. . "Pellana"@en . "\u03A0\u03B5\u03BB\u03BB\u03AC\u03BD\u03B1"@en . . "Pellana (Greek: \u1F21 \u03A0\u03AD\u03BB\u03BB\u03B1\u03BD\u03B1, Paus. iii. 20. \u00A7 2; \u03C4\u1F70 \u03A0\u03AD\u03BB\u03BB\u03B1\u03BD\u03B1, Strabo viii. p. 386; \u03A0\u03B5\u03BB\u03BB\u03AE\u03BD\u03B7, Xen. Hell. vii. 5. \u00A7 9; Polyb. iv. 81, xvi. 37; Plut. Agis, 8), was a city of Laconia, on the Eurotas river, and on the road from Sparta to Arcadia.According to archaeologist Theodore Spyropoulos, Pellana was the Mycenaean capital of Laconia. It is also a former municipality in Laconia, Peloponnese, Greece."@en .