Perperene


Perperene or Perperena was a city of ancient Mysia on the south-east of Adramyttium, in the neighbourhood of which there were copper mines and good vineyards. It was an Aeolian colony.
Stephanus of Byzantium calls it Parparon, an Aeolian city in Asia, and notes that some referred to the place as Perperene. He further explains that the male inhabitant was called a Parparonian, derived from the genitive Parparonos, with a corresponding feminine form, while Androtion, in the third book of his Atthis, used the ethnic Parpariotes, a formation that appears to presuppose a place name Parparia rather than Parparon.
Ptolemy calls it Perpere or Permere. According to the Suda, Hellanicus of Lesbos, a 5th-century BC Greek logographer, died at Perperene at age 85. At a later date it was given the name Theodosiopolis or Theodosioupolis.
It is located near Aşagı Beyköy, on the Kozak plateau near Bergama in the İzmir Province of Turkey in western Anatolia.

Ecclesiastical history

Perperene was the seat of a bishop; no longer a residential bishopric, it remains a titular see of the Roman Catholic Church.