§ 1.1 A description of the known world is what I (Pomponius Mela) set out to give, a difficult task and one hardly suited to eloquence, since it consists chiefly in names of peoples and places and in their fairly puzzling arrangement. To trace this arrangement completely is a time-consuming, rather than a welcome, subject, but nevertheless a very worthwhile thing to consider and understand. It repays the effort of those who give it attention — at least by the very act of contemplating it, if not by the richness of this supplicant's natural talent.
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§ 1.2 I should, however, say more elsewhere and with greater preciseness. Now let me address the things that are most unambiguous, as they all certainly will be, even in a summary treatment. To start with, in fact, let me untangle what the shape of the whole is, what its greatest parts are, what the condition of its parts taken one at a time is, and how they are inhabited; then, back to the borders and coasts of all lands (a) as they exist to the interior and on the seacoast, (b) to the extent that the sea enters them and washes up around them, and (c) with those additions that, in the nature of the regions and their inhabitants, need to be recorded. So that this outline can be known and grasped more easily, its full extent will be revisited in a little more depth. The Shape of the Whole
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§ 1.3 Whatever all this is, therefore, on which we have bestowed the name of world and sky, it is a single unity and embraces itself and all things with a single ambit. It differs in its parts. Where the sun rises is designated formally as east or sunrise; where it sinks, as west or sunset; where it begins its descent, south; in the opposite direction, north.
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§ 1.4 In the middle of this unity the uplifted earth is encircled on all sides by the sea. In the same way, the earth also is divided from east to west into two halves, which they term hemispheres, and it is differentiated by five horizontal zones. Heat makes the middle zone unlivable, and cold does so to the outermost ones. The remaining two habitable zones have the same annual seasons, but not at the same time. The Antichthones inhabit one, we the other. The chorography of the former zone is unknown because of the heat of the intervening expanse, and the chorography of the latter is now to be described.
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§ 1.5 The Three Continents
This zone stretches from east to west and, because it is situated this way, is somewhat longer than it is wide at its widest point. It is entirely surrounded by Ocean, and from Ocean it allows four seas to enter — one from the north, from the south two, a fourth from the west. Those other seas will be recounted in their own places.
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§ 1.6 This last one, at first narrow and not more than ten miles wide, breaks into the land mass and penetrates it. Then, spreading in length and width, it pushes back the shores, which recede to an impressive degree, but when those same shores almost come together at the opposite end, the sea is reduced to a space so constricted that the opening is less than a mile wide. From there it spreads out again, but very moderately, and again it proceeds into a space even more constricted than the previous one. After the sea is received by this space, its size increases greatly again, and it is connected to a huge swamp, but only by a tiny aperture. The whole sea, both where it comes in and as far as it reaches, is called by a single name, Our Sea.
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§ 1.7 We call the narrows and the entranceway of the incoming water the Straight, but the Greeks call it the Channel. Wherever that sea extends, it gets different names in different places. Where it is constricted for the first time, it is called the Hellespont; then Propontis where it spreads out; where it compresses itself again, the Thracian Bosphorus; where it widens again, the Pontus Euxinus. Where it comes into contact with the swamp, it is called the Cimmerian Bosphorus. The swamp itself is called Maeotis.
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§ 1.8 By this sea and by two famous rivers, the Tanais and the Nile, the whole earth is divided into three parts. The Tanais, descending from north to south, flows down almost into the middle of Maeotis, and from the opposite direction the Nile flows down into the sea. Those lands that lie from the Strait to those rivers, on the one side we call Africa, on the other Europe. Whatever is beyond those rivers is Asia.
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§ 1.9 Ocean, differing by name as by position, abuts Asia from three directions: the Eastern Ocean from the east, from the south the Indian, from the north the Scythian Ocean. Asia itself, reaching eastward with a huge and continuous coastline, empties its rivers on this end over a coast as wide as Europe, Africa, and the sea that extends between them. Then, after its coastline has advanced uninterrupted for some distance, it lets in the Arabian and the Persian Seas from what we call the Indian Ocean, and from the Scythian Ocean it lets in the Caspian. Therefore, being narrower where it lets them in, Asia expands again and becomes as wide as it had been. Then as soon as it arrives at its own limit and the boundaries it shares with other lands, the middle of the western edge is received by our waters; the rest of it goes by one horn to the Nile, by the other to the Tanais.
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§ 1.10 Asia's coast descends in banks with the bed of the Nile River into the sea, and for a long time it stretches out its shores in conformity with that sea's advance. Then the coastline directly confronts the sea as the sea approaches. The shoreline extends, for the first time, in a curve with a huge sweep. After that, it again curves obliquely back to the Bosphorus. After repeatedly curving to the Pontic side, Asia stretches in a crosswise line as far as the entrance of the Maeotis, and, hugging the edge of the very Maeotis all the way to the Tanais, it becomes the riverbank where the Tanais is located.
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§ 1.11 We are told that the first humans in Asia, starting from the east, are the Indians, the Seres, and the Scyths. The Seres inhabit more or less the middle of the eastern part. The Indians and the Scyths inhabit the extremities, both peoples covering a broad expanse and spreading to the ocean not at this point only. For the Indians also look south and for a long time have been occupying the shore of the Indian Ocean with continuous nations, except insofar as the heat makes it uninhabitable. The Scyths look north too, and they possess the littoral of the Scythian Ocean all the way to the Caspian Gulf, except where they are forestalled by the cold.
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§ 1.12 Next to the Indians is Ariane, then Aria and Cedrosis and Persis up to the Persian Gulf. The Persian peoples surround this gulf; the Arabs surround the other one named earlier. After these peoples, what remains up to Africa belongs to the Aethiopians. In the former place the Caspiani, next to the Scyths, surround the Caspian Gulf. Beyond them, the Amazons are said to be found, and beyond them, the Hyperboreans.
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§ 1.13 Many different nations inhabit the interior of the land. The Gandari, Pariani, Bactri, Sogdiani, Pharmacotrophi, Chomarae, Choamani, Propanisadae, and Dahae are found beyond the Scyths and the Scythian deserts. On the shores of the Caspian Gulf are found the Comari, Massagetae, Cadusi, Hyrcani, and Hiberi. Beyond the Amazons and Hyperboreans are found the Cimmerians, Cissianti, Achaei, Georgians, Moschi, Cercetae, Phoristae, and Arimphaei. Where its expanse protrudes into Our Seas are found the Matiani, Tibarani, and — better-known names — the Medes, Armenians, Commagenes, Murimeni, Eneti, Cappadocians, Gallo-Greeks, Lycaones, Phrygians, Pisidians, Isaurians, Lydians, and Syro-Cilicians.
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§ 1.14 Again, of these latter nations that face south, the same ones that hold the interior hold the shores all the way to the Persian Gulf. Beyond the Caspian Gulf are the Parthians and Assyrians, beyond the Persian Gulf are the Babylonians, and beyond the Aethiopians are the Aegyptians. The Aegyptians likewise possess the lands adjacent to the banks of the Nile River and Our Sea. Then Arabia, with its narrow coastline, is contiguous with the shores that follow. From there, as far as that bend we described above, is Syria. On that very bend is Cilicia, but, in addition, Lycia and Pamphylia, Caria, Ionia, Aeolis, and the Troad all the way up to the Hellespont. From there the Bithynians are found up to the Thracian Bosphorus. Around the Pontus are a number of peoples, with one boundary or another, but all with one name, the Pontici. Beside the Maeotic Lake are found the Maeotici; beside the Tanais, the Sauromatae.
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§ 1.15 Europe
For terminal points Europe has the Tanais, the Maeotis, and the Pontus in the east; in the west the Atlantic; to the north the Britannic Ocean. Its coastline is the form of the littoral from the Tanai's to the Hellespont. Europe is not only opposite to the facing shores of Asia but also similar to them [a] where it is a bank of the aforesaid river, [b] where it brings the bend of the Swamp back to the curve of the Pontus, and [c] where it lies beside Propontis and Hellespont with its shore.
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§ 1.16 From there to the Strait, now sweepingly receding, now protruding, the European littoral makes three very large gulfs and projects into the sea with the same number of long extensions. On the other side of the Strait, the Atlantic coast runs up quite irregularly to the west, particularly its middle portion. To the north it extends, practically speaking, as if in a straight line, except where once or twice it is pulled back in by means of a deep recess.
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§ 1.17 The sea that it takes in with its first gulf is called the Aegean. The one it takes in through the next opening is called the Ionian Sea, but its interior part is the Adriatic. Finally, the one that we regard as the Tuscan sea, the Greeks regard as the Tyrrhenian Sea.
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§ 1.18 The first nation, from the Tanais more or less to the middle of the Pontic littoral, is Scythia (not the one already mentioned). From here Thrace stretches into part of the Aegean, and Macedonia is joined to it. Then Greece protrudes and divides the Aegean from the Ionian Sea. Illyria occupies the coast of the Adriatic. Between the Adriatic itself and the Tuscan sea Italy juts out. In the innermost part of the Tuscan sea is Gaul; on the farther side is Spain.
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§ 1.19 Spain stretches, with differently situated coastlines, to the west and also for a long time to the north. Then Gaul again extends for a long way, and it reaches from our shores all the way up to this point. After Gaul the Germans reach as far as the Sarmatae, and they to Asia. Africa
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§ 1.20 Africa, terminated to the east by the Nile and everywhere else by the sea, in fact has a less extensive coast than Europe, because it never extends opposite to Asia, and because it does not extend directly opposite to all of Europe's coastline. Nevertheless, Africa is actually longer than it is wide, and it is widest where it abuts the Nile. As far as Africa extends from that point, it goes uncurved to the west, rises — mainly in its middle reach — into mountain chains, and gently hones itself to a point. Because of that point, Africa becomes gradually more contracted from its original width and is narrowest right where it ends.
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§ 1.21 As much as is inhabited is remarkably fertile. Since most of it, however, is not cultivated and is a desert (either because covered by unproductive sand or because of climatic or regional aridity) or else is infested by many a harmful species of animal, Africa is huge but not populous. The sea by which it is surrounded we call to the north the Libyan Sea, to the south the Aethiopian Sea, and to the west the Atlantic.
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§ 1.22 In that part adjacent to Libya, next to the Nile, is the province they call Cyrene; next is Africa, the province designated by the name of the continent as a whole. The Numidians and Moors hold the remainder, but the Moors are exposed to the Atlantic Ocean. Beyond these coastal peoples, the Nigritae and the Pharusii are found all the way to the Aethiopians. These Aethiopians possess both the rest of this eastern coast and the whole coast that looks south, all the way to the frontier with Asia.
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§ 1.23 On those shores washed by the Libyan Sea, however, are found the Libyan Aegyptians, the White Aethiopians, and, a populous and numerous nation, the Gaetuli. Then a region, uninhabitable in its entire length, covers a broad and vacant expanse. At that point we hear of the Garamantes as the first people to the east; after them, the Augilae and Trogodytae; and farthest to the west, the Atlantes. In the interior — if one wants to believe it — at this point the scarcely human and rather brutish Goat-Pans, Blemyes, Gamphasantes, and Satyrs possess, rather than inhabit, the land. They roam freely everywhere, with no houses and no fixed abodes.
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§ 1.24 This is the full extent of our world. These are its largest parts, its shapes, and the nations of its parts. Now for me, as I begin to describe its coastlines and regions with greater preciseness, it is most convenient [a] to begin from that point where Our Sea enters into the land mass and preferably to begin with these lands that are on the right side of the inflow, then [b] to skirt the shores in the order they lie in, and [c], when all the places that abut that sea have been traversed, to coast along those places, too, that Ocean girds, until [d] the course of the work now begun sails around both the inside and the outside of the known world and returns to that place whence it began. Mauretania
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§ 1.25 It has been stated earlier that the Atlantic is the ocean that girds the earth on the west. From here — for those traveling into Our Sea — Spain is on the left, Mauretania on the right. The former is the first part of Europe, the latter of Africa. The eastern end of the Mauretanian coast is the Mulucha River. Its head (and starting point), however, is the promontory that the Greeks call Ampelusia; the Africans call that promontory by another name, but one that means the same thing.
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§ 1.26 On it is the sacred Cave of Hercules, and beyond the cave is Tinge, a very old town founded, as they say, by Antaeus. A proof of their claim exists, a huge shield cut from elephant hide, one that, because of its size, is not easy to wield if anyone today were to use it. The locals consider it as true that the shield was made by the famous giant. They pass the story down, and for that reason they pay him cult in an exceptional way.
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§ 1.27 Next comes a very high mountain, facing the one that Spain raises up on the opposite shore. The one on this side they call Abila, the one on the far side Calpe; they call them together the Pillars of Hercules. Oral tradition goes on to give the story of the name: Hercules himself separated the mountains, which had once been joined in a continuous ridge, and Ocean, previously shut out by the mole of the mountains, was let into those places that it now inundates. On this side of the Strait, the sea already pours in over a rather broad area, and with its great rush it bends back rather far the lands it has cleared from its path.
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§ 1.28 Moreover, the region, not well known, and scarcely endowed with anything illustrious, is populated with small towns and gives passage to small rivers. It is of better quality in its soil than in its men; and it is obscure because of the inactivity of its people.
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§ 1.29 Nevertheless, of the things here that are not embarrassing to mention, there are tall mountains that spread — on purpose, as it were — in an unbroken line, and that are called the Seven Brothers because of their number and likeness to one another, then the Tumuada River, the small towns of Rusigada and Siga; and Portus Magnus, so called because of its expanse. That river, which we called the Mulucha, is nowadays the boundary of tribes, but once it was the boundary of kingdoms, those of Bocchus and Jugurtha.
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§ 1.30 Numidia
Numidia, which spreads from there to the banks of the Ampsacus River, is actually narrower in expanse than Mauretania, but it is both more widely cultivated and richer. Of the cities that it contains, the largest are Cirta and Iol. Cirta is far from the sea and is now a colony of the Sittiani, but once it was the home of kings, at its wealthiest when it belonged to Syphax. Iol, on the seaside, was once unknown but is now famous because it was the royal residence of Juba and because it is referred to now as Caesarea.
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§ 1.31 On the near side of this city — it is situated more or less in the middle of the coast — are the towns of Cartinna and Arsinna, the garrison town of Quiza, Laturus Gulf, and the Sardabale River. On its far side is the common tomb of the royal family, then the cities of Icosium and Ruthisia and, flowing between them, the Aucus, as well as other things, which it is no loss, either of fact or fame, to pass over in silence.
