Leuctra

Leuctra (Ancient Greek: Λεῦκτρα) was a village in ancient Greece, in Boeotia, seven miles southwest of Thebes. It is primarily known today as the site of the important 371 BC Battle of Leuctra in which the Thebans, under Epaminondas, defeated the Spartans. The Spartan hegemony was fallen after that battle, and the Thebans became a new power within the Hellenic world, until the rise of Macedon.

Lefktra today

Lefktra (Greek: Λεύκτρα) is a modern village in the regional unit Boeotia, Greece, part of the municipality of Thebes. Before 1915, its name was Greek: Παραπούγγια - Parapoungia.[1] Lefktra is a traditional Greek village of Central Greece (Roumeli), located in the foothill of Kithairon (353 meters average elevation).[2] The population of Lefktra is 1,091 people (2011 census).[3] Thebes is sixteen kilometers away and Athens 70 km away, from the old national road. There are bus lines from Thebes to Lefktra and vice versa daily, and from Athens to Lefktra at the weekends. Residents' main occupations are agriculture and stockbreeding. Livadostra and Koromili beaches are ten minutes away by car.

Between 1912 and 1997 Lefktra was an independent community (after 1989 independent municipality).[1] In 1997, at the Kapodistrias reform, it was merged into the municipality Plataies, along with the communities Melissochori, Loutoufi and Kaparelli. In 2010, at the Kallikratis reform, Plataies was merged into the municipality of Thebes.[4]

References

Coordinates: 38°15′16″N 23°10′56″E / 38.25444°N 23.18222°E / 38.25444; 23.18222


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