Franchthi Cave
Archaeological site · Ermionida Municipality
Ancient city
Hermione (Ancient Greek: Ἑρμιόνη) or Hermium or Hermion (Ἑρμιών or Ἑρμιῶν) was a town at the southern extremity of Argolis, in the wider use of this term, but an independent city during the Classical period of Greek history, and possessing a territory named Hermionis (Ἑρμιονίς). The sea between the southern coast of Argolis and the island of Hydra was called after it the Hermionitic Gulf (Ancient Greek: Ἑρμιονικὸς κόλπος, romanized: Hermionikos kolpos; Latin: Hermionicus Sinus), which was regarded as distinct from the Argolic and Saronic Gulfs. The ruins of the ancient town lie about the modern village of Ermioni. According to Greek mythology, Hermione was founded by the Dryopes, who are said to have been driven out of their original abodes on Mount Oeta and its adjacent valleys by Heracles, and to have settled in the Peloponnesus, where their three chief towns were Hermione, Asine, and Eïon. Hermione is mentioned by Homer along with its kindred city Asine in the Catalogue of Ships in the Iliad. Asine and Eïon were conquered at an early period by the Dorians, but Hermione continued to exist as an independent Dryopian state long afterwards. Hermione appears to have been the most important...
Greek and Swedish archaeologists have conducted research in Hermione since 2015, first in a project entitled A Greek cityscape and its people. A study of Ancient Hermione (2015-2017), which has been continued in a research program called Hermione: A model city (2018-). The projects aim to create a better understanding of life in a Greek polis from a long-term perspective through integrated studies of the built environment, landscape, family and other social structures as well as religious practices, including funerary rituals. The first results have been published in the journal of the Swedish Institute at Athens, called Opuscula, and in the journal Archaeological Prospection.