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§ 1.32 Farther inland, and quite far from shore, there reportedly exist and are found — amazingly, if their reality is credible — the spines of fishes, pieces of murex and oyster, rocks smoothed (as they are supposed to be) by waves and no different from rocks in the sea, anchors set in reefs, other indications of the same kind, and even traces, in fields that nourish nothing, of a sea that once poured right up to those locations.
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§ 1.33 Africa Provincia
The following region, from Point Metagonium [Cape Bougaroun) to the Altars of the Philaeni, usurps for itself the name of Africa. In it are the towns of Hippo Regius, Rusiccade.
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§ 1.34 Then three promontories — White Point [Cap Blanc), Point Apollo [Ras Si Ali Mekki), and Point Mercurius) — projecting an impressive distance into the sea, make two large gulfs. They call the one right after Hippo Diarrhytus [Bizerte) the Gulf of Hippo, because the town is located on its shoreline. In the other gulf are Castra Delia, Castra Cornelia, the Bagrada [Mejerda) River, Utica, and Carthage. Both Utica and Carthage are famous, and both were founded by Phoenicians. The former is marked by the death of Cato. The latter is marked by its own fate: now it is a colony of the Roman people, but it was once their determined rival for imperial power. In fact, Carthage is now wealthy again, but it remains more famous for the destruction of its ancestors' claims than for the wealth of its present inhabitants. Hadrumetum, Leptis, Habromacte, Phyre, and Neapolis, the most widely known cities vis-a-vis other obscure places, lie one after another from here to Syrtis.
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§ 1.35 Syrtis is a gulf almost one hundred miles wide where it receives the open sea and three hundred miles wide where it encloses the sea. It has no ports and is frightening and dangerous because of the shallowness of its frequent shoals and even more dangerous because of the reversing movements of the sea as it flows in and out.
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§ 1.36 On its shoreline a huge swamp receives the Triton River; the swamp itself is Lake Triton, that is, the lake of Minerva, who, as the locals think, was born there, whence it was given her epithet. They give some credibility to that legend, because they celebrate the day they think is her birthday with contests of virgins, who compete among themselves.
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§ 1.37 Farther on is the town of Oea and the Cinyps [Khane) River, which descends through the lushest fields; then a second Leptis and a second Syrtis, equal in name and nature to the first, but approximately twice as large both where it remains open and where it curves. Its first promontory is Borion, and, from there on, the shore (which the Lotus-Eaters are said to have occupied) reaches its farther promontory on a coast with no ports all the way to Phycon.
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§ 1.38 The actual Altars have taken their name from the brothers Philaeni, who were sent from Carthage to meet certain Cyrenaeans in order to end by treaty a border war that had been waged for a long time with great losses on both sides. Later the agreement failed, by which the representatives of the two sides were to be dispatched from both directions at a prearranged time, and by which the boundary was to be established right where the two sides met. They renewed from scratch the agreement that everything on the nearer side fell to their respective countrymen, and the brothers allowed themselves — an amazing deed and most worthy of memory! — to be buried alive on the spot.
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§ 1.39 Cyrenaica
From there to Catabathmos is the province of Cyrenaica, and in it are the famously reliable oracle of Ammon, the spring they call the Fountain of the Sun, and a particular cliff sacred to Auster. When this cliff is touched by human hands, that wind springs up wildly and, whipping the sands like seas, rages the same way it does on water. The fountain boils up in the middle of the night, and then, gradually changing to lukewarm, at dawn it passes to cold; then, in proportion to the sun's rising, it gets colder and actually becomes solid ice at midday; then it turns lukewarm again, it is steaming at sundown, and the more night advances, the hotter the spring gets. In the middle of the night, it is boiling hot again.
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§ 1.40 Along the shore are found Zephyrium Point and Naustathmus, Port Paraetonium, the cities of Hesperia, Apollonia, and Arsinoe; and also Cyrene itself, from which the region takes its name. The Catabathmos Valley, sloping down into Aegypt, is the boundary of Africa.
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§ 1.41 Peoples of Africa
That being so, the shores are inhabited by people socialized according to our custom, except that particular ones differ in language and in the cult of the gods whom they worship as ancestral and venerate in the traditional way. No cities, in fact, arise in neighboring areas, but nevertheless there are groupings of nomads' huts called mapalia. Their way of life is crude and lacks amenities. The chiefs dress in rough woolen cloaks, the people in skins of wild and domestic animals. Sleeping and banqueting are done on the ground. Containers are made of wood and bark. They drink milk and the juice of berries. Their food is most often the meat of game animals. Indeed, the flocks are spared as much as possible because that is their only wealth.
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§ 1.42 The nomads to the interior also follow their flocks in a rather uncouth way of life. As the flocks are drawn on by pasturage, the nomads move forward and move their shelters too, and when daylight fails, there they spend the night. Although, being scattered all over in family groups and without law, they take no common counsel, still, because individual men have several wives and for that reason more children than usual (both those eligible to receive an inheritance and those not eligible), they are never few in number.
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§ 1.43 Of the people here who are recorded as being beyond the desert, the Atlantes curse the sun, both while it rises and while it sets, on the grounds that it is disastrous to them personally and to their fields. Individuals do not have names; they do not feed on animals; nor is it granted to them to visit and see in their sleep things like those granted to all other mortals.
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§ 1.44 The Trogodytae own no resources, and rather than speak, they make a high-pitched sound. They creep around deep in caves and are nurtured by serpents.
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§ 1.45 There are also herd animals among the Garamantes, and those animals feed with their necks bent at an odd angle since their horns, when directed at the ground, get in their way as they bend down. No one has one specific wife. Out of the children, who are born here randomly from such indiscriminate sexuality on their parents' part, and who are not clearly identified, the adults recognize by their similar looks those whom they are to raise as their own.
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§ 1.46 The Augilae think only the Manes are gods. They swear by them; they consult them as oracles. They pray to the Manes for what they want, and, after they have thrown themselves on burial mounds, the Manes bring dreams as oracular responses. On their wedding night, the women have a religious obligation to be available for sexual intercourse with every man that comes bearing a gift. On that occasion, it is a very great honor to sleep with many men, but the rest of the time chastity is manifested.
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§ 1.47 The Gamphasantes go naked and have no knowledge of any weapons. They know neither how to duck away from spears nor how to hurl them. For that reason they run away from anyone they meet and do not endure either meetings or conversations with anyone who does not have the same kind of nature.
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§ 1.48 The Blemyes lack heads; their face is on their chest. The Satyrs have nothing human except their superficial appearance. The form of the Goat-Pans is celebrated in their name. So much for Africa.
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§ 1.49 The first division of Asia is Aegypt between Catabathmos and the Arabs. From this shore Aegypt extends far to the interior and runs back southward, until it borders on Aethiopia with its back. The land is devoid of rain but is an amazingly fertile and very prolific producer of both human beings and other animals. The Nile causes this fertility, since it is the largest river that makes its way into Our Sea.
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§ 1.50 The Nile reaches out from the deserts of Africa and at this point is neither easily navigable at once nor called the Nile at once. After it descends in a single, rushing torrent, the river spreads wide around Meroe, an island covering a broad expanse on the border of Aethiopia; and on one side of Meroe the river is called Astabores, on the other Astape. Where it comes together again, it takes this name, the Nile.
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§ 1.51 From there, sometimes rough, sometimes capable of supporting ships, the river descends into a tremendous lake, from which it rushes out in steep cataracts, then embraces a second island, Tachempso, and runs down, still rough and seething, all the way to Elephantine, a city in Aegypt. Then at last, more peaceful and now quite navigable, it begins for the first time to have three streams near the town of Cercasorum. Then, dividing again and again at Delta and Melys, it moves freely and broadly through all of Aegypt. The river divides itself into seven mouths, but still it rolls on in ample individual beds.
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§ 1.52 It does not, however, spread over very much surface, but it does overflow its banks under the summer sky and also irrigates the land. Its waters are so efficacious for procreation and sustenance that — besides swarming with fish and producing huge beasts like hippopotamuses and crocodiles — the river even pours out the breath of life in clumps of silt and from the very soil fashions living creatures. This process is plain from the fact that when it has stopped flooding and returned to itself, certain organisms that are not yet completely formed are seen again and again. These organisms, however, take their first breath when they are still partially formed and still earthen in part.
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§ 1.53 The Nile increases, furthermore, either [a] because snow, melted under great heat, flows down from the immense mountain ridges of Aethiopia more abundantly than can be held by the riverbanks, or [b] because the sun, being nearer the earth in winter, and thereby evaporating the river's head, then retreats to a higher point and allows the river's head, unaffected by the sun and at its fullest, to raise the river's level, or else [c] because the Etesian winds, which blow throughout that period, either [i] drive in clouds that move from north to south as rain directly above the river's starting points, or block the advancing water with an adverse wind and forestall the course of the descending water, or choke the river's mouths with the sand they drive onto the shore right along with the waves. The Nile becomes greater either because it loses nothing from itself, or because it receives more water than usual, or because it loses less than it should.
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§ 1.54 If, however, there is a second world, and if there are Antichthones located directly opposite to us in the south, that first explanation will not have departed too far from the truth. The river, originating in those Antichthonian lands, emerges again in ours, after it has penetrated beneath Ocean in an unseen channel, and it therefore increases at the summer solstice because at that time it is winter where the river originates.
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§ 1.55 Other amazing things also exist in these lands. In one particular lake floats the island of Chemmis, which supports sacred groves, a wood, and a large temple of Apollo; and it is driven in whatever direction the winds push it. The pyramids are built with rocks of thirty feet; the largest of these structures — there are three — occupies almost four iugera of ground at its base and is erected to an equivalent height. Moeris, once a plain, now a lake accommodating a circumference of twenty miles, is deeper than necessary to sail in heavy freighters.
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§ 1.56 The Labyrinth is a work of Psammetichus; it embraces a thousand homes and twelve palaces within its continuous enceinte. It is built of marble and roofed and has one passageway down into it but almost countless paths inside; many confusing paths turn back on themselves this way and that but extend in both directions with a continuous winding and with porticoes that are often circular; with these paths promptly making one circle on top of others, and with the curve of a circle promptly bending back as far as it had advanced, the Labyrinth is puzzling with its long, yet solvable, wandering path.
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§ 1.57 The cultivators of Aegypt's districts live much differently from everyone else. They smear themselves with dung when they lament their dead; they consider it unholy to cremate or to bury them; but they place the dead, skillfully embalmed, in the inner rooms of a building. They write backward. They pulverize dirt between their hands but grind flour under their heels. Women take care of the forum and business; men take care of spinning and the home. Women carry bundles on their shoulders; men do so on their heads. It is mandatory for women to nurture their parents when they are in need, and for men it is a choice. They take food in the open air and outdoors; they consign their bodily functions to the inner recesses of the house.
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§ 1.58 They pay cult to the images of many animals and even more to the animals themselves (but different people to different animals) — to such an extent that it is a capital offense to kill certain animals, even through inadvertence. When those animals have been killed by disease or by chance, it is a religious obligation to bury them and grieve over them. Apis — a black bull, marked by particular spots and different from other bulls in his tail and in his tongue — is the divinity of all the Aegyptian peoples. He is born only rarely, conceived not from mating cattle, as they say, but miraculously in a celestial fire. The day of his birth is particularly festive to the whole people.
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§ 1.59 The Aegyptians themselves are, as they declare, the oldest human beings, and they refer in unambiguous annals to 330 pharaohs before Amasis and to a history of more than thirteen thousand years. They also preserve a written tradition that, for as long as there have been Aegyptians, the stars have changed their course four times, and the sun has set twice already where it now rises.
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§ 1.60 They inhabited twenty cities when Amasis ruled, and now they inhabit numerous ones. The most famous of those cities far from the sea are Safe, Memphis, Syene, Bubastis, Elephantine, and, in particular, Thebes, which, as stated by Homer, has one hundred gates or, as others say, one hundred palaces, the homes, once, of one hundred important chiefs, each house accustomed to send out ten thousand armed soldiers when trouble had driven them to it. On the coast is Alexandria, bordering on Africa, and Pelusium, which borders on Arabia. The mouths of the Nile — the Canopic, Bolbitic, Sebennytic, Pathmetic, Mendesian, Cataptystic, and Pelusiac mouths — cut into those very shores. Arabia
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§ 1.61 From here Arabia reaches to the Red Sea, but on the far side, being richer and more productive, it abounds in incense and perfumes. On this side, except where it is heightened by Mt. Casius, Arabia is flat and barren and admits Port Azotus as a trading place for their own wares. On this side Arabia rises to a great height, being so elevated that, from the mountaintop, sunrise is visible from the fourth watch on.
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§ 1.62 Syria
Syria holds a broad expanse of the littoral, as well as lands that extend rather broadly into the interior, and it is designated by different names in different places. For example, it is called Coele Syria, Mesopotamia, Judaea, Commagene, and Sophene.
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§ 1.63 It is Palestine at the point where Syria abuts the Arabs, then Phoenicia, and then — where it reaches Cilicia — Antiochia, which was powerful long ago and for a long time, but which was most powerful by far when Semiramis held it under her royal sway. Her works certainly have many distinctive characteristics. Two in particular stand out: Babylon was built as a city of amazing size, and the Euphrates and Tigris were diverted into once dry regions.
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§ 1.64 In Palestine, however, is Gaza, a mighty and very well fortified city. This is why the Persians call it their treasury (and from that fact comes the name): when Cambyses headed for Aegypt under arms, he had brought here both riches and the money for war. Ascalon is no less important a city. Iope was founded, as they tell it, before the flood, Iope is where the locals claim that Cepheus was king, based on the proof that particular old altars — altars with the greatest taboo — continue to bear an inscription of that man and his brother Phineus. What is more, they even point out the huge bones of the sea-monster as a clear reminder of the event celebrated in song and legend, and as a clear reminder of Andromeda, who was saved by Perseus. Phoenicia
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§ 1.65 The Phoenicians are a clever branch of the human race and exceptional in regard to the obligations of war and peace, and they made Phoenicia famous. They devised the alphabet, literary pursuits, and other arts too; they figured out how to win access to the sea by ship, how to conduct battle with a navy, and how to rule over other peoples; and they developed the power of sovereignty and the art of battle.
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§ 1.66 In Phoenicia is Tyre, once an island, but now tied to the mainland, because siegeworks were thrown up by Alexander, who at one time assailed it. Villages occupy the upper coast, along with still-wealthy Sidon, the most important of the maritime cities before it was captured by the Persians.
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§ 1.67 From it to Point Theuprosopon there are two towns, Byblos and Botrys. Farther on there were once three towns, each separated from the next by a single stade, now the place is called Tripolis from the number of those towns. Then comes Simyra, a military post, and Marathos, a not obscure city.
