Violet-crowned City.

Aristophănēs calls Athens ιoστεφανoζ (Equitēs, 1323 and 1329), and again in the Acharnians, 637. Macaulay uses the phrase, “city of the violet crown.” Ion (a violet) was a representative king of Athens, whose four sons gave names to the four Athenian classes; and Greece in Asia Minor was called “Ion-ia.” Athens was the city of Ion, crowned king, and hence the “Ion crowned” or violet-crowned.

Similarly Paris is called the “City of Lilies,” by a pun on the word Louis (lys, a lily).

previous entry · index · next entry

Entry taken from Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, edited by the Rev. E. Cobham Brewer, LL.D. and revised in 1895.

Vine
Vinegar (Hannibal’s.)
Vinegar Bible
Vineyard Controversy
Vino. In vino veritas
Vintry Ward. (London)
Vinum Theologicum
Violet
Violet
Violet (Corporal)
Violet-crowned City
Violin
Violon
Viper and File
Virgil
Virgilius
Virgin
Virgin Mary’s Guard (The)
Virgin Mary’s Peas (The)
Virgin Queen (The)
Virgins