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New plan
I decided to do an update of Oetaea in this sandbox. If you have comments or suggestions, you may start a new section at the bottom of the sandbox

Article
Oetaea or Oitaia (Οἰταῖα ) was a historic region located in the current regional unit of Phthiotis, administrative region of Central Greece. The area took its name from Mount Oeta, today's Oiti. The terrain counted as Oiti is roughly trapezoidal included between the Spercheios River Valley in the north and the Boeotian Cephissus Valley in the south, both of which run roughly west-east, the Asopus River Gorge on the east and the Vistriza River Gorge on the west. The latter two rivers are right tributaries of the Spercheios. They drain the precipitous north slopes of Oiti.

The classical region
The modern definition of Oiti is not necessarily the same as the ancient. However, presumably any region named after the mountain would contain the major part of it. References to such a name in ancient Greek literature begin in the classical period, continue into the Hellenistic period, and are inherited finally by the Roman Empire and subsequent.

In classical times ancient Greece had a significantly different geopolitical structure, which featured predominantly the polis (plural poleis), a micro-state. A polis had a foundation date and its own constitution, although many were in fact subordinate to a more powerful polis, as the perioikoi, or surrounding states of Lacedaimon, were subordinate to Sparta, even though they had their own constitutions. Regions of poleis typically were more or less united by alliances. A region was not necessarily restricted to only one alliance.

residuum
of ancient Thessaly, Greece inhabited by the Oetaeans (Οἰταῖοι). It was the mountainous district around Mount Oeta in the upper valley of the Spercheius, and to the east of Dolopia. The Oetaeans appear to have been the collective name of the various predatory tribes, dwelling upon the northern declivities of Mt Oeta, who are mentioned as plundering both the Malians on the east, and the Dorians on the south. The most important of these tribes were the Aenianes (Αἰνιᾶνες - Aeniānes), called Eniēnes (Ἐνιῆνες) by Homer and Herodotus, an ancient Hellenic Amphictyonic race. They are said to have first occupied the Dotian plain in Pelasgiotis; afterwards to have wandered to the borders of Epirus, and finally to have settled in the upper valley of the Spercheius, where Hypata was their chief town. Besides Hypata, which was the only place of importance in Oetaea, we find mention of Sperchiae and Macra Come by Livy, and of Sosthenis (Σωσθενίς), Homilae (Ὅμιλαι), Cypaera (Κύπαιρα) and Phalachthia (Φαλαχθία) by Ptolemy.

Oetaea formed a political unit in antiquity. It minted silver and bronze coins with the following legends: «ΟΙΤ», «ΟΙΤΑ», «ΟΙΤΑΩΝ», and «ΟΙΤΑΙΩΝ».