Gortyna was the second most powerful city on Crete next to Knossos. While they were earlier allies, they spent most of the classical and Hellenistic times at each others’ throats. Today, the ruins of the ancient city are a major tourist attraction in Crete.
Pictured on one side of this coin is the goddess Europe in front of a Platanos tree. In mythology, Zeus disguised himself as a bull and abducted Europa, then they did the deed underneath a Platanos tree by the side of what would become a famous spring.
These Platanos trees may live two thousand years, so it’s possible that a direct descendant of that very tree provides shade over the modern city today.
Europa had three children from Zeus – Minos, Radamanthys, and Sarpedon. Each would become a major king of Crete, and it’s boasted today that European civilization began in Crete. Since the continent took its name from Europa, it can be argued that it can be narrowed down to Gortyna, and this coin depicts the place.
400 BCE
The Gortyn Code in chiseled into a wall in Gortyna. Its fragments are the second longest Greek inscription remaining.
Philipoemen is invited to Gortyna and takes control of its military.
The Aetolian League aids Rome in defeating Philip V in the Battle of Cynoscephalae. Philip pauses for a day at Gonnos for troops who had survived the battle. Several hundred soldiers from Gortyna participate on the Roman side.
The Roman general Quintus Caecilius Metellus conquers Crete, incorporating it into the Roman Republic. Eleutherna, along with Gortyna, Knossos, and Kydonia, come under Roman rule
Gortyna made the capital of the Roman province of Crete and Carthage.
July 21
An earthquake destroys Aptera, Gortyna, Eleutherna, and Knossos on Crete. Alexandria is devastated by a tsunami, and Kyrene is also affected by the same tsunami.