Pottery finds suggest that Kolonai was inhabited in prehistoric times, but it is unknown whether there was any continuity between these period of its settlement and the Greek period. Greek ceramic material appears on the site from the 7th century BC, marking its foundation as a Greek settlement. At the period in which Daës of Kolonai was writing (probably the 4th century BC), the inhabitants of Kolonai thought they had been founded by
Aeolian Greeks. Given that
Lesbos was also ethnically
Aeolian and Kolonai was one of the so-called
Actaean cities which
Athens took from
Mytilene following the end of the
Mytilenean revolt in 427 BC, it is likely that Mytilene founded Kolonai and subsequently controlled it. A corrupt passage of the geographer
Strabo suggests instead that Kolonai belonged to the
peraia of
Tenedos, but there is now a consensus among consensus that the manuscripts should refer to it belonging to the peraia of
Lesbos. References to Kolonai in written sources from
Classical Antiquity are extremely rare. The
Spartan general
Pausanias may have fled from
Byzantium to Kolonai in 478 BC if it is this Kolonai rather than '
Lampsacene' Kolonai which is meant by
Thucydides. Following the end of Mytilenaean control in 427 BC, it became part of the
Delian League, and in 425/424 BC is recorded as paying a tribute of 1,000
drachmas, relatively small compared to the 3
talents which its neighbour
Larisa paid in the same year. In 399 BC, Kolonai was forcibly reincorporated into the
Persian Empire by the local dynast
Mania, but in the following year it was freed again by the
Spartan general
Dercyllidas. During the 4th century BC the city minted coins depicting a head of
Athena on the
obverse. Its relationship with neighbouring
Larisa is unclear throughout the
Classical period, but appears to be one of semi-dependence. In c. 310 BC Kolonai is thought to have been part of the
synoecism with
Antigoneia Troas, at which point the settlement is presumed to have been abandoned. ==Daes of Kolonai==