Neapoli (, before 1928: ÃÂõùÃÂïÃÂÃÂñ â Leipsista), is a town in the Kozani regional unit of West Macedonia in northern Greece. A former municipality, it has been a municipal unit of Voio since the 2011 local government reform. The municipal unit has an area of 238.277 km<sup>2</sup>, the community 22.001 km<sup>2</sup>. The municipal unit has a population of 3,246 while the community has 2,063 inhabitants (2021). The community consists of the town Neapoli and village Melidoni.
An original name of modern Neapoli was Lapsista (ÃÂñÃÂïÃÂÃÂñ). Linguist Max Vasmer states the toponym was LÃÂvà ¡ià ¡ÃÂe and cognate with the SerboâÂÂCroatian Lepà ¡iÃÂ, a personal name derived from the Slavic word lÃÂp meaning "nice". Linguist Yordan Zaimov associated the toponym Lapsista with the Bulgarian toponym Lapà ¡ià ¡ta, deriving both from LubÃÂià ¡te in reference to a personal name formed from Lubko, with bàin Slavic rendered as ps (ÃÂ) in Greek.
Linguist Konstantinos Oikonomou derives the toponym from the Albanian word lafsh/ë referring to the plumage or plume of a rooster. The term when applied in a geographical context could refer to small mountainous heights. The word lafsh/ë along with either the Slavic ending or Albanian suffix ishta resulted in the phonetic form l'afà ¡ià ¡ta/liafà ¡ià ¡ta through the Albanian l (l'i) and Leafà ¡ià ¡ta or Leausista (ÃÂõñàÃÂïÃÂÃÂñ) where i became e near the l. In the last form of the toponym, the sound ea turned into a and fà ¡ became ps (ÃÂ) resulting in Lapsista (ÃÂñÃÂïÃÂÃÂñ). Other villages with the name are Ano (Upper) and Lower (Kato) Lapsista in Greek Epirus.
Under Ottoman rule, the town was known as Nasliç () in Turkish. In Greek, the form Anaselitsa (ÃÂýñÃÂõûïÃÂÃÂñ), derived from a nearby village Seltsa (modern Eratyra) was also used for the town and the wider area until the late 1920s.
Michael Kalinderis lists Leipista as populated by Greek speaking Muslim Vallahades. The 1920 Greek census recorded 1401 people in the town, and 250 inhabitants (130 families) were Muslim in 1923. Following the GreekâÂÂTurkish population exchange, Greek refugee families in Leipsista were from East Thrace (3), Asia Minor (142), Pontus (85) and the Caucasus (8) in 1926. The 1928 Greek census recorded 1592 town inhabitants. In 1928, the refugee families numbered 239 (978 people). The town mosque was destroyed and some remnants of its masonry were incorporated in the foundations of the Financial Tax Office building.