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§ 1.68 From there on, Asia is no longer sideways to the sea but runs directly into it. Asia forms a tremendous gulf with the unbent extension of its littoral. Wealthy peoples live around the gulf, and the location makes them rich, because the fertile district, perforated by frequent navigable riverbeds, exchanges and combines, in a ready traffic, the diverse riches of sea and land.
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§ 1.69 On the gulf is the remainder of Syria, to which the name of Antiochia applies, and on its shore are the cities Seleucia, Hypatos, Berytos, Laodicea, and Rhosos, as well as the rivers that go between these cities, the Lycos, the Hypatos, and the Orontes; then comes Mt. Amanus and, right after it, Myriandros and the Cilicians.
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§ 1.70 Cilicia
In the gulf's deepest recess, however, is the site of a great historical turning point long ago. This place observed and witnessed both the Persians routed by Alexander and Darius in flight. Now it is marked not even by the most insignificant city, but then it was famous because of its mighty city. The place was Issos, and that is why the gulf is called the Gulf of Issos. At a distance from there lies Point Hammodes, between the Pyramus Rivers. The Pyramus, the river nearer to Issos, flows beside Mallos; the Cydnus, farther on, goes through Tarsus.
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§ 1.71 Next is a city once occupied by Rhodians and Argives, later occupied by pirates when Pompey allotted it to them; now called Pompeiopolis, then called Soloe. Beside it, in a small mound, the funerary monument of the poet Aratus must be mentioned for this reason: because — no one knows why — rocks that are hurled on it burst apart. Not far from here the town of Corycos, which is tied to the continent by a narrow ridge, is surrounded by a harbor and by the open sea.
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§ 1.72 Above the town is the so-called Corycian Cave, a cave of unique nature, too extraordinary to be easily describable. For in fact it gapes wide with a tremendous maw and makes an opening, right at the very top, into the mountain, which is located alongside the shore, and which is quite steep with a path of ten stades. Then, going down deeply — the more impressive the farther down it goes — the cave is alive with hanging growth everywhere, and it is encircled completely by the shady embrace of its sides. The cave is so wonderful and beautiful that, at first sight, it boggles the minds of those who approach it, but it will not gratify them when they have steeled themselves to observe it better.
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§ 1.73 There is one descent into it, narrow, rough, a mile-and-a-half long, through lovely shadows and the shade of a forest that resonates with a tinge of rusticity, while streams continually flow from one direction or another. When the bottom is reached, again a second cave is opened up, but this one is now to be described for entirely other reasons. It terrifies those who enter with its miraculous roar of cymbals and the great uproar of things rustling around.
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§ 1.74 After that, it is visible for some time, but then — where it goes down farther — it becomes darker. It draws deep down anyone who dares, and it lets them in deep as if through a rabbit hole. There a mighty river rising from a mighty spring shows just a glimpse of itself, and, after it has drawn great force in its short channel, again it plunges down and disappears. Inside, there is a space too hair-raising for anyone to dare to go forward, and for that reason it remains unknown.
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§ 1.75 The whole cave, however, being narrow and truly sacred, both worthy of being inhabited by gods and believed to be so, reveals nothing that is not venerable, and it reveals itself as if with some kind of numinous power.
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§ 1.76 Farther on is another cave, which they call the Cave of Typhon, with a narrow mouth and a very tight squeeze, as those who have experienced it have reported. That is why the cave is permeated by an unending night and never easy to investigate. Because this cave was once the bedchamber of Typhon, however, and because now it instantly deprives of life anything and everything that goes down into it, it is worth recording for its nature and its legend.
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§ 1.77 Next, there are two promontories: Sarpedon, once the boundary of the kingdom of Sarpedon, and Anemurium, which separates Cilicia from Pamphylia. Between them lie Celenderis and Nagidos, colonies of the Samians, but Celenderis is the one nearer to Sarpedon.
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§ 1.78 Pamphylia
In Pamphylia are the navigable Melas River, the town of Sida, and a second river, the Eurymedon. Beside the latter river the great naval battle took place against the Phoenicians and Persians, as well as the great victory of Cimon, the Athenian general. From a moderately high hill, Aspendos looks out on the sea where the battle was fought. Argives had founded Aspendos, but their neighbors came to possess it.
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§ 1.79 After that, there are two other very strong rivers, the Cestros and the Catarractes. The Cestros is easy to navigate, but the latter gets its name because it makes waterfalls. Between those rivers are the town of Perga and the temple of Pergaean Diana, whom they name after the town. Across those same rivers are Mt. Sardemisos and Phaselis, which was founded by Mopsus and marks the boundary of Pamphylia.
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§ 1.80 Lycia
Moving right along, Lycia, named for King Lycus, the son of Pandion, and, as they say, once unsafe because of the Chimaera's fiery breath, terminates the tremendous gulf with the harbor of Sida and a spur of the Taurus range.
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§ 1.81 The Taurus range actually rises over an immense distance starting from the shores of the Eastern Ocean and reaches quite an elevation. Then, turning with its right flank to the north, its left to the south, the range goes straight west, and with its unbroken chain, where it separates the lands from one another, it is the boundary of great peoples wherever it drives its ridge. The range ends by extending into the sea. Even where it looks east, the Taurus is called by the same name as the whole (as just indicated). Then it is called Haemodes and Caucasus and Propanisus (Paropamisus); after that, the Caspian Gates, the Niphates, the Armenian Gates; and, where now it abuts Our Seas, the Taurus again.
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§ 1.82 After the Taurus promontory come the Limyra River and the city that is its namesake. Except for Patara, the towns are as unresplendent as they are numerous. The temple of Apollo, once similar to Delphi in wealth and in oracular credibility, makes Patara well known. Farther on are the Xanthus River, the town of Xanthos, Mt. Cragus, and the city that bounds Lycia, Telmesos.
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§ 1.83 Caria follows, and peoples of uncertain origin inhabit it. Some writers hold the opinion that they are indigenous peoples, others that they are Pelasgians, still others that they are Cretans. The nation was once so enamored of weapons and fighting that they used to fight other peoples' wars for pay. There are some forts here; then two promontories, Pedalion and Crya; and after the Calbis River, the town of Caunus, infamous for the ill health of its inhabitants.
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§ 1.84 From there to Halicarnassos the following places are located: a few Rhodian colonies and two harbors, Gelos and the one called Thyssanusa after the city it surrounds. Between those harbors are the town of Larumna and the Hill of Pandion, which extends into the sea; then three gulfs, in order, Thymnias, Schoenus, and Bubassius. Thymnias' promontory is Point Aphrodisium; Schoenus surrounds Hyla; Bubassius surrounds Cyrnos. Then comes Cnidus on the tip of a peninsula, and between it and the Ceramicus Gulf, located in a secluded place, is Euthana.
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§ 1.85 Halicarnassos is an Argive colony, and there is a reason, apart from its founders, why it is memorable: it produced the Mausoleum, that is, the funerary monument of King Mausolus, one of the Seven Wonders and the work of Artemisia. Beyond Halicarnassos are the following places: the coast of Leuca; the cities of Myndos, Caruanda, and Neapolis; the Iasian and Basilic Gulfs. Bargylos is on the Iasian Gulf.
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§ 1.86 After the Basilic Gulf, Ionia winds around with several twists and turns. Beginning its first bend from Point Poseidon, it goes around the oracle of Apollo, who in the old days was called Branchidian but nowadays is called Didymaean Apollo. Then comes Miletus, once the leading city of all Ionia because of its skill in war and in peace, and the birth place of the astronomer Thales, the musician Timotheus, and the natural philosopher Anaximander; and whenever they talk of Ionia Miletus is also justly renowned for the celebrated talents of its other citizens. The city of Hippis is the outlet of the Maeander River, and Mt. Latmus is known for the legend of Endymion, deeply loved, as they report, by the Moon.
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§ 1.87 After that, bending in again, the coastline goes around the city of Priene and the mouth of the Gaesus River, and then, the bigger its circuit, the more it embraces. The Panionium is there. It is a sacred district and, for that reason is so designated because the Ionians tend it in common.
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§ 1.88 There founded by fugitives, as they say (and the name agrees with the report.- is Phygela. Ephesus is there, and the most renowned temple of Diana, which the Amazons, rulers of Asia, are reported to have dedicated. The Cayster River is there. Lebedos is there, and the shrine of Apollo, which Manto, Teiresias' daughter, founded when she was fleeing the Epigoni, the conquerors of Thebes. Colophon is there, which Mopsus, son of that same Manto, founded.
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§ 1.89 By contrast, the promontory by which the gulf is defined projects like a peninsula, because with its other side it makes another gulf, which they call the Gulf of Smyrna, and because it extends its remaining portions over a wider expanse after a narrow neck of land. On that isthmus, Teos to the south side and Clazomenae to the north are tied together by a common boundary where they press their backs together, and they look out on different seas with different coastlines. On the peninsula itself is Coryna. On the Gulf of Smyrna are the Hermus River and the city of Leuca; beyond is Phocaea, the last city of Ionia.
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§ 1.90 The next region became Aeolis from the time when it began to be cultivated by Aeolians. It was previously called Mysia, however, and where it adjoins the Hellespont, with the Trojans in possession, it was the Troad. They call the first of its cities Myrina after its founder Myrinus. Pelops established the following city when he returned from Greece after his victory over Oinomaus; the leader of the Amazons, Cyme, called it Cyme, once those who had dwelt there were driven out. Above it, the Caicus runs down between Elaea and Pitane, the city that bore Arcesilas, a very renowned head of the Academy when its doctrine was the suspension of judgment.
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§ 1.91 At that point, on a promontory, comes the town of Cyna. This promontory receives gulfs that are not detailed here; they are not small gulfs but long and gentle bends that gradually carry the shoreline all the way back to the foot of Mt. Ida. The mountain range is sprinkled at first with small cities, of which the most renowned is Cisthena. On the inner fold the plain, Thebe by name, contains the adjacent towns Adramytion, Astura, and Chrysa (in the same order as named), and it contains Antandrus on the other side.
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§ 1.92 A dual explanation of that last name is in circulation. Some claim that Ascanius, the son of Aeneas, was captured by the Pelasgians when he ruled there, and that he ransomed himself in exchange for that city. Others think that it was founded by people here, whom civil war had driven from the island of Andros The latter wanted the name Antandrus to be accepted as meaning "in exchange for Andros," the former as "in exchange for a man."
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§ 1.93 The following stretch of coast reaches Gargara and Assos, colonies of the Aeolians. Then, not far from Troy, a second gulf. Achaeon Limen, curves its shores, which are very renowned because of the city, the war, and the destruction. Here was the town of Sigeum, here the camp of the warring Achaeans. Descending to this place from Mt Ida, the Scamander makes its outlet and the Simois too, rivers more important because of tradition than because of their physical character.
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§ 1.94 The mountain itself, remembered on account of the old struggle for booty and because of the judgment of Paris, reveals the rising sun differently from the way it is usually viewed in other lands. In fact, for people watching from the very peak, more or less from the middle of the night on, scattered fires appear to shine. The nearer the light draws, the more those fires appear to come together and to fuse with one another, until, as a result of being gathered closer and closer together, fewer fires are burning, and until at the end, they burn with a single flame.
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§ 1.95 After that light has blazed brilliantly, like a fire, for a long time, it compresses itself, becomes round, and turns into a huge sphere. For a long time that sphere appears sizable and tied to the earth. Then it decreases little by little, becoming brighter the more it decreases. Last of all, it dispels the night, and, turning into the sun now, it rises along with the day.
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§ 1.96 Outside the gulf is the Rhoetean coast, with the renowned cities of Rhoeteum and Dardania, but the coast is particularly important for the tomb of Ajax. From here the sea narrows down and no longer washes onto the mainland. Instead, it divides the land again, and it splits, by means of the narrow strait of the Hellespont, the shore that blocked its path. The sea causes the lands where it flows to be its sides again.
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§ 1.97 Farther in are the Bithynians and the Mariandyni; on the coast are the Greek cities Abydos, Lampsacum, Parion, and Priapos. Abydos is famous because of the circulation of a great love story long ago. Lampsacum, as the Phocaeans call it, got its name from the fact that, when they inquired where it would be best for them to head out for, an oracular response told them to make their home on the very spot where daylight had first struck.
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§ 1.98 Then the sea widens as the Propontis, into which flows the Granicus, the river known for the very first battle between the Persians and Alexander. On the other side of the river, Cyzicum is located on the isthmus of a peninsula. We have learned that Cyzicus, its namesake, died in battle, slaughtered by the unthinking Minyans when they were invading the Colchians. Later on come Placia and Scylace, small Pelasgian colonies over which, from the back, hangs Mt. Olympus, or Mt. Mysius as the locals call it.
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§ 1.99 The Rhyndacos River goes through those places that follow. All around it are generated monstrous snakes, remarkable not only because of their size but also because, after they have fled from the sun's heat into the riverbed, they in fact emerge, open their mouths wide, and swallow birds that fly above them, even if they are flying high and fast. On the far side of the Rhyndacus are Dascylos and Myrlea, the city the Colophonians settled.
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§ 1.100 After that, there are two moderate-sized gulfs. One without a name embraces Cion, the most convenient trading town for Phrygia, which lies not too far away; the other one, the Gulf of Olbia, bears on its promontory a shrine of Neptune and in its bosom Astacos, a city founded by Megarians.
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§ 1.101 Next, the continents again lie rather close to one another, and the channel, where the sea narrows as it is about to enter the Pontus, separates Europe from Asia by five stades. This channel is the Thracian Bosphorus, as previously indicated. In the very jaws of this Bosphorus is a town, and at its mouth is a temple. The name of the town is Calchedon, its principal founder Archias the Megarian. The divinity of the temple is Jupiter, its founder Jason. Here now the mighty Pontus opens out, and it extends to both the near and far sides in a long and straight line (except where there are promontories), even though the coast winds everywhere else. However, because the shoreline recedes less on the opposite side than it does to the left or the right, it curves around with soft points until it makes narrow angles on both ends and is rounded very much like the shape of the Scythian bow. The sea is brief, cruel, and cloudy; its stopping-off places are few and far between; it is surrounded by a shore that is neither soft nor sandy; it borders on the north winds; and it is billowy and tempestuous, because it is not deep. In the olden days the sea was called the Axenus Sea from the vicious disposition of the inhabitants, but later it was called the Euxinus Sea because of traffic with somewhat gentler nations.
