Krimisa,Crimisa orCrimissa was an ancient town, probably originating in the 7th century BC, situated in modernCalabria in the region ofPunta Alice. It was inhabited by an indigenous people assimilated by the Greeks.
The sanctuary of Apollo Aleus was closely associated with Crimissa and has been excavated.[1]
Even though the identification remains uncertain, scholars are inclined to believe that the city stood in Punta Alice, near the presentCirò Marina.
According to various mythographical accounts, not always uniform and coherent, ofStrabo,Pseudo-Apollodorus,Lycophron andPseudo-Aristotle, the Greek heroPhiloctetes reached these places on his way back from theTrojan War, together with theRhodians underTlepolemus. He colonized the promontory of Crimisa and founded a city of the same name. Topographically, Krimisa was located in a lower area as compared to Chone, city of the Choni, nowCirò.
Philoctetes was believed to have also foundedPetelia (Strongoli) andMacalla. He also had a sanctuary dedicated toApollo Aleus, where he laid his bow and arrows received as a gift fromHeracles. Then, rushing to the aid of his Rhodian allies, he died fighting against barbaric natives. On his tomb erected near the riverSybaris was subsequently built a temple where he was honoured with sacrifices.

The site dates to the 7th century BC. During the Classical period the city was thoroughly Hellenized and remained that way until theRoman era.
The sanctuary of Apollo Aleus had 4 phases, the oldest being "Greek-Italic" probably in wood, from 7th century until the end of the 6th century BC. The monumental rebuilding of the sanctuary using Greek architecture took place from the first half of the 6th century BC.[2]
The second phase dates from the mid-5th to the end of the 4th century BC, when the acrolith of Apollo (440-420 BC) was created and another Temple of Demeter, near the Alice crossroads, was built. It is represented most notably by architecturalterracotta. This temple was very elongated (16.15 x 38.10 m stylobate) with 7 x 15 columns. The base of the wall of the cella and the bases of the central colonnade and the pillars inside the adyton are preserved. The construction technique was common to many archaic buildings: on a light foundation a plinth was made up of two rows of freshly rough-hewn limestone blocks, bound by clay and limestone flakes; the walls must have been made of mud bricks and wood, shown by the modest dimensions of the foundations and the absence of stone fragments.
The third, Hellenistic, phase of the mid-4th and 3rd centuries, coincides with the emergence of theBruttii. In the first decades of the 3rd century BC the archaic temple was demolished and its most sacred relics (acrolith and votive offering) buried in the new foundations which incorporate the old structure and a larger Doric peripteral temple was erected by the Bruttii in limestone, surrounded by 8 x 19 columns. The temple was famous until the devastations ofPyrrhus[3] after which its decline began, which saw it sacked and destroyed perhaps already towards the end of the 3rd and 2nd c. BC.
The fourth phase from the end of the Second Punic War (202 BC) until the fall of the Roman Empire (476 AD) had a reduced attendance of visitors.
The famous Italian archaeologistPaolo Orsi worked in the area where the ancient Krimisa is presumed to have been located, and made several discoveries during excavations carried out between 1924 and 1929.[citation needed]
Subsequent excavation campaigns at the temple of Apollo Aleo were carried out between 1970 and 1990.
In the Museo Civico Archeologico of Cirò Marina, located in an 18th-century building of Palazzo Porti and in Castello Sabatini, are exhibited several artifacts found in the area of the sanctuary of Apollo Aleus: acapital, several architectural items, a terracotta mask, a pedestal, fragments of a bronze statue, fragments of a wig made of bronze, bronze coins, figurines.
In the Museo Archeologico Nazionale ofCrotone finds from the sanctuary of Apollo Aleus at Cirò Punto Alice include: some Doriccapitals of the temple, anantefix with a disc portraying aGorgon from theacroterium, votive tablets, a matrix of an antefix, and fragments of an archaic statuette of a young man inlimestone. There is no lack of captions illustrating the site and photos of the famousacrolith.
In theMuseo Nazionale della Magna Grecia, more precious items include:
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