200px|thumb|right|Satellite view of the region

Tenea () is a municipal unit within the municipality of Corinth, Corinthia, Peloponnese, Greece. The municipal unit has an area of . Until 2011, its municipal seat was in Chiliomodi.

The modern city is named after ancient Tenea, established approximately southeast of Corinth and northeast of Mycenae shortly after the Trojan War. According to Pausanias, Tenea's founders were Trojan prisoners of war whom Agamemnon had allowed to build their own town. The name Tenea is styled upon Tenedos, the founders' hometown, whose mythological eponym was the hero Tenes. Tenea and Rome, according to Virgil's Aeneid, had in the years following the Trojan War produced citizens of Trojan ancestry. Under the leadership of Archias in 734 or 733BC, Teneans and Corinthians established the joint colony of Syracuse in Sicily, the homeland of Archimedes.

History

Tenea was the most important place in ancient Corinthia after the city of Corinth and its port towns. It was situated 60stadia south of Corinth, according to Pausanias, hence the southern gate of Corinth was called the Teneatic. Stephanus of Byzantium describes Tenea as lying between Corinth and Mycenae. Pausanias says that the Teneatae claimed descent from the inhabitants of Tenedos, who were brought over from Troy as prisoners, and settled by Agamemnon in this part of Corinthia. It was in consequence of their Trojan origin that they worshipped Apollo above all the other gods. It was at Tenea that Oedipus was said to have passed his childhood. It was also from this place that Archias took majority of the colonists with whom he founded Syracuse. After the destruction of Corinth by Lucius Mummius Achaicus, Tenea had the good fortune to continue undisturbed, because it is said to have assisted the Romans against Corinth. or archaic smile.

In 1984, archaeologists discovered a sarcophagus from the Greek early archaic period containing the remains of a high-society woman along with offerings.

In 2013, a team of archaeologists led by Elena Korka began to excavate a site in the area where Tenea was thought to have been, in search of the remains of the city. In 2019, a large bath complex was discovered, covering around . The complex dated to between the late-3rd and mid-1st centuryBC.

Subdivisions

The municipal unit of Tenea is subdivided into the following communities, with constituent villages indicated in brackets:

  • Agionori
  • Agios Vasileios
  • Chiliomodi
  • Klenia
  • Koutalas (Koutalas, Mapsos, Spathovouni)
  • Stefani

Historical population

{| class=wikitable

! Year !! Population

|-

| 1991 || 5,245

|-

| 2001 || 5,136

|-

| 2011 || 5,084

|-

| 2021 || 4,168

|}

See also

  • List of traditional Greek place names

References

  • Kouros of Tenea
  • Apollo of Tenea
  • Municipality of Tenea
  • Strabo, Book 8
  • Gallery and description [in Greek] of monuments in and around Tenea.
  • Korka, Eleni; Lefantzis, Michalis; Corso, Antonio. Archaeological Discoveries from Tenea. Actual Problems of Theory and History of Art: Collection of articles. Vol. 9. Ed: A. V. Zakharova, S. V. Maltseva, E. Iu. Staniukovich-Denisova. Lomonosov Moscow State University / St. Petersburg: NP-Print, 2019, pp. 172–179. ISSN 2312-2129