Octavian founded Nikopolis in 31 BC to commemorate his naval defeat of
Antony and Cleopatra at Actium. He then compelled the inhabitants of
neighbouring cities to relocate and populate his `City of Victory'.
These papers focus on recent excavations, in Nikopolis and in the
surrounding regions, to examine the impact of this forced relocation.
The evidence indicates that the neighbouring settlements were much less
deserted than had been assumed and a rereading of Strabo, the principal
contemporary source, supports this. Other papers examine the Actian
Tropaeum, the most important construction in Nikopolis which celebrated
Actium, settlement patterns, epigraphy, pottery surveys and the
distribution of cults.