Toronean Gulf

The Toronean Gulf or Toroneos Gulf (Greek: Τορωναίος κόλπος, romanized: Toronaios Kolpos), also known as the Kassandra Gulf (Greek: Κόλπος Κασσάνδρας, romanized: Kolpos Kassandras), is a gulf of the Thracian Sea, part of the northern Aegean Sea, in Chalkidiki, Greece.[1] It lies between the Kassandra peninsula in the west,[2] and Sithonia in the east.

Toronean Gulf
Toronean Gulf
Location of the Toronean Gulf within Greece
LocationCentral Macedonia
Coordinates40°8′N 23°38′E
TypeGulf
Native nameΤορωναίος κόλπος  (Greek)
EtymologyToroni
Part ofAegean Sea
Basin countriesGreece

History

According to Herodotus, the gulf was historically known for its fish. The harbour of Torone, the only city on the gulf, was known as the "deaf" harbour due to the gulf's quietness and calmness.[3]

The ancient city of Olynthus was said to be at the head of the Toronean Gulf.[4]

References

  1. "Τορωναίος κόλπος". wikimapia.org (in Greek). Retrieved 2020-01-26.
  2. "Double bounded contingent valuation of quality improvement in a coastal environment". Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Environmental Science and Technology, at Cania, Crete, Greece via ResearchGate.
  3. R.H. Mather (1872). Selections from Herodotus and Thucydides. p. 104.
  4. Mavor, William (1804). "Universal History, Ancient and Modern; from the Earliest Records of Time to the General Peace of 1801". Stansbury and Gird. p. xxviii.
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