OEUM or OEIUM
OEUM or
IUM (
Οἰόν,
Οἶον,
Ἰόν: Eth.
Οἰάτης, Eth.
Ἰάτης), the chief town of the district Sciritis in Laconia, commanded the pass through which was the road from Tegea to Sparta.
It probably stood in the
Klisúra, or narrow pass through the watershed of the mountains forming the natural boundary between Laconia and Arcadia. When the Theban army under Epaminondas first invaded Laconia in four divisions, by four different passes, the only division which encountered any resistance was the one which marched through the pass defended by Oeum.
But the Spartan Ischolaus, who commanded a body of troops at this place, was overpowered by superior numbers; and the invading force thereupon proceeded to Sellasia, where they were joined by the other divisions of the army. (
Xen. Hell. 6.5. 24-
26.) In Xenophon the town is called
Ἰόν and the inhabitants
Ἰᾶται; but the form
Οἰόν or
Οἶον is probably more correct. Such towns or villages, situated upon mountainous heights, are frequently called Oeum or Oea. (Comp. Harpocrat. s. v.
Οἶον.) Probably the Oeum in Sciritis is referred to in Stephanus under
Οἶος: πολίχνιον Τεγέας. Αἰσχύλος Μυσοῖς: οἱ πολίται Οἰᾶται.
Oeum is not mentioned subsequently, unless we suppose it to be the same place as
IASUS (
Ἴασος), which Pausanias describes as situated within the frontiers of Laconia, but belonging to the Achaeans. (
Paus. 7.13.7; comp. Suid. s. v.
Ἴασος; Leake,
Morea, vol. iii. p. 30; Ross,
Reisen im Peloponnes, p. 179; Curtius,
Peloponnesos, vol. ii. p. 264.)