the time of the Peloponnesian War - it would take another century for them to appear. The main war machines used at this time, called mechanai, were mostly scaling-ladders, battering rams, and tortoises. There are two known instances of incendiary machines, but we don't know exactly how they worked. The Thebans used one against the Athenians at Delium in 424 BCE, and the Spartans at Torone in 423 BCE.

Woodcutting and charcoal making typically took place in the forest. Charcoals were then bagged and transported to private homes or presumably nearby markets. In wood-rich areas, local production of wood for common use appears to have been either in the hands of individuais, or potentially middlemen who might collect wood from various sources, then reselLit at the local agora. The elite's access to such wood may have been outside the market if their landholdings provided suitable material), except for the purchase of exotic materials. The full range of woodworking tools and techniques employed by wood workers of the ancient Mediterranean and the practical knowledge concerning wood species and their most valuable applications attest to the importance of wood technologies for agriculture and hunting, domestic life, trade, warfare, and leisure activities. It is worth mentioning that the tools and the techniques employed by the end of the Classical and Roman period would show little change until the appearance of the Industrial Revolution fifteen centuries later.

Naxos

The ancients often made bees and honey into symbols related to the deities. Honey was considered heavenly since it never expired, and was a typical offering placed on altars for the gods. These offerings were given to rustic deities such as Pan and Priape, who were protectors of beekeepers, but also to Chthonian deities worshiped in mystery cults such as Hermes, Dionysos, and Demeter. Honey and bees were also a symbol of resurrection. Honey was considered a gift - a remnant of the Golden Age - that the gods kindly gave to men. It guaranteed long life and good health. In this way, it was connected to nectar and ambrosia - drinks of the immortal gods. In childhood, Zeus was nourished with honey and milk. Mead was seen as a substitute for these divine drinks. Honey's religious symbolism was all the more important since it could be food for newborns - a young Plato was said to be fed with honey - but also for the dead.

Naxos was the largest island in the Kyklades. lts protective deity was Dionysos, god of wine, who was born on the island according to mythology. The money of Naxos served as model for the banner, and is linked with the god as the coins show a kantharos - a wine cup. Naxos produced wine, but was more famous for its marble. It was exported and widely used. For example, it was used in Olympia and on the Akropolis in Athens. Its craftsmen were pioneers in the development of monumental marble sculptures and architecture.

Greek soil contains great geological diversity. Since the beginning of the Early Cycladic period, the Greeks used marble in architecture, sculpture, figurines, and more. The word marble, from the Greek term marmaros, means "resplendent stone". It quickly became a luxury furniture in Greek cities, and it played a big part in the Greek economy. Some regions stand out for their marble-related wealth, including Naxos, Paros, Thasos, Attika, the Peloponnese, and Euboea Island. Marble is made up of different colors (red, pink, yellow), and each has a different texture (translucent, wavy, streaked, swirly, etc.). For example, Peloponnesian marble was red with touches of black. Pentelic marble, found near Athens, was greenish with a grainy pattern. The most prestigious marble of the time came from Paros, and was greyish white.

In Naxos, ancient quarries were located on the Ágios loannis hill on the north side of the island, with another one in the central region, Melanes. In general, the quarrymen exploited natural fissures and applied pressure to extract massive blocks. They then drilled holes into the marble, drove wooden shafts into the holes, and poured water over the wood so it swelled and split off the desired blocks of stone. In Naxos, whiter parts of the stone were preferred during the quarrying process, which had a direct impact on the price of this marble. Around 5000 m3 of the most prestigious Naxian marble was exported annually. The workers carried the marble with cranes and rails. They moved it around with pullies, cranes, levers, rails, and inclined planes.

Obsidian Islands

Triskeles (which means three legs) from the reverse type of a stater of Melos / c. 600 BCE - 200 CE (Ancient Greece)

The banner of Melos is derived from a coin of the city, depicting the symbol of the triskeles; the name of this symbol literally means "three legs". It was sometimes used on coins, but more often on shields.

The larger meaning of this symbol is not clear, but an ancient epigram speaks of a triskeles on a shield that is supposed to frighten opponents—the bearer of this shield supposedly ran very fast.

This symbol is still in use today on the Sicilian flag, and that of the Isle of Man.

Herakles taking apples from the garden of the Hesperides. Scene from a black-figure amphora / 540 BCE (Archaic Greece)

The eleventh and twelfth labors of Herakles were tacked on at the end, since Eurystheas didn't recognize Herakles killing the Hydra as a labor because Iolaos helped him. Cleaning the stables was also ignored because Herakles was paid, and it was the rivers that did the actual cleaning work.

The eleventh labor required Herakles to steal apples from the garden of the Hesperides, the three nymphs of the evening. The garden was situated in the west of the world, in Northern Africa, and produced golden apples.

There, Herakles tricked Atlas into retrieving the apples for him. Although he proposed to hold up the heavens for a while in Atlas' stead, Herakles tricked the Titan and walked away with the fruit himself.

Pephka

The source material concerning weapon manufacturing in Ancient Greece is not prolific. However, we do know that as early as the 7th century BCE, more specialized-production centers emerged in regions already known for their metallurgical activities.

Chalkis, in Euboea, specialized in the production of swords, while Korinth was renowned for its bronze helmets - both crucially important elements of hoplite equipment. Sykyon, in the Peloponnese peninsula, provided the iron for the manufacture of Spartan weapons. Athens, famous especially for its cuirass workshops, was also an important location in the world of Greek weapons production.

During what's called the "Dark Ages" in Greek history [1200-800 BCE), a transition took place in weaponry. The material used switched from bronze to iron - a substance that was lighter, tougher, and able to take a sharper edge. Swords became shorter and larger than the preceding bronze specimens. Both conical helmets with ornamented crests and all shapes of shields may have also been made of that metal.

