Thessaly

Thessaly, the largest division of ancient Greece, a wide, fertile plain stretching southward from the Macedonian border to the Maliac Gulf, and entirely surrounded by mountains save the Vale of Tempe in the NE. between Mounts Ossa and Olympus; was conquered by Philip of Macedon in the 4th century B.C., and subsequently incorporated in the Roman Empire, on the break up of which it fell into the hands of the Venetians, and eventually of the Turks (1335), and remained a portion of the Ottoman Empire till 1881, when the greater and most fertile part was ceded to Greece. Chief town, Larissa.

Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)

Thessalonica * Thetford
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Theophrastus
Theosophy
Therapeutæ
Thermo-dynamics
Thermopylæ
Thersites
Theseus
Thespis
Thessalonians, Epistle to the
Thessalonica
Thessaly
Thetford
Thetis
Theuriet, André
Thialfi
Thierry, Jacques Nicolas Augustin
Thiers, Louis Adolphe
Thing
Thinker, The
Thirlmere
Thirlwall, Conop

Nearby

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Alexander The Great
Blount, Sir Henry
Browne, Edward
Cyneas
Epaminondas
Heliodorus
Hippocrates
Oecumenius
Simonides