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Location of Nicopolis.
'Nicopolis' (meaning in Greek: ''city of victory''; see also
List of traditional Greek place names) or ''Actia Nicopolis'' was an ancient city of
Epirus, founded
31 BC by
Octavian in memory of his victory over
Antony and
Cleopatra at
Actium.
The colony, composed of settlers from a great many of the towns of the neighboring countries (
Ambracia,
Anactoriuni,
Calydon, Argos Amphilochicum, Leucas etc.), proved highly successful, and the city was considered the capital of southern Epirus and
Acarnania, and obtained the right of sending five representatives to the Amphictyonic council.Nicopolis had about 30.000 citizens.
On the spot where Octavian's own tent had been pitched he built a
monument adorned with the beaks of the captured galleys; and in further celebration of his victory he instituted the so-called
Actian games in honor of Apollo Actius.

General plan of Nicopolis.
The city was restored by the emperor
Julian, and again after the
Gothic invasion by
Justinian; but in the course of the
Middle Ages it was supplanted by the town of
Preveza. The ruins of Nicopolis, now known as Palaia Preveza (Old Preveza) lie about 3 miles north of that city, on a small bay of the
Gulf of Arta (Sinus Ambracius) at the narrowest part of the isthmus of the peninsula which separates the gulf from the
Ionian Sea. Besides the
Acropolis, the most conspicuous objects are two theatres (the larger with 77 rows of seats) and an
aqueduct which brought water to the town from a distance of 27 miles.
This is the city that
epictetus, stoic philosopher, was exiled to and died in in 135 AD.
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There are several other places named Nicopolis:
★ a city in
Asia Minor, founded by
Leo III in 740, on the spot where he defeated an
Arab army (see:
Afyonkarahisar)
★ a city in
Cappadocia in the valley of the
Lycus, founded by
Pompey on the spot where he defeated
Mithradates
★ a city in
Egypt, founded by
Octavian 24 BC to commemorate his final victory over Antony
★
Nicopolis ad Istrum, a city in
Thrace at the junction of the latrus (
Yantra) with the
Danube, founded by
Trajan in memory of his victory over the
Dacians. In modern
Bulgaria.
★ a Roman name for the refounded city of
Emmaus in 221 AD
★
Nikopolis was a Bulgarian medieval city, where
Ivan Shishman — one of the last
Bulgarian tsars — escaped to after the fall of his capital
Veliko Tarnovo to the
Ottomans. It was outside this city that the major
Battle of Nicopolis was fought in
1396, where the Ottomans crushed a joint
Hungarian-
Burgundian crusade.