Around the 7th century BCE, a new tactical formation, the phalanx, gradually made its appearance in Greece. It marked the return of the use of bronze in weaponry. The new infantryman, the hoplite, was required to pay for his panoply, a set of weapons and pieces of equipment including a cuirass, greaves, helmet with cheek plates, shield, spear, and sword. Bronze was used to make all or some parts of the body armor, shield, and helmet, while the sword and spearhead were crafted with iron.

The costliness of the panoply made it difficult or altogether impossible for lower-class citizens to purchase one. Therefore, only members of the elite could afford the entire set.

Petrified Islands

The banner of Lesbos, home of the famous poet Sappho, was inspired by one of the most interesting monetary types in antiquity.

Unlike others cities, Lesbos changed monetary types from one issuance to another. This provided great variety - notably this unusual depiction of two female heads overlapping.

Lesbos's cities were members of the Delian league from the start. They provided ships to the alliance, but then revolted in 428 BCE and the victorious Athenians sent clerouchs (settlers) to occupy the island.

Field camps were built at the end of a day's march to provide protection in case of a surprise enemy attack. They were widely-used when attacking cities during sieges. The camps are where soldiers would eat, sleep, and store their weapons, food rations and spoils - often for months at a time. It's also where a soldier would take refuge when and if things went badly in battle. Building a good fortified camp or fortifying a village or small city in the enemy's territory may have meant the difference between victory and defeat. As sieges would stretch on, a good fortified camp meant that an army could safely remain in unfriendly lands and exert pressure on the enemy. This could be done by burning or taking their crops, by preventing resupply, or simply by exerting their demoralizing presence. Establishing a fortified position in enemy lands in order to constantly raid it was a common tactic in the Peloponnesian War. Athens employed it at Pylos from 425 to 409 BCE, and so did the Spartans with a more devastating effect over a weakened Athens when they fortified Dekeleia from 413 to 404 BCE.

Soldiers on the move mostly slept under the sky on beds of reeds, for in most cases tent materials were too great a burden. They ate two meals a day - one at mid-day [except when battle was expected), and then dinner. They usually cooked these meatls themselves. In most cases, the meal consisted of maza, a sort of barley porridge. The Spartans did things differently; they had dedicated cooks in their armies. When the soldiers need to relieve themselves, they simply went wherever they could outside of camp, as there was no special location for this act. There was little in the way of entertainment in military camps. The Spartans, however, did have some techniques for avoiding boredom. After their regular practice and exercise, they had a sort of contest of singing songs by the poet Tyrtaios, and the winner received a prize in meat. Even in a war camp, the gods had to be honored. Whenever possible, sacrifices were made and seers were consulted, often about the tides of battle.

Inspired by The Art of Assassin's Creed Odyssey, by Kate Lewis, with courtesy from Titan Books.

(Behind the scenes)

Lesbos is an island situated in the north-east of the Aegean Sea. Lesbos rebelled against the Athenians, leading to its eventual surrender to Athens. Lesbos is notable in real life for its 18-million-year-old petrified forest, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, home to fossilized remains of a once vast swathe of vegetation and forest. The art team used their artistic license to grow the trees into dense forests of tangled roots and branches, a maze for our hero to navigate. The atmosphere of the forest is oppressive, with temple ruins appearing from the murky background, and a sense of dread lingering behind every corner.

Finished concepts by Hugo Puzzuoli show the red and yellow accents in the rock of the petrified trees, caused by intense volcanic activity millions of years ago.

Inspired by The Art of Assassin's Creed Odyssey, by Kate Lewis, with courtesy from Titan Books.

(Behind the scenes)

The Medusa has been portrayed in many different ways over the years, from a beautiful young woman, to a monstrous creature with a serpent's body and tail. The art team decided to move away from these depictions, concentrating on the details of her appearance. The snakes are based on actual Greek species found on the islands and mainland Greece. Her dress is made from targe swathes of snake skin, suggesting even bigger serpents once existed. "Medusa is represented in her Greek form, as a humanoid woman, rather than in the Roman version that would follow," explains art director Thierry Dansereau. She is, after all, a woman transformed by an ancient artifact, rather than the will of the gods.

Perseus was the Greek hero who ultimately killed Medusa. He was the son of Zeus and Danai, and he promised to obtain the head of Medusa to King Polydektes. Medusa was a gorgon, a female monster that had living snakes on her head instead of locks of hair. Her gaze petrified all who locked eyes with her, and turned them to stone. Perseus went to the Hesperides to acquire the weapon that would help him defeat Medusa. They also gave him a sack to hold her head (kibisis). He received a sword [harpe) from Zeus, winged sandals from Hermes, a shiny shield from Athena, and the ability to hide from Hades. When Perseus entered Medusa's cave, he used the shield's reflection to avoid eye contact, and successfully decapitated her. Perseus used the head of Medusa as a weapon, but later gave it as a gift to Athena, who placed the head of the gorgon (gorgoneion) on her shield, or the Aegis.

Inspired by The Art of Assassin's Creed Odyssey, by Kate Lewis, with courtesy from Titan Books.

(Behind the Scenes)

Where better to have the home of the notorious Medusa, famous for turning her victims to stone, than in a petrified forest. As one of the most well-known creatures from Greek myth, featuring in countless books, movies, and historical records, it was a challenge for the development team to strip away the previous incarnations and start fresh. In mythology, Medusa was one of the three Gorgons, sisters with wings and snakes for hair, able to petrify onlookers. The Medusa in Assassin's Creed Odyssey is a woman, transformed by a First Civilization artifact into a creature of great power. As such, her temple features the classic geometry and architecture of First Civilization constructions, and is the only open-air First Civilization temple in game.