Sinda (Ancient Greek: Σίνδα) was an ancient town mentioned to have been situated on the western frontier of ancient Pisidia, in the neighbourhood of Cibyra and the river Caularis.[1] Stephanus of Byzantium,[2] who spoke of a Sindia as a town of Lycia, was thought to have alluded to the same place.[3] Some writers have confounded Sinda with Isionda, which is the more surprising, as Livy mentions the two as different towns in the same chapter;[4] modern scholars treat them as separate places.[5]
Its site is located near Gölhisar in Asiatic Turkey.[6][5]
37°07′14″N 29°36′16″E / 37.120499°N 29.6045°E
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Smith, William, ed. (1854–1857). "Sinda". Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography. London: John Murray.