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§ 1.102 Here now the mighty Pontus opens out, and it extends to both the near and far sides in a long and straight line (except where there are promontories), even though the coast winds everywhere else. However, because the shoreline recedes less on the opposite side than it does to the left or the right, it curves around with soft points until it makes narrow angles on both ends and is rounded very much like the shape of the Scythian bow. The sea is brief, cruel, and cloudy; its stopping-off places are few and far between; it is surrounded by a shore that is neither soft nor sandy; it borders on the north winds; and it is billowy and tempestuous, because it is not deep. In the olden days the sea was called the Axenus Sea from the vicious disposition of the inhabitants, but later it was called the Euxinus Sea because of traffic with somewhat gentler nations.
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§ 1.103 On the Pontus, first off, the Mariandyni inhabit a city founded, as they say, by Argive Hercules. It is called Heraclea, and that name adds credibility to the tradition. Next to it is the Acherusian Cave, which goes down, as they tell it, to the Manes, and they believe that Cerberus was hauled up from there.
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§ 1.104 After that comes the town of Tios, in fact a colony of the Milesians, but now belonging to the land and people of Paphlagonia. More or less in the middle of their littoral is Point Carambis. On its nearer side is the Parthenius River; the cities of Sesamos, Cromnos, and Cytorus (founded by Cytisorus, the son of Phrixus); then Cinolis, Collyris, and Armene, which marks the end of Paphlagonia.
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§ 1.105 Next, the Chalybes occupy two very renowned cities, Amisos and Sinope, the latter being the birthplace of Diogenes the Cynic. As to rivers, they have the Halys and the Thermodon. Beyond the Halys is the city of Lycastos; a plain lies beside the Thermodon. On that plain was the town of Themiscurum, and there was an encampment, too, of Amazons, which they call Amazonius for that reason.
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§ 1.106 The Tibareni, for whom the highest good lies in playing and laughing, extend to the Chalybae. Farther on, the Mossyni take shelter under wooden towers, completely mark their whole bodies with tattoos, eat in the open air, recline with the sexes mixed and without concealing it, and choose kings by vote. They keep their kings in chains and under the closest guard, and when the kings have earned blame for exercising some power wrongfully, the people punish them by depriving them of a whole day's food. Otherwise, the people are rough, crude, and absolutely vicious to those who put in to shore there.
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§ 1.107 After them come the less savage Macrocephali, Bechiri, and Buxeri, but even these peoples are of unruly disposition. Cities are rare; particularly renowned, though, are Cerasunta and Trapezus.
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§ 1.108 Next is that place where the stretch of coastline coming from the Bosphorus terminates, and from there the bend of the opposite shore, becoming more elevated on the gulf, forms the narrowest angle of the Pontus. Here are the Colchians; the Phasis bursts into the sea here; here is the town colonized by Themistagoras the Milesian; here are the grove and temple of Phrixus, who is well known from the old legend of the Golden Fleece.
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§ 1.109 Rising from here, the mountains stretch in a long ridge until they connect to the Riphaean Range. These mountains, on one end, face the Euxine, the Maeotis, and the Tanais, and on the other they face the Caspian Sea. They are called the Ceraunians but are elsewhere called the Taurus Mountains, the Moschic, the Amazonian, the Caspian, the Coraxic, the Caucasus — called by as many different names as there are peoples beside them.
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§ 1.110 On the first bend, however, of the now curving shore, there is a town that Greek merchants founded, and they reportedly called it Cycnus because the voice of a swan had given a sign to them when, while being tossed around in a blinding storm, they did not know where land was. Wild, uncivilized nations living beside the vast sea occupy its remaining coastline: the Melanchlaeni, the Toretici, and six Colician peoples (the Coraxici, the Phthirophagi, the Heniochi, the Achaeans, the Cercetici, and, at this point, the Sindones, on the boundary of the Maeotis).
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§ 1.111 In the territory of the Heniochi, Dioscorias was founded by Castor and Pollux, who came to the Pontus with Jason; and Sindos, in the territory of the Sindones, was founded by the actual cultivators of the land.
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§ 1.112 Then a region, situated sideways to the sea and moderately wide, runs between the Pontus and the Swamp to the Cimmerian Bosphorus. The Coracanda, which drains in two riverbeds to the lake and to the sea, makes this region a peninsula. Four cities are located there: Hermonassa, Cepoe, Phanagorea, and, on the very shore, Cimmerium.
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§ 1.113 On the near side, the Maeotic Lake receives those who enter it. It spreads in all directions where it touches broad land, but it is surrounded by an uncurving shore nearer to the sea. Maeotis is enclosed, as it were, by a border except where it has its opening, and at the nearer end it is virtually similar to the Pontus in size.
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§ 1.114 The Maeotici cultivate the shore that curves from the Cimmerian Bosphorus all the way to the Tanais, as do the Thatae, the Sirachi, the Phicores, and — next to the mouth of the river — the Ixamatae. Among them, women practice the same skills as men, so much so that women are not free even from military service. Men serve in the infantry and fight with bows; women enter battle on horseback and do not fight with swords but kill their captives by dragging them off with lariats. Still, women do marry, but there is no predictable age at which to be considered marriageable: women remain virgins except for those who have killed an enemy.
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§ 1.115 The Tanais itself, falling from the Riphaean Mountains, rushes so precipitously that it alone endures both summery heat and wintry cold in close proximity, yet it runs down always the same, unchanged and fast-moving, even when neighboring rivers, the Maeotis, the Cimmerian Bosphorus, and certain parts of the Pontus are all frozen by winter's cold.
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§ 1.116 The Sauromatae occupy its banks and the places that are contiguous with them. They are one nation but have as many peoples as they have names. First, the Maeotid Gynaecocratumenoe — the kingdoms of the Amazons — occupy plains that are rich in pasture but barren and bare for other things. The Budini inhabit the city of Gelonos. Next to them the Thyssagetae and Turcae occupy endless forests and feed themselves by hunting.
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§ 1.117 The next region is deserted and rough, with uninterrupted cliffs over a wide stretch; it extends all the way to the Aremphaei. These people enjoy customs that are very much based on fair treatment; they have sacred groves for homes and berries as food; and both men and women keep their heads bare. Therefore these people are regarded as consecrated, and no one from nations as savage as those here profanes these people, which results in the custom that other people flee to them for asylum. Farther on, the Riphaean Mountains rise up, and beyond them lies the shore that faces Ocean.
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§ 2.1 BOOK II That is the boundary, as I have said, and the layout of Asia where it verges on Our Sea and the Tanais. If people travel by the Tanais into the Maeotis, Europe is situated to the right, but to the left if sailing upriver. In Europe, constantly falling snow makes those places contiguous with the Riphaean Mountains (which actually reach even this far) so impassable that, in addition, they prevent those who deliberately travel here from seeing anything. After that comes a region of very rich soil but quite uninhabitable because griffins, a savage and tenacious breed of wild beasts, love — to an amazing degree — the gold that is mined from deep within the earth there, and because they guard it with an equally amazing hostility to those who set foot there.
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§ 2.2 Scythia
The first human beings are Scyths, and first of the Scyths are the so-called one-eyed Arimaspoe; after them the Essedones are found all the way to Maeotis. The Buces River cuts the Maeotis' bend, and the Agathyrsi and Sauromatae surround it. The Hamaxobioe are called that because they use their wagons as homes. Then a strip, now running sideways to the Cimmerian Bosphorus, is enclosed both by the Pontus and by the Maeotis.
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§ 2.3 The Satarchae occupy the area that goes toward the Swamp; beside the Cimmerian Bosphorus are the Cimmerian towns of Murmecion, Panticapaeon, Theodosia, and Hermisium, while the Taurici live beside the Euxine Sea. Beyond them, a bay full of harbors and therefore called Calos Limen is enclosed by two promontories. One promontory they call Criu Metopon, and it is equal and opposite to Point Carambis, which we have said is in Asia. The other one is Point Parthenion. The town of Cherronesus lies beside this promontory and was founded — if this is believable — by Diana. The town is particularly famous for a nymphaeum in the form of a cave, which was dedicated on its citadel to the nymphs.
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§ 2.4 Then the sea encroaches on the bank, and it follows all the way along the receding coastlines until it is five miles distant from the Maeotis, where it renders them into a peninsula. One of these coasts the Satarchae occupy, the Taurici the other. What lies between the Swamp and the bay is called Taphrae; the bay is called Carcinites, In it is the city of Carcine, flanked by two rivers, the Gerrhos and the Hypacaris, which make their outlet to the sea through a single mouth, although they flow down from different springs and from different directions. For the Gerrhos rolls along between the territory of the Basilidae and that of the Nomads, the Hypacaris right through that of the Nomads.
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§ 2.5 Then come the vast forests that these lands bear, as well as the Panticapes River, which separates the Nomads and the Georgians. At that time the land, which pulls back for a long stretch, is tied to the shore by a slender base; subsequently, where it is moderately wide, the land fashions itself gradually into a point. Just as if it were collecting its long sides into a sword point, the land affects the appear-ance of a drawn sword. Achilles entered the Pontic Sea with a hostile fleet, and it is remembered that he celebrated his victory there with competitive games and that there he routinely exercised himself and his men when there was a respite from the fighting. Therefore the land is called Dromos Achilleos.
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§ 2.6 Then the Borysthenes River washes up on the territory of the nation that bears its name. The loveliest among Scythia's rivers, it flows down the most smoothly (the others are turbulent), and it is calmer than the others and absolutely delicious to drink. This river feeds the most prolific pastures and sustains big fish with the best flavor and no bones. The Borysthenes comes from a long way off and rises from unidentified springs. With its bed the river skims through a path of forty days' hiking, is navigable over the same route, and debouches between the Greek towns of Borysthenis and Olbia.
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§ 2.7 The Hypanis River borders the territory of the Callipidae. It rises from a vast swamp, which the locals call its Mother, and for a long while flows down exactly as it was born. Finally, not far from the sea, it takes in from a small spring (the name of which is Exampaeus) waters so bitter that from this point on the very river still continues to flow but is now changed completely. The Asiaces, the next river, descends between the territories of the Callipidae and the Asiacae. The Tyra separates the people here from the Istrians. That river rises among the Neuri, and where it makes its outlet to the sea, it runs beside a town of the same name.
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§ 2.8 The river that separates the peoples of Scythia from their neighbors, however, begins — its sources in Germany are known — with a name different from the one with which it finishes. In fact, through immense lands belonging to great nations, it is for a long time the Danube; then with the local peoples using another name, it becomes the Ister. After receiving several more rivers, it then becomes a mighty river. Of those rivers that debouch into Our Sea, the Ister is no smaller than the Nile and has the same number of mouths as that river, but it flows into the sea with three shallow mouths and four that are navigable.
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§ 2.9 The temperaments and cultures of the nations differ. The Essedones celebrate their parents' funerals joyfully and with a festive gathering of family members. In the feast, they devour the actual corpses, once they have been ripped apart and stirred in with the innards of slaughtered cattle. After they have smoothed and polished them skillfully, the skulls are bound with gold, and they use them for drinking cups. These are, among them, the last rites of their religion.
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§ 2.10 The Agathyrsi tattoo their faces and limbs, each more or less in proportion to the prominence of their ancestors, but they all do so with the same marks and in such a way that they cannot be washed off. The Satarchae have no experience of gold and silver (the worst pestilences), and they conduct business by barter. They even inhabit caves and dugouts, with their homes sunk into the ground because of the savage and virtually unending winter; they cover their whole bodies and even their faces except where they look out.
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§ 2.11 The Taurians, well remembered for the arrival of Iphigenia and Orestes, are monstrous in character and have the monstrous reputation that they slaughter newcomers as sacrificial offerings. The Basilid nation began with Hercules and Echidna. Their character is regal, and only arrows serve them as weapons. The wandering Nomads follow the pastures of the flocks, and as long as those pastures last, they pass the time in a fixed abode. The Georgians cultivate and work the fields. The Asiacae do not know what stealing is, and for that reason they neither protect their own property nor touch anyone else's.
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§ 2.12 To the interior the ritualistic behavior of the inhabitants is cruder and the territory less tilled. They love the bloodshed of war, and it is customary for warriors to drink blood from the very wounds of the first man they ever killed. The more a man kills, the more valued he is among them. Among the marks of shame, by contrast, surely the worst is to have no experience of shedding blood. Not even their peace treaties are without blood. The negotiators all cut themselves and sip the drawn blood after they have mixed everybody's together. They think that drinking it is the surest guarantee of a lasting good faith.
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§ 2.13 At their banquets, the happiest and most frequent topic of conversation is to tell how many men each one has killed. Those who have reported the most chug from double cups. Among the carousers, that is a special honor. These people smooth out their drinking cups from the skulls of their greatest personal enemies, the same way the Essedones do from their parents' skulls.
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§ 2.14 Among the Anthropophagi, even ordinary banquets are provided with human entrails. The Geloni cover themselves and their horses with the skins of their enemies — their horses with the flesh from the rest of the body, themselves with the skin from the heads. The Melanchlaeni have coal black clothing, and from that they get their name. There is a preordained time for each of the Neuri at which, if they so desire, they metamorphose into wolves and back into who they were.
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§ 2.15 Mars is the god of all these peoples. To him they dedicate swords and sword belts instead of images and sacrifice human beings instead of animals. The lands cover a broad expanse, and because the rivers often overflow their banks, they are never barren of pasture. Yet in some places the lands are so completely infertile for any other growth that the inhabitants, who are short of wood, feed their fires with bones. Thrace
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§ 2.16 Thrace is next to these lands, and it extends far inland from its front on the Pontic end all the way to the Illyrians. Where it extends its lateral borders, Thrace is contiguous with the Ister and Our Sea. The region is favorable neither in its climate nor in its soil, and except where it is closer to the sea, it is infertile, cold, and quite intolerant of cultivated plants. It rarely ever sustains a fruit-bearing tree but rather commonly sustains the vine. The fruit of the vine, however, does not ripen and soften except where the cultivators have stopped the cold by heaping leaves around them. It nourishes men in more kindly fashion, but not for their physical appearance. Indeed, their bodily condition is rough and unbecoming but is especially conducive to fierceness and population size, since they are both numerous and merciless.
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§ 2.17 It lets few rivers go through to the sea, but the most famous ones it lets through are the Hebrus, the Nestos, and the Strymon. The interior throws up mountains — Mt. Haemos, Mt. Rhodope, and Mt. Orbelos, all very well known for the sacred rituals of Father Liber and for the gathering of maenads that Orpheus instituted. Of these three, the Haemos rises so high that it gives views of both the Euxine and the Adriatic Seas from its very peak.
