in Ancient Geography, a maritime town of Laconia, situated between Trinassus and Acrise, in Pausanias's time in ruins. The district was called Helotea, and the people Helotes, Helota, Heloi, and Heloetea, by Stephanus; and Hote, by Livy. Being subdued by the Lacedemonians, they were all reduced to a state of public slavery, or made the slaves of the public, on these conditions, viz. that they neither could recover their liberty nor be sold out of the territory of Sparta. Hence Hence the term *Helotae*, in Harpocrates, for being in a state of slavery; and hence also the Lacedemonians called the slaves of all nations whatever *helotes*. *Heloticus* is the epithet.