Aegina was a colony of Epidaurus, to …

Years: 765BCE - 622BCE

Aegina was a colony of Epidaurus, to which state it was originally subject, according to Herodotus.

Its placement between Attica and the Peloponnesus made it a center of trade even earlier, and its earliest inhabitants came from Asia Minor.

Minoan ceramics have been found in contexts of around 2000 BCE.

The discovery in the island of a number of gold ornaments belonging to the latest period of Mycenaean art suggests the inference that the Mycenaean culture held its own in Aegina for some generations after the Dorian conquest of Argos and Lacedaemon.

It is probable that the island was not doricized before the ninth century BCE.

One of the earliest historical facts is its membership in the League of Calauria (Calaurian Amphictyony, circa eighth century BCE), which included, besides Aegina, Athens, the Minyan (Boeotian) Orchomenus, Troezen, Hermione, Nauplia and Prasiae, and was probably an organization of city-states that were still to some degree Mycenaean, for the purpose of suppressing piracy in the Aegean that had arisen as a result of the decay of the naval supremacy of the Mycenaean princes.

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