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§ 2.18 The Thracians inhabit the land, one people, although they are furnished with a variety of names and customs. Some Thracians — and certainly the Getae — are wild and absolutely prepared to die. A range of belief brings this readiness into being. Some individuals think that the souls of the dead will return; others think that even if they do not return, souls still are not obliterated but go to a happier place; still others think that souls do perish absolutely but that dying is better than living. Therefore childbirth is mourned among certain Thracians, and newborns are wept over. Funerals, in contrast, are festive and are celebrated, just like their sacred rites, with singing and gamboling.
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§ 2.19 Not even in the case of women does the mind shirk its duty. They consider it the greatest obligation to be killed over the corpses of their dead husbands and to be buried along with them. Because individual men have several wives at once, their wives compete in a great contest to be the one to have this honor, and they compete before those who will make the decision. It suits their mores and is a special source of joy when there is a struggle to be supreme in this contest.
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§ 2.20 Other women raise the lament with their keening and raise their voices in the most bitter lamentations. But those who have a mind to console them bring their weapons and wealth to the funeral pyre, and these same individuals are prepared, as they say over and over again, either to bargain with or to fight with the destiny of the dead man in case it is up to them; when there is no room for fighting or money, [...].
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§ 2.21 Virgins worthy of marriage are not given to their husbands by their parents. Instead, they either are publicly displayed as ready for marriage or else are put up for sale. The explanation for the choice of procedure rests on appearance and character. Upright, beautiful women are prized; men with money seek out all the others for a price. The use of wine is unknown to some Thracians, but a hilarity like drunkenness comes over them from the smoke at banquets when certain seeds are thrown onto the fires as they sit around them.
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§ 2.22 On the seacoast, HIstropolis lies beside the Ister; next Callatis, colonized by the Milesians; then Tomoe, Caria Port, and Cape Tiristis. The second angle of the Pontus receives those who go past this promontory — that is, the angle opposite to the one by the Phasis River and like it but fuller. Here was Bizone, which collapsed in an earthquake. Here are the port of Crunos and the cities of Dionysopolis, Odessos, Messembria, and Anchialos, as well as the great Apollonia in the deepest part of the bay, right where the Pontus finishes its second bend with an angle.
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§ 2.23 From here the shoreline is straight except that more or less in the middle it extends into a promontory, which they call Thynias. In contradistinction, the coast continues with its uncurved shores, and it supports the cities of Halmydesos, Philiae, and Phinopolis. That is as far as the Pontus goes.
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§ 2.24 After that come the Bosphorus and Propontis; on the Bosphorus is Byzantion, and on the Propontis, Selymbria, Perinthos, and Bytinis. The rivers that flow among these places are the Erginos and Atyras. At that point comes the part of Thrace once ruled by Rhessus, then Samian Bisanthe, and once-mighty Cypsela. Farther on is the place the Greeks call Macron Teichos, as well as Lysimachia, sitting at the base of the great peninsula.
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§ 2.25 The land that follows never runs to much width and is very constricted here between the Hellespont and the Aegean. They call the narrow part Isthmos, its forward part Mastusia, and the whole Chersonesus, which is famous for many reasons.
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§ 2.26 On it is the Aegos river, remarkable because of the destruction of the Attic fleet. Sestos is there too, opposite Abydos, and is very well known for the love of Leander. That is also the region where the Persian army dared to join by bridges lands that were separated by space and sea. An amazing and mighty deed! It crossed from Asia to Greece on foot and crossed the sea without sailing on it. The bones of Protesilaus have been consecrated there with a shrine. Here too is Port Coelus, remarkable for the destruction of the Laconian fleet when the Athenians and Lacedemonians clashed in naval battle. Here is Cynos Sema, the tomb of Hecuba, acquiring this humble name either from the figure of the dog into which she reportedly was changed or else from the misfortune into which she had fallen. Here is Madytos, and here Eleus, which ends the Hellespont.
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§ 2.27 The long shore immediately thrusts along the Aegean Sea for a considerable distance, and in a great, gentle ambit from here to what is called Cape Sounion it goes around land that is swept back from its path. Those who sail this stretch and round Mastusia have to enter a gulf that flows onto the other side of the Thracian Chersonesus and is enclosed by a mountain ridge just like a valley. The gulf is called Melas after the river it takes in, and it embraces two cities, Alopeconnesus and Cardia, which is situated on the far side of the Isthmus.
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§ 2.28 Aenos, which was founded by Aeneas in exile, is an exceptional place. The Cicones are found around the Hebrus River, and on its far side is Doriscos, where they say Xerxes measured his troops by space, because he could not do so by number. After that is Cape Serrhion and Zone, where even the groves, according to the story, followed the singing Orpheus. At that point come the Sthenos River and Maroneia lying on its banks.
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§ 2.29 The farther region bore Diomedes. He used to throw strangers to be eaten by his monstrous horses, and he was thrown, once and for all, to those same horses by Hercules. What they call the Tower of Diomedes remains as evidence of the legend, and so too the city of Abdera. which his sister named after herself. That city, however, has something else to be remembered for, namely, that it gave birth to Democritus the natural philosopher, rather than that it was founded in this way.
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§ 2.30 Farther on, the Nestos River flows, and between it and the Strymon are the cities of Philippi, Apollonia, and Amphipolis; between the Strymon and Athos is the Tower of Calarnaea, the port of Capru Limen, and the cities of Acanthus and Echinia; between Athos and Pallene are the cities of Kleonai and Olynthos. The Strymon, as we have said, is a river. It begins far away, where it is a rivulet, but becomes fuller now and then from waters that originate elsewhere. After the river forms a lake not far from the sea, it then rushes into the sea from a bed greater than the one it had come down with.
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§ 2.31 Mt. Athos is so tall that it is believed to be even higher than the place from which the rains fall. The idea gets credibility because ashes do not wash off the altars that it has on its peak but remain on the mound where they are left. The mountain, however, proceeds to the sea not by a spur, as some say, but with its whole long ridge.
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§ 2.32 Where it clings to the continent, it was excavated and then sailed across by Xerxes when he was invading Greece, and it is still traversable by a navigable strait. Small colonies of Pelasgians occupy the foot of the mountain. On its summit was the town of Acrothoon, where, as they tell it, the life of the inhabitants was longer by half than it was in other lands.
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§ 2.33 Pallene has so much open land that it is the seat and territory of five cities; the whole peninsula extends into the sea even though it is quite narrow where it begins. Potidaea is located there, but where it is broader, Mende and Scione need mention. Mende was founded by the Eretrians, Scione by the Achaeans as they were returning after the capture of Troy.
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§ 2.34 Then the Macedonian peoples inhabit a number of cities, of which Pelle is especially renowned, Its native sons create this reputation — Philip the conqueror of Greece and Alexander, too, the conqueror of Asia. On the coast, Megyberna Bay, between Points Deris and Canastraion, goes around both the port of Cophos and the cities of Torone and Myscella, as well as Megyberna (whence the bay's name).
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§ 2.35 Sane is next to Point Canastraion; in the middle, where the land folds in, Megyberna Bay cuts moderately into the shoreline. However that may be, the huge Thermaic Gulf, with its long sides, extends well into the sea. The Axius River runs through Macedon into this gulf, and at this point so does the Peneus through Thessalian territory. Thessalonice comes before reaching the Axius, and between these two places are Cassandria, Cydna, Aloros, and Itharis. From the Peneus to Point Sepias are Corynthya, Meliboea, and Castanea, all equally famous except that Philoctetes, its native son, ennobles Meliboea.
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§ 2.36 The lands of the interior, famed for the names of its localities, produce almost nothing that is not well known. Not far from here is Olympus; Pelion is here; so is Ossa — all mountains remembered for the fabled War of the Giants. Here is Pieria, both the mother of the Muses and their home. Here is the ground last tramped by the Greek Hercules, the defile of Mt. Oita. Here is Tempe, well known for its sacred grove, and Libethra, the fountain of songs.
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§ 2.37 At that point Greece now projects very much on a grand scale. As far as it borders on the Myrtoan Sea, Greece, extending from north to south, faces the sunrise over the Aegean's waves and sunset over those of the Ionian Sea. Also, the land, quite wide at first and called Hellas, goes forward with a considerable coastline; then it is virtually cut more or less in half as both seas — but the Ionian Sea more — invade its lateral coastlines to the point that Hellas is four miles wide.
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§ 2.38 From there again, with the land mass widening both to the near and the far side and going farther down into the sea, Greece is not as wide as it had begun, but nevertheless it is of great size again and extends as a virtual peninsula. It is called the Peloponnesos, and at the same time, because of the bays and promontories, by which it is incised as if by veins, it is similar to the leaf of a plane tree, because it spreads rather widely from a slender stem.
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§ 2.39 After Macedonia, first comes Thessaly, and after it Magnesia, Phthiotis, Doris, Locris, Phocis, Boeotia, Atthis, and the Megarid; but most famous of all is Atthis. In the Peloponnesos are Argolis, Laconice, Messenia, Achaian Elis, and Arcadia; farther on are Aitolia, Acarnania, and Epiros, all the way to the Adriatic.
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§ 2.40 Of the places and cities that the sea does not wash up on, the following are the ones especially worth remembering: in Thessaly nowadays Larissa is best known, but in the old days Iolcos was; in Magnesia, Antronia; in Phthiotis, Phthia; [...]; in Locris, Cynos and Calliaros; in Phocis, Delphi, Mt. Parnassos, and both the shrine and the oracle of Apollo; in Boeotia, Thebes and Mt. Cithaeron, which is celebrated in song and legend.
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§ 2.41 In Atthis, Eleusis, which is sacred to Ceres, and Athens, more famous than needs to be pointed out; in the Megarid, Megara, from which the region takes its name; likewise, in the Argolid, Argos, along with Mycenae and the temple of Juno, which is very famous for its antiquity and for its cult; in Laconice, Therapnae, Lacedemon, Amyclae, and Mt. Taygetus; in Messenia, Messenia and Methone.
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§ 2.42 In Achaia and Elis, once the Pisa of Oinomaus, Elis, still famous today, and the shrine of Olympian Jupiter, known mainly in fact, for its athletic competition and unique inviolability but also for the actual statue that is the work of Phidias.
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§ 2.43 The Peloponnesian peoples ring Arcadia on all sides; in Arcadia are the cities of Psophis, Tegea, and Orchomenos, along with Mt Pholoe, Mt. Cyllene, Mt. Parthenius, and Mt. Maenalus and the Erymanthus and Ladon Rivers; in Aitolia, the town of Naupactos; in Acarnania, that of Stratos; in Epirus, the temple of Jupiter Dodonaeus and likewise the sacred spring. Although this spring is cold, and although like all other springs it extinguishes burning torches that are immersed in it, it lights them up again when from afar they are moved, unlit, toward it.
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§ 2.44 When, however, one coasts along the shores, the course after Point Sepias lies beside Demetrias, Halos, Pteleon, and Echinos, to the Gulf of Pagasa. That gulf, embracing the city of Pagasae, takes in the Sperchios River and is remembered because the Minyans launched the Argo from there when they left for Colchis.
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§ 2.45 The following places must first be passed by those sailing from there to Sounion: the sizable Gulf of Malia and equally sizable Opuntian Gulf, and on these gulfs the monument to the Laconian war-dead; Thermopylae, Opous, Scarphia, Cnemides, Alope, Anthedon, Larumna, and Aulis, the camp of Agamemnon's fleet and the Greeks who swore allegiance against Troy; Marathon, the witness of numerous heroic acts right from Theseus on but especially known for the slaughter of the Persians;
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§ 2.46 Rhamnus, small but still renowned, because in it is the shrine of Amphiaraus and the Nemesis by Phidias; then Thoricos and Brauronia, once cities, now mere names. Sounion is a promontory and terminates the coast of Hellas that faces east.
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§ 2.47 From there the land mass rotates to face south and goes back up as far as Megara; the land lies now with its front to the sea, the same way it did previously with its side. Piraeus, Athens' port, is there, as well as the Scironian Rocks, infamous once upon a time (and even today) for Sciron's savage hospitality.
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§ 2.48 Megara's territory runs up to the Isthmos, which gets its name because the Aegean Sea, being at a remove of four miles from the Ionian Sea, ties the Peloponnesos to Hellas by a narrow neck of land. On it is the town of Cenchreae; a temple of Neptune, which is renowned because of the so-called Isthmian Games; and Corinth, a city once famous for its wealth, better known later for its destruction, and now a Roman colony. Corinth has a view of both seas from the peak of the acropolis they call Acrocorinth.
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§ 2.49 Bays and promontories mangle the coast of the Peloponnesos, as we have noted: from the east, Bucephalos, Chersonessus, and Scyllaeon; to the south, Malea, Taenaros, Acritas, and Ichthys; to the west, Chelonates and Araxos. The Epidaurians and Troezenians live between the Isthmos and Scyllaeon. The Epidaurians are famous for the temple of Aesculapius, the Troezenians glorious for their loyalty to an alliance with Athens.
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§ 2.50 The Saronic Gulf and the Gulfs of Schoenos and Pogon are located there, but on their shores are the towns of Epidaurus, Troezene, and Hermione. Between Scyllaeon and Malea is the so-called Gulf of Argolis; between Malea and Taenaros, the Laconian Gulf; between Taenaros and Akritas, the Gulf of Asine; between Akritas and Ichthys, the Gulf of Cyparissos
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§ 2.51 On the Argolic Gulf are the well-known Erasinus and Inachus Rivers and the well-known town of Lerna; on the Laconian Gulf are Gythium and the Eurotas; on Cape Taenaros itself is a temple and a cave of Neptune, similar in appearance and legend to what we called the Acherusian Cave on the Pontus, in the Gulf of Asine is the Pamisus River; on the Gulf of Cyparissos is the Alpheus River. A city located on the shore gave its name to these gulfs — Cyparissos to the latter, Asine to the former.
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§ 2.52 The Messenians and Pylians till the land, and Pylos actually lies beside the sea. Cyllene, Callipolis, and Patrae occupy that shore where the Chelonates and Araxos Rivers have their outlets, but Cyllene is distinguished because they think Mercury was born there. After that, the Rhion — that is the sea's name there — cuts, by means of a narrow passage like a strait, into the side of the remaining shoreline and breaks in between the Aitolians and the Peloponnesians as far as the Isthmos.
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§ 2.53 There the Peloponnesian littoral starts to face north. On these shores are Aegion, Aegira, Olyros, and Sikyon, but on the opposite shores are Pagae, Creusis, Anticyra, Oianthia, Cirrha, Calydon (somewhat better known by name), and Evenos beyond Rhion. In Acarnania, which is especially famous, are the town of Leucas and the Achelous River.
