Drymaea or Drymaia (Ancient Greek: Δρυμαία)[1] or Drymus or Drymos (Δρύμος)[2] or Drymea or Drymia (Δρυμία)[3] or Drymiae[4] was a frontier town of ancient Phocis, on the side of Doris, whence it is included in the limits of Doris by Livy.
He also speaks of an ancient temple of Demeter at Drymaea, containing an upright statue of the goddess in stone, in whose honour the annual festival of the Thesmophoria was celebrated.
[8][9] William Martin Leake visited the site in the 19th century and noted that is indicated by some ruins, situated midway between Kamares and Glunista, and occupying a rocky point of the mountain on the edge of the plain.
The masonry is generally of the third order, but contains some pieces of the polygonal kind; the space enclosed is a triangle, of which none of the sides is more than 250 yards (230 m).
At the summit is a circular acropolis of about 2 acres (0.81 ha), preserving the remains of an opening into the town".