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§ 2.54 In Epiros nothing is better known than the Ambracian Gulf. The gulf, which lets in a great sea through its narrow jaws (less than a mile wide), makes it well known, as do the cities that line its shore — Actium, the Amphilochian Argives, and Ambracia, the royal seat of the Aeacids and of Pyrrhus in particular. Beyond is Butroton, then the Ceraunian Mountains, and after these places a bend toward the Adriatic.
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§ 2.55 The Adriatic Sea is formed by a great retraction of the littoral and in fact covers a considerable breadth, although it reaches considerably farther in. It is surrounded by Illyric peoples as far as Tergeste, but then by the Gallic and Italic peoples. The Partheni and Dasaretae occupy its first places; the Taulantii, Encheleae, and Phaeaces occupy what follows.
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§ 2.56 After that come the Illyrii proper, then the Piraeans, Liburnians, and Istria. The first city is Oricum, the second Dyrrachium, where Epidamnus used to be. (The Romans changed the name, because travelers headed there thought of the name as an omen, as if they were going "to damnation.")
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§ 2.57 Farther on are Apollonia, Salona, Iader, Narona, Tragurium, the Gulf of Pola, and Pola, which was once inhabited, as they tell it, by Colchians. How much things change! Now Pola is a Roman colony. Moreover, the rivers are the Aeas, the Nar, and the Danube (which here is called the Ister); but the Aeas comes after Apollonia, and the Nar comes between the Piraeans and the Liburnians, while the Ister runs through the territory of the Istrians. Tergeste, located in the deepest part of the Adriatic Gulf, is the boundary of Illyricum.
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§ 2.58 ITALY
About Italy a few things will be said, more because the order requires it than because it needs to be described. All its places are well known. From the Alps it begins its extension into the sea, and as it proceeds it is elevated down the middle by the continuous ridge of the Apennines. Italy runs down solid for a long time between the Adriatic and Tuscan Seas (also known as the Upper and Lower Seas). But when it is far removed from its beginning, it divides into two horns, and it looks off toward the Sicilian Sea with one horn, toward the Ionian Sea with the other. Italy as a whole is narrow, and in some places much narrower than where it had begun.
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§ 2.59 Various peoples cultivate its interior. The Carni and Veneti cultivate the left part up to Gallia Togata; then come Italic peoples — Picentines, Frentani, Dauni, Apulians, Calabri, and Sallentines. To the right, at the foot of the Alps, are the Ligurians; at the foot of the Apennines, Etruria; after that, Latium, the Volsci, Campania, and, below Lucania, the Bruttii.
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§ 2.60 Of the cities that are inhabited far from the sea, the wealthiest are, to the left side, Antenor's Patavium, Mutina, and Bononia, colonies of the Romans; to the right, Capua, founded by the Tuscans, and Rome, long ago founded by shepherds, now a second book in itself if there is to be discussion on the topic.
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§ 2.61 On the shores, by contrast, Concordia is next after Tergeste. Between them flows the Timavus, which rises from nine heads but debouches through a single mouth. Then, not far from the sea, the Natiso River runs beside rich Aquileia. Farther on is Altinum.
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§ 2.62 The Padus occupies the upper coast over a considerable expanse. In fact, where it rises from the very roots of Mt. Vesulus, it first gathers itself from small springs and is somewhat scant and meager. Then the river increases and is fed by other rivers so much that at the end it lets into the sea through seven mouths. One of these mouths they call the Great Padus.
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§ 2.63 Once it begins, the river rushes forward with such speed that for a long time it drives, with waves breaking, the same waters it began with and preserves its own bed even in the sea until the Ister River, flowing in with the same force from the opposite shore of Istria, meets it. Because of this phenomenon, for those sailing through that vicinity, where the rivers meet from both sides, a drink of fresh water is possible in the midst of salty sea.
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§ 2.64 The route from the Padus to Ancona crosses Ravenna, Ariminum, Pisaurum, the colony of Fanum, the Metaurus River, and the Aesis River. And in fact, the terminus sits in the narrow joint — like a bent elbow — of those two famous promontories that meet there from opposite sides, and thus it was called Ancon by the Greeks; Ancona lies between the Gallic and Italic peoples like a boundary stone.
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§ 2.65 The shores of Picenum welcome travelers beyond this point. On these shores are the cities of Numana, Potentia, Cluana, and Cupra and, moreover, the strongholds of Firmum, Adria, and Truentinum (the adjacent river is also its namesake). After that, the Frentani hold the mouths of the Matrinus and Aternus Rivers, as well as the cities of Buca and Histonium. The Daunians, however, have the Tifernus River and the towns of Cliternia, Larinum, and Teanum, as well as Mt. Garganus.
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§ 2.66 A bay by the name of Urias, moderate in size but often harsh of access, is surrounded by the continuous Apulian shore. It is above both Sipontum — or, as the Greeks said, Sipiuntum — and the river contiguous with Canusium, the Aufidus as they call it; after that are Barium, Gnatia, and Rudiae, renowned for Ennius; and at this point in Calabria are Brundisium, Valetium, Lupiae, and Mt. Hydrus, then the Sallentine Fields, the coast of Sallentum, and the Greek city Callipolis.
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§ 2.67 The Adriatic reaches this far; so does one side of Italy. Its coast-line breaks into two horns, in fact, as we have said. It lets the sea enter between both horns, however, and divides it several times by slender promontories. The coast does not go around, then, with a uniform edge, and it receives the sea not spread out and wide open but in bays.
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§ 2.68 The first one is called the Tarentine Gulf of Tarentum, between the promontory of the Salentines and Point Lacinium, and on it are Tarentus, Metapontum, Heraclea, Croton, and Thurium. Second is the Bay of Scyllaceum, between Point Lacinium and Zephyr Point, and on this bay is Petelia, Carcinus, Scyllaceum, and Mystiae. The third one, between Zephyr Point and Bruttium, passes around Bruttium, Consentia, Caulonia, and Locri. In Bruttium are Columna Rhegia, Rhegium, Scylla, Taurianum, and Metaurum.
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§ 2.69 From here there is a bend to the Tuscan Sea and the second side of the same land. On this side of Italy are Medma, Hipponium (or Vibo), Temesa, Clampetia, Blanda, Buxentum, Velia, Palinurus (once the name of a Trojan helmsman, now the name of a place), the Paestan Gulf, the town of Paestum, the Silerus River, Picentia, the Petrae (rocks) which the Sirens once inhabited, the promontory of Minerva — all places in Lucania;
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§ 2.70 then the Bay of Puteoli, Syrrentum, Herculaneum, a view of Mt. Vesuvius, Pompeii, Neapolis, Puteoli, the Lucrine Lake and Avernus, Baiae, Misenum (the name of a place now, but once the name of a Phrygian soldier), Cumae, Liternum, the Volturnus River, the town of Volturnum — the lovely shores of Campania;
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§ 2.71 then Sinoessa, the Liris River, Minturnae, Formiae, Fundi, Tarracina, Circeia (once the home of Circe), Antium, Aphrodisium, Ardea, Laurentum, and Ostia on the near side of the Tiber.
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§ 2.72 Above it are Pyrgi, the Minio River, Castrum Novum, Graviscae, Cosa, Telamon, Populonia, the Caecina River, and Pisae — Etruscan localities and rivers; after that comes what belongs to the Ligurians, Luna, Tigula, Genua, Sabatia, and Albingaunum; then come the rivers Paulo and Varum, both descending from the Alps, but the Varum somewhat better known because it marks the boundary of Italy.
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§ 2.73 The Alps themselves spread over a considerable expanse from these shores and run in a long stretch, first to the north; then, after they have reached Germany, they go forth with an eastward thrust; and after dividing savage peoples from one another, they penetrate all the way to Thrace.
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§ 2.74 GAUL
Gaul, which is divided by Lake Lemannus and the Cebennici Mountains into two parts, and which abuts the Tuscan Sea on one side, the Ocean on the other, reaches all the way to the Pyrenees from the Varum River on this side and from the Rhenus on the far side. The part located beside Our Sea — it was once Gallia Bracata, now it is Gallia Narbonensis — is more cultivated and more plentifully sown and therefore also more productive.
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§ 2.75 The wealthiest of the cities are Vasio (belonging to the Vocontii), Vienne (the Allobroges), Avennio (the Cavares), Nemausus (the Arecomici), Tolosa (the Tectosages), Arausio (the veterans of Legion II), Arelate (the veterans of Legion VI), and Beterrae (the veterans of Legion VII). The colony, however, of the Atacini and of the veterans of Legion X (who once brought help to these lands) leads the pack and is now an honored name, Martius Narbo.
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§ 2.76 On the littoral there are a number of places with names, but cities are rare, because harbors are rare. The whole strip is exposed to the south wind and to the Southwest wind. Nicaea is immediately next to the Alps; so is the town of the Deciates and also Antipolis.
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§ 2.77 Then comes Forum Iulii, a colony of veterans from Legion VIII; and at that point after Athenopolis, Olbia, Taurois , and Citharistes comes Lacydon, the port of Massilia, on which is Massilia itself. This last city originated with Phocaeans, was long ago founded among violent peoples, but now borders on peoples as different as they are peaceful. It is amazing how easily these Phocaeans took up a foreign abode in those days yet still maintain their own tradition.
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§ 2.78 Between it and the Rhodanus, Maritima Avaticorum sits beside a marsh, and the Marian Canal empties part of its river into the sea by means of a navigable channel. In general, the shore, Litus Lapideum as they call it, is undistinguished. Here, they report, while Hercules was fighting Alebion and Dercynus, the sons of Neptune, and when his arrows had run out, he was helped by a rain of rocks at the hands of Jupiter, whom he had invoked. You would believe that it had rained rocks — so numerously and so widely do they lie scattered all over!
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§ 2.79 The Rhodanus rises not far from the sources of the Ister and the Rhenus. It is then received by Lake Lemannus, retains its force, keeps itself intact through the middle of the lake, and emerges as powerful as it arrived. Then, on the opposite side, heading to the west, the river divides the Gauls for some distance; and later, with its course drawn southward, it enters Gallia Narbonensis. At this point it is voluminous, and it is now and then even more voluminous from the entrance of other rivers; and it debouches between the Volcan and Cavaran peoples.
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§ 2.80 Farther on are the marshes of the Volci, the Ledum River, the fort of Latara, and Mesua Hill, which is surrounded almost completely by the sea, an island except where it is tied to the continent by a narrow mound. Then, descending from the Cebennae Mountains, the Arauris flows beside Agatha, the Orbis beside Beterrae.
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§ 2.81 The Atax, descending from the Pyrenees, is slight and shallow wherever it comes with its original waters. At this point it retains its otherwise huge bed but is never navigable except when it reaches Narbo. When it is swollen from winter storms, however, this river routinely rises so high that it actually cannot contain itself. Lake Rubraesus, relatively spacious but slight of access where it lets the sea in, becomes the river basin.
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§ 2.82 Farther on is Leucata (the name of the coast) and the spring of Salsula, which flows down with waters that are not sweet but saltier than the sea's. Beside Salsula is a plain that is bright green from a slight and slender marsh grass but supported atop the swamp that passes under it. Its middle section makes that clear, since it is cut off from the surrounding parts, floats like an island, and allows itself to be driven and pulled.
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§ 2.83 What is more, indeed, where these surrounding parts are dug all the way through to the bottom, the sea is revealed because it rises up from below. As a result, Greek writers, and even our own, thought it right, either from ignorance of the truth or else from the pleasure of lying (even for sensible writers), to pass on to posterity the story that in this region a fish was pulled from deep within the earth, because after the fish had penetrated from the sea to this place, it was killed by a blow from its captors and brought up through those holes.
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§ 2.84 Next is the coast of the Sordones and the small Telis and Ticis Rivers (both quite violent when swollen), the colony of Ruscino, and the village of Eliberrae, which is the slender vestige of a once-great city and its once-great wealth. Then, between spurs of the Pyrenees, come the saltless Port Venus and the district of Cervaria, the boundary of Gaul.
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§ 2.85 SPAIN
The Pyrenees, to begin with, extend from here to the Britannic Ocean. Then, after shifting direction, the range bursts into the lands of Spain, and excluded from its smaller division to the right, it protracts its continuous sides in an uninterrupted path until it reaches the western shores after going across the entire province in a single dividing line.
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§ 2.86 Spain actually is girt by the sea except where it is contiguous with Gaul, and it is especially narrow at the places of contact. Spain extends gradually into Our Sea and Ocean, and becoming increasingly wider the farther west it goes, it becomes widest right there. Spain is also teeming with men, horses, iron, lead, copper, silver, and gold, and it is so fertile that wherever it changes and is barren for lack of water, it still supports flax or esparto.
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§ 2.87 It is, however, distinguished by three names. Part of it is called Tarraconensis, part Baetica, and part Lusitania. Tarraconensis borders on the Gauls at one extreme, on Baetica and Lusitania at the other. Where it looks south, it thrusts its sides along Our Sea; where it looks north, along Ocean. The Anas River separates the other two regions there, and thus Baetica faces both seas — the Atlantic to the west, Our Sea to the south — while Lusitania is situated only along the Atlantic, but with its lateral extension to the north, its front to the west.
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§ 2.88 The most renowned of the inland cities in Tarraconensis were Palantia and Numantia (nowadays it is Caesaraugusta); in Lusitania, Emerita; and in Baetica, Astigi, Hispalis, and Corduba.
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§ 2.89 If, however, you coast along the shores, right after Cervaria comes the cliff that thrusts the Pyrenees out into the sea, next the Ticis River near Rhoda, next Clodianum near Emporiae, and then Mt. Jupiter. They call its western face the Stairs of Hannibal, because outcroppings of cliffs rise up from below, stepwise, between small spaces.
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§ 2.90 Then, near Tarraco, are the small towns of Blande, Iluro, Baetulo, Barcino, Subur, and Tolobi; small rivers, the Baetulo beside Mt. Jupiter, the Rubricatum on the shore of Barcino, and the Maius between Subur and Tolobi. Tarraco is the city on these shores that is wealthiest in maritime resources. The moderate Tulcis River runs beside it, and on the farther side, the mighty Hiberus runs beside Dertosa.
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§ 2.91 From there the sea winds its way into the land, and then as soon as it is let in with a great sweep, it is divided into two bays by the promontory they call Ferraria.
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§ 2.92 The first is called the Bay of Sucro. It is the larger one and admits the sea with quite a large mouth, but the farther one enters it, the narrower it gets. This bay takes in the unimportant Sorobis, Turia, and Sucro Rivers. It includes some cities too, in fact, but the best-known are Valentia and that famous city, Saguntum, which is renowned for its loyalty as well as its troubles.
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§ 2.93 Next, the Bay of Ilice holds Allo, Lucentia, and Ilice (whence its name). Here now the land goes farther into the sea and makes Spain broader than it had been.
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§ 2.94 At the same time, though, from the places mentioned in this vicinity to the starting point of Baetica, nothing needs to be reported except Carthage, which the Carthaginian general Hasdrubal founded. On Baetica's coast there are obscure towns, of which mention is relevant only for proper sequence. There is Urei on the Bay of Urei, as they call it; outside the bay are Abdera, Suel, Ex, Maenoba, Malaca, Salduba, Lacippo, and Barbesula.
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§ 2.95 Then the sea becomes very narrow, and mountains constitute the closest shores between Europe and Africa. The Pillars of Hercules, as we said at the beginning, Abila and Calpes, each jut into the sea in fact, but Calpes more so and almost totally. Calpes is hollowed out to an amazing degree, and on its western face its side opens more or less halfway. From there, for those who enter, the whole grotto is reasonably passable for almost its whole width.
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§ 2.96 There is a bay beyond that point, and on it is Carteia. Carteia, some think, used to be Tartessos. Tingentera, which Phoenicians who crossed from Africa still inhabit — and where we're from too — is located there. Then Melaria, Bello, and Baesippo occupy the shore of the Strait all the way to Point Juno. At this stage that promontory runs to the west and to Ocean with a sidewise ridge, and it faces that promontory in Africa that we had said was called Ampelusia. It terminates Europe where Our Seas are situated.
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§ 2.97 ISLANDS
The island of Gades, which meets travelers as they exit the Strait, is a reminder to mention all the other islands before the narrative proceeds, as we promised at the beginning, to the shores of Ocean and the earth's periphery. There are a few islands in Maeotis — it seems easiest to begin there — but they are not all under cultivation, since they do not produce even range grass generously. That is the reason the meat of huge fish is dried by the inhabitants in the sun and ground to a powder for use as flour.
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§ 2.98 There are a few islands in the Pontus also. Leuce is thrust up opposite the mouth of the Borysthenes. It is relatively small and, because Achilles is buried there, has the eponym of Achillea. Not far from the Colchians is Aria, which was dedicated to Mars, as told in legend, and which produced birds that hurled their feathers like spears — along with the greatest carnage of newcomers. There are six islands among the mouths of the Ister, of which Peuce is the best known and most important. Thynias, next to the land of the Mariandyni, has a city that they call Bithynis because Bithynians live there.
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§ 2.99 Opposite the Thracian Bosphorus, two islands that are small and scarcely removed from one another were once believed, and said, to crash together: they are called Cyaneae and Symplegades. In the Propontis, only Proconnesos is inhabited.
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§ 2.100 Outside the Hellespont, of the islands adjacent to the Asiatic regions, the most renowned are Tenedos, opposite the coast of Sigeum, and — in the order listed — those islands that spread out near the spur of the Taurus Mountains, and which some authors thought were called the Macaron, either because they were moderately blessed in climate and soil, or because Macar had held them under his own sway and that of his descendants:
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§ 2.101 In the Troad, Lesbos and on it once the five towns of Antissa, Pyrrha, Eresos, Methymna, Mytilene; in Ionia, Chios and Samos; in Caria, Cos; in Lycia, Rhodes. On the latter islands there are individual cities of the same name, and on Rhodes in the past there were, as well, the three cities of Lindos, Camiros, and Ialysos.
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§ 2.102 Those islands that lie — unluckily for those sailing by — directly opposite the spur of the Taurus Range are called Chelidonian. Cyprus runs in an east-west direction into the biggest gulf that Asia takes in, and it lies more or less in its center. It stretches in a straight ridge between Cilicia and Syria, and as an island that at one time held nine kingdoms and now sustains a number of cities (the most renowned being Salamis, Paphos, and Old Paphos, where they claim Venus first emerged from the sea), Cyprus is huge.
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§ 2.103 Arados is a small island in Phoenicia, and the whole island is coast-to-coast town, but it is a crowded town, because it is legal to build apartment buildings. Canopos is small and lies before the so-called Canopic mouth of the Nile. Menelaus' helmsman Canopus died there accidentally, and he gave his name to the island, which then gave its name to that mouth.
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§ 2.104 Pharos is linked to Alexandria by a bridge now, but once upon a time, as transmitted in the Homeric epic, it was removed from those shores by a whole day's sail. If that was the case, it seems possible to researchers that the Nile provided the cause for such a great change. As long as the river dredges silt from its bed, and especially during the period while the river is dredging it up, the Nile adds the silt to the shoreline, increases the land mass, and extends the area of the increasing land mass into the neighboring shallows.
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§ 2.105 In Africa, opposite the greater Bay of Syrtis, is Euteletos; opposite the promontories of the lesser Syrtis are Meninx and Cercina; opposite the Gulf of Carthage are Chyarae, Thylae, and Aegatae, memorable for the bloody Roman defeat.
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§ 2.106 Several additional islands are located off the shores of Europe: in the Aegean Sea near Thrace are Thasos, Imbros, Samothrace, Scandile, Polyaegos, Sciathos, Halonessos, and — opposite Mt. Athos- Lemnos, where at one time only women are said to have lived, after all the men had been slaughtered. The Gulf of Pagasa looks on Scyros and encloses Cicynethos.
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§ 2.107 Euboea causes Point Geraestus and Point Caphereus to protrude southward and Point Kenaion northward. Euboea is never wide and has a breadth of two miles where it is narrowest, but it is long and lies along the whole of Boeotia, separated from its coastline by a narrow strait.
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§ 2.108 They call that strait Euripos. It has a swift current and flows in alternating directions seven times a day and seven times a night, with its waves changing direction too, it flows so unusually that it frustrates even the winds as well as ships with the wind to their backs. There are some towns on the island, namely, Styra, Eretria, Pyrrha, Nesos, and Oichalia. but the wealthiest cities are Carystos and Chalkis.
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§ 2.109 In Atthis. Helene is the isle known for the adultery of Helen, and Salamis is even better known for the destruction of the Persian fleet. In the vicinity of the Peloponnesos, but still at this point on the Aegean side, are Pityussa and Aigina; off the coast of Epidaurus, among other obscure islands, Calauria, famous for Demosthenes' demise at Troizene.
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§ 2.110 In the Myrtoan Sea, Cythera opposite Malea, as well as Theganusa and the isles of Oinussae opposite Mt. Acritas; on the Ionian Sea, Prote, Asteria, Cephallania, Neritos, Same, Zacynthos, Dulichium, and, among those not obscure, Ithaca, which is mainly illustrious for the name of Ulysses; in Epiros, the Echinades group and another group formerly called the Plotae, now called the Strophades; opposite the Ambracian Gulf, Leucadia and, bordering on the Adriatic Sea, Corcyra. These islands lie near the coasts of Thrace and Greece.
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§ 2.111 By contrast, farther out to sea are Melos, Olearos, Aegilia, Cothon, Ius, Thia, Thera, Gyaros, Hippuris, Donysa, Cythnos, Chalcis, Icaria, Cinara, Nisyros, Lebinthos, Calymnia, and Syme. These islands are called the Sporades, because they are scattered, but Ceos, Sicinos, Siphnos, Seriphos, Rhenea, Paros, Myconos, Syros, Tenos, Naxos, Delos, and Andros are called the Cyclades, because they lie in a circle.
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§ 2.112 Beyond these islands, in the middle of the sea at this point, huge and once inhabited by a hundred cities, Crete extends Point Samonium to the east, to the west Criu Metopon. It is similar to Cyprus except bigger, and it is notorious for its many legends (the arrival of Europa, Pasiphae's and Ariadne's loves, the Minotaur's savagery and his death, the works of Daedalus and his escape. Talus' lookout and his death), but especially because the locals point out as the virtually unambiguous indication that Jupiter was buried there the tomb on which his name is engraved.
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§ 2.113 Its best-known cities are Cnossos, Gortyna, Lyctos, Lycastos, Olopyxos, Therapnae, Cydonea, Moratusa, and Dictynna, Among its hills, because we are told that Jupiter was born there, Mt Ida's tradition is preeminent.
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§ 2.114 Off the coast of Crete are the islands of Astypalaea, Naumachos, Zephyre, Chryse, Caudos and those three they nevertheless call by one name, Musagorus; and Carpathos, whence the Carpathian Sea gets its name. In the Adriatic are Apsoros, Dyscelados, Absyrtis, Issa, Titana, Hydria, Electrides, Black Corcyra, Linguarum, Diomedia, Aestria, Asine, and Pharos, which lies beside the coast of Brundisium, just as that other Pharos lies beside Alexandria.
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§ 2.115 Sicily was long ago, as they report, part of the continent and tied to Bruttium, but it was severed at a later time by the strait that belongs to the Sea of Sicily. That strait is narrow and moves in two directions. With one current it flows through to the Tuscan sea, with the other to the Ionian Sea. It is frightful, violent, and renowned for the savage names of Scylla and Charybdis. Scylla is a rock, Charybdis the sea. Both are deadly to those who are driven onto them. Sicily itself is huge, and running in different directions with its three promontories, it looks like the Greek letter called "delta."
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§ 2.116 The promontory that looks toward Greece is called Point Pachynum; Lilybaion the one that looks toward Africa; and Pelorias, the one that turns to and is opposite Scylla. Its namesake is the helmsman Pelorus, who was buried there by Hannibal When Hannibal, as a political refugee from Africa, was traveling through these regions to Syria, he had killed Pelorus because he thought Pelorus had betrayed him. His reason was that as he scanned the horizon from some distance, the shores seemed to him to be continuous. and the sea did not seem to be passable at all.
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§ 2.117 The shore that extends from Pelorias to Pachynum, bordering on the Ionian Sea, produces these illustrious places; Messana, Tauromenium, Catina, Megaris, Syracusa, and — a marvel in this last city — Arethusa. The Fountain of Arethusa is the one where objects reappear that are thrown into the Alpheus, a river — as we have said — that flows on the Peloponnesos. Because of this phenomenon, the fountain is believed not to be connected to the sea but to drive its bed this far and to rise again here after it has sunk below the surface of land and sea.
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§ 2.118 Between Pachynum and Lilybaion are Acragas, Heraclea, and Thermae; between Lilybaion and Pelorias are Panormus and Himera. Farther inland, to be sure, are Leontini, Centuripinum, Hybla, and several other cities. Henna has special fame because of the temple of Ceres.
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§ 2.119 Of the mountains, Eryx is mentioned mainly because of the sanctuary of Venus founded by Aeneas, Aetna because in olden times it bore the Cyclopes and nowadays burns with uninterrupted fire. Of the rivers, the Himera needs to be mentioned, because it rises exactly in the middle of the island and descends in opposite directions. On both sides that river divides the island. It comes down to the Libyan Sea on one side, to the Tuscan sea on the other.
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§ 2.120 Near Sicily, in the Sicilian Strait, is the island of Aeaee, which Calypso reportedly inhabited; toward Africa, Gaulos, Melita, and Cossura; nearer Italy, Galata and those seven that they call the Isles of Aeolus — Osteodes, Lipara, Heraclea, Didyma, Phoenicusa, and the two like Aetna, Hiera and Strongyle, which burn with uninterrupted flame.
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§ 2.121 But to move on, Pithecusa, Leucothea, Aenaria, Sidonia, Capreae, Prochyta, Pandateria, Sinonia, and Palmaria lie on the Italic coast on this side of the Tiber's mouth.
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§ 2.122 Farther on there are some small islands, Dianium, Carbania, Urgo, Ilva, as well as two large islands divided by a strait. Of these two, Corsica is nearer to the Etruscan coast. It is narrow between its lateral extensions but long, and it is cultivated by barbarians except around the colonies of Aleria and Mariana.
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§ 2.123 Sardinia, which also borders on the African Sea, is equal and squarish on all sides except that its western flank is narrower than its eastern, and it is nowhere any wider than Corsica is long. In other regards, Sardinia is fertile, has better soil than it does climate, and is almost as malarious as it is productive. Of its peoples the most ancient are the Ilienses; of its cities, Caralis and Sulci.
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§ 2.124 In Gaul, by contrast, the only islands fit to report are the Stoechades, which are scattered from the coast of Liguria all the way to Massilia. The Balearic Isles, located in Spain across from the coast of Tarraco, are not far from one another and are designated by size; the Greater Balearic Isles, and Lesser. The forts of Iamno are on the Lesser Balearic Isle; on the Greater Balearic are the colonies of Palma and Pollentia.
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§ 2.125 Near the promontory they call Ferraria in the Bay of Sucro, the isle of Ebusos has a city by the same name. Only for grain is it unproductive; it is rather bountiful for other crops. The island is so free of all harmful animals that it does not produce even those wild animals that are gentle, nor does it sustain them if they are imported.
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§ 2.126 Facing Ebusos is Colubraria, which it comes to mind to mention because, although the island is teeming with many a harmful breed of snake and is uninhabitable for that reason, it is still without danger and safe for anyone who enters within a space demarcated by a circle of dirt from Ebusos. Those same snakes that otherwise habitually attack people they meet stay far away from the sight of that dust — in terror — as if the sight were a kind of poison.
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§ 3.1 The coastline of Our Sea has been described now, and the islands it includes too. What is left is the periphery, as we said at the outset, that Ocean encircles. The huge and boundless sea is in motion, being stirred by great tides (that is what they call its movements). Sometimes it inundates fields; other times it strips them and runs back — not one field and another in turn, and not going back and forth between opposite coasts in alternating advances with full thrust, now on these fields, now on those. Instead, after it floods out from its center point equally onto all the shores of land and island, even though they lie in different directions, Ocean gathers itself back into its center point from those shores and returns to its original condition. It always moves with so much force that it even drives back great rivers and either sweeps away the creatures of the earth or else strands marine life there.
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§ 3.2 It is, moreover, not quite understood [a] whether the world causes that process by its own breathing and restores all around the water that has been pulled back with its breath — if, as pleases the more learned, the world is a single animate being — or [b] whether there are certain caves sunk below the surface where the returned waters reside and whence they rise up copiously again, or [c] whether the moon is the explanation of such great movements. The tides certainly vary with the moon's rising and setting, and we have ascertained that they ebb and flow, not regularly at the same moment, but as the moon waxes and wanes.
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§ 3.3 IBERIAN PENINSULA
The Atlantic and the line of Baetica's oceanfront receive those who travel this way and follow the right-hand coast. This coastline is virtually straight as far as the Anas River, except where it draws back gradually once or twice. The Turduli and Bastuli are its inhabitants.
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§ 3.4 In the nearest bay is a harbor they call the Port of Gades and a woods they call Wild-Olive Grove; then a fort, Ebora, on the coast; and far from the coast the colony of Hasta. On the coast again there is an altar and a temple of Juno, and on the sea itself, the Monument of Caepio, which is set on a cliff rather than an island.
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§ 3.5 The Baetis River, coming from the Tarraconensis region more or less through the middle of this one, runs down for a long time in a single stream, just as it originates. Later on, after it has made a large lake not far from the sea, a twin rises up as if from a new source, and the river flows on in separate beds as sizably as it had arrived in its single bed. Then a second bay curves all the way to the province's boundary, and the small towns of Olintigi, Onoba , and Laepa line it.
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§ 3.6 By contrast, on the other side of the Anas, where it faces the Atlantic Ocean, Lusitania at first goes on with a mighty thrust into the sea; then it stops and recedes farther than Baetica does.
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§ 3.7 Where it juts out, the coast spreads into three promontories, with the sea being received in two folds. The promontory beside the Anas is called Wedge Field, because it runs out from a wide base and gradually hones itself into a point; they call the second one Sacred Promontory and the one beyond it Great Point. On Wedge Field are Myrtili, Balsa , and Ossonoba ; on Sacred Promontory, Laccobriga and Port Hannibal; on Great Point, Ebora.
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§ 3.8 Bays lie between the promontories. Salacia is on the first one; on the second are Ulisippo and the mouth of the Tagus, a river that generates jewels and gold. From these promontories to the part that has receded, a huge bend opens up, and on it are the Old Turduli and the towns of the Turduli as well as the Munda River, which flows broadly more or less halfway up the coast of the last promontory, and the Durius River, which washes the foot of the same promontory.
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§ 3.9 The oceanfront there has a straight bank for a considerable distance and then protrudes a little bit where it takes a moderate bend. At that time, drawn back again and again and lying in a straight line, the coast extends to the promontory we call Celtic Point.
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§ 3.10 Celtic peoples — except for the Grovi from the Durius to the bend — cultivate the whole coast here, and the rivers Avo, Celadus, Nebis, Minius, and Limia (also known as the Oblivion) flow through their territory. The bend itself includes the city of Lambriaca and receives the Laeros and Ulla Rivers.
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§ 3.11 The Praetamarici inhabit the section that juts out, and through their territory run the Tamaris and Sars Rivers, which arise not far away — the Tamaris next to Port Ebora, the Sars beside the Tower of Augustus, which has the famous inscription. The Supertamarici and the Neri, the last peoples on that stretch, inhabit the remainder. This is as far as its western shores reach.
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§ 3.12 From there the coast shifts northward with its entire flank from Celtic Point all the way to Scythian Point. The shoreline, uninterrupted except for moderate recesses and small promontories, is almost straight until it reaches the Cantabri.
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§ 3.13 On that shore, first of all, are the Artabri (actually a people of Celtic ancestry), then the Astyres. In the territory of the Artabri a bay admits the sea through a narrow mouth but encloses it with its not-so-narrow grasp; it rings the city of Adrobrica and the mouths of four rivers. Two mouths are little known even among locals; through the other two the Mearus and the Iubia Rivers make their outlets. On the coast that belongs to the Astyres is the town of Noege, and on the peninsula sit the three so-called Altars of Sestius. These altars are dedicated in the name of Augustus, and they make famous a land previously undistinguished.
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§ 3.14 From what they call Salia River, though, the coast begins to recede gradually, and the breadth of still-wide Spain begins to contract more and more. The land narrows so much that where it abuts Gaul, its breadth is less by half than where it extends its western shore.
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§ 3.15 The Cantabri and Vardulli occupy this stretch; there are several peoples and rivers among the Cantabri, but their names cannot be couched in our language. The Saunium descends through the territory of the <... > and of the Salaeni, the Namnasa down through the territory of the Autrigones and Orgenomescos, and the <... >. One nation, the Vardulli, spreading from here to the promontory of the Pyrenees, terminates the Spains.
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§ 3.16 GAUL
Gaul's second coast follows. At first its shoreline does not go out to sea at all, but after a while, proceeding almost as far beyond Spain as Spain had receded, it comes to lie opposite the lands of the Cantabri. The coast then bends in a great curve and tums its flank so that it faces west. Then turning to face north, the coastline unfolds a second time in a long and straight stretch up to the banks of the Rhenus.
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§ 3.17 The land is rich, primarily in grain and fodder, and it is lovely with its vast woods. It is conducive to good health and rarely populated with animals of a harmful kind, but it supports — with difficulty, and not everywhere — those plants that are intolerant of the cold.
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§ 3.18 The peoples are crude, superstitious, and sometimes even so monstrous that they used to believe that to the gods the best and most pleasing sacrificial victim was a human being. Traces of their savagery remain, even though it has been banned now. Nevertheless, after they have led their consecrated human victims to the altars, they still graze them slightly, although they do hold back from the ultimate bloodshed. And yet, they have both their own eloquence and their own teachers of wisdom, the Druids.
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§ 3.19 These men claim to know the size and shape of the earth and of the universe, the movements of the sky and of the stars, and what the gods intend. In secret, and for a long time (twenty years), they teach many things to the noblest males among their people, and they do it in a cave or in a hidden mountain defile. One of the precepts they teach — obviously to make them better for war — has leaked into common knowledge, namely, that their souls are eternal and that there is a second life for the dead. Therefore they cremate and bury with the dead things that are suitable for the living. Long ago, traders' accounts and debt collection were deferred until they died, and some individuals happily threw themselves onto the pyres of their loved ones as if they were going to live with them!
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§ 3.20 The whole region they inhabit is Gallia Cornata. Its peoples have three very distinguished names, and those peoples are separated by mighty rivers. In fact the Aquitani reach from the Pyrenees to the Garunna River, the Celts from there to the Sequana , and from there to the Rhenus, the Belgae. Of the Aquitani the most famous are the Ausci; of the Celts, the Haedui; of the Belgae, the Treveri. The wealthiest cites are Augusta among the Treveri, Augustodunum among the Haedui, and among the Aquitani, Eliumberrum.
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§ 3.21 The Garunna, which descends from the Pyrenees, flows shallow for a long time and is barely navigable except when swollen by winter rain or melted snow. But when it has been increased by the intrusions of the seething Ocean, and while those same waters are receding, the Garunna drives on its own waters and those of Ocean. The river, being considerably fuller, becomes wider the farther it advances, and at the end it is like a strait. It not only carries bigger ships but rises like the raging sea and violently buffets those who sail it, at least if the wind pushes one way and the current another.
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§ 3.22 In the river is the island named Antros, which the locals think floats on the surface and is raised up by the rising waves. The reasons they think so are [a] that while the adjacent shore seems more elevated, the river covers it when its level rises, whereas prior to flooding only this island is surrounded by water, and [b] that what the banks and hills had stood opposite (so that it was not seen) is completely visible at that time as if because of being on higher ground.
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§ 3.23 From the Garunna's outlet begins the horizontal stretch of land that runs into the sea, as well as the shore that lies opposite the coast of the Cantabri and that bends from the Santoni all the way to the Ossismi (with other peoples living in between). Indeed, after the Ossismi, the oceanfront again faces back to the north, and it reaches to the farthest people of Gaul, the Morini. And it does not have anything more noteworthy than the port they call Gesoriacum.
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§ 3.24 The Rhenus, cascading down from the Alps, makes — more or less at its source — two lakes, Lake Venetus and Lake Acronus. Then solid for a long time and descending in a defined bank, not far from the sea it spreads in two directions. To the left the Rhenus actually remains a river until it reaches its outlet. On the right, however, the river is at first narrow and unchanged, but later its banks recede over a vast expanse. At this point it is no longer called a river but a huge lake — Lake Flevo — where it has flooded the fields. It surrounds an island of the same name , becomes narrower again, and again makes its outlet as a river.
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§ 3.25 GERMANY
Germany extends on the near side from the banks of the Rhenus as far as the Alps; on the south from the very Alps; on the east from the frontier with the Sarmatian peoples; and where it faces north, from the ocean-front.
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§ 3.26 The people who live there are extraordinary in courage, as in physique, and thanks to their natural ferocity they exercise both prodigiously — their minds by making war, their bodies by habitual hard work but above all by habitual exposure to the cold. They live naked before they reach puberty, and childhood is very long among them. The men dress in wool clothing or the bark of trees even during the harsh winter.
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§ 3.27 They have not only a tolerance for swimming but a fancy for it. They wage war with their neighbors, and they provoke the causes of those wars for sheer pleasure, not for the pleasure of ruling or enlarging what they possess (since they do not cultivate in earnest even what is already in their possession, but simply so that what lies around them may be laid waste.
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§ 3.28 They consider that right lies in might, so much so that not even brigandage shames them, provided that they are good to their guests and compliant for their suppliants. They are so crude and uncivilized in their way of life that they even eat raw or fresh-killed meat, or else they eat meat that has been frozen in the actual hides of cattle and wild animals after they have softened the meat by working it with their own hands and feet.
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§ 3.29 The land itself is not easily passable, because of its many rivers; it is rugged on account of its numerous mountains; and to a large extent it is impassable with its forests and swamps. Of the swamps, the Suesia, the Metia, and the Melsyagum are the biggest. Of the forests, the Hercynian and some others that have names do exist, but because it covers a distance of sixty days' march, the Hercynian Forest is as much better known as it is bigger than the others.
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§ 3.30 Of the mountains, excepting those with names scarcely to be pronounced by a Roman mouth, the tallest are Mt. Taunus and Mt. Retico. Of the rivers that pass into the territories of other peoples, the most famous are the Danube and the Rhodanus; of those that go into the Rhenus, the Moenis; and of those that go into the Ocean, the Amissis , the Visurgis , and the Albis.
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§ 3.31 On the other side of the Albis, the huge Codanus Bay is filled with big and small islands. For this reason, where the sea is received within the fold of the bay, it never lies wide open and never really looks like a sea but is sprinkled around, rambling and scattered like rivers, with water flowing in every direction and Crossing many times. Where the sea comes into contact with the mainland, the sea is contained by the banks of islands, banks that are not far offshore and that are virtually equidistant everywhere. There the sea runs a narrow course like a strait, then, curving, it promptly adapts to a long brow of land.
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§ 3.32 On the bay are the Cimbri and the Teutoni; farther on, the farthest people of Germany, the Hermiones.
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§ 3.33 SARMATIA
Sarmatia, wider to the interior than toward the sea, is separated by the Vistula River from the places that follow, and where the river reaches in, it goes all the way to the Ister River. Its people are very dose to the Parthians in dress and in weaponry, but the rougher the climate, the cruder their disposition.
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§ 3.34 They do not live in cities or even in fixed abodes. Insofar as pastures have lured them on, or insofar as an enemy's flight or pursuit has forced them out, they live in camps all the time and drag their possessions and their wealth with them. They are warlike, free, unconquered, and so savage and cruel that women also go to war side by side with men; and so that women may be suited for action, their right breast is cauterized as soon as they are born. As a result, that breast, now exposed and ready to withstand blows, develops like a man's chest.
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§ 3.35 Archery, horseback riding, and hunting are a girl's pursuits; to kill the enemy is a woman's military duty, so much so that not to have struck one down is considered a scandal, and virginity is the punishment for those women.
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§ 3.36 SCYTHIA
After that, the Scythian peoples — almost all designated under one name as the Belcae — inhabit the Asian frontier except where winter remains continuous and the cold remains unbearable. On the Asiatic littoral, first of all, the Hyperboreans are located beyond the north wind, above the Riphaean Mountains, and under the very pole of the stars, where the sun rises, not every day as it does for us, but for the first time at the vernal equinox, and where it eventually sets at the autumnal equinox. Therefore, for six months daylight is completely uninterrupted, and for the next six months night is completely uninterrupted.
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§ 3.37 The land is narrow, exposed to the sun, and spontaneously fruitful. Its inhabitants live in the most equitable way possible, and they live longer and more happily than any mortals. To be sure, because they delight in their always festive leisure, they know no wars, no disputes, and they devote themselves primarily to the sacred rites of Apollo. According to tradition, they sent their first fruits to Delos initially in the hands of their own virgins, and later they sent them through peoples who handed them on in succession to farther peoples. They preserved that custom for a long time until it was profaned by the sacrilege of those peoples. The Hyperboreans inhabit groves and forests, and when a sense of having been satisfied by life (rather than boredom) has gripped them, they cheerfully wreathe themselves in flowers and actually throw themselves into the sea from a particular cliff. For them that is the finest death ritual.
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§ 3.38 The Caspian Sea first breaks into the land like a river, with a strait as small as it is long, and after it has entered by its straight channel, the sea is diffused into three bays. Opposite its very mouth, it passes into the Bay of Hyrcania; on the left, into Scythian Bay; and on the right, into the one they call by the name of the whole, Caspian Bay. The sea as a whole is violent, savage, without harbors, exposed to storms everywhere, as well as crowded with sea-monsters more than any other sea is, and for all these reasons it is not fully navigable. To the right as you enter, the Scythian Nomads occupy the shores of the strait.
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§ 3.39 To the interior, beside Caspian Bay, are the Caspians and Amazons (at least the ones they call the Sauromatidae); alongside the Bay of Hyrcania are the Albani, the Moschi, and the Hyrcani; and on Scythian Bay are the Amardi, the Pestici, and, at this point near the strait, the Derbices. Many rivers, great and small, flow into that bay, but the famous one, the <... >, descends in a single bed from the Ceraunian Mountains and makes its outlet into the Caspian in two beds.
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§ 3.40 The Araxes , which cascades down from the side of the Taurus Range, slips a long peacefully and quietly as long as it slices through the plains of Armenia, and it is not clear which way it is moving even if you watch it closely. When the Araxes goes down into rougher terrain, is squeezed to either side by cliffs, and is that much swifter because it is that much narrower, the river becomes as a result rough and choppy alongside the crags that block its path. Because of that it rolls on with a mighty crashing and roaring, so rapid that where it is about to drop precipitously onto lower-lying terrain, the Araxes does not even change its water's direction but shoots the water straight out beyond its channel. The river propels itself in the air at a height of more than a iugerum, its waters suspended in midair without a riverbed. Then, after it descends in a curve with its stream bent like a bow, the river becomes tranquil, and again silently and scarcely moving through the plains, it rolls out to the coastline there.
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§ 3.41 The Cyrus Rivers, produced from springs near the roots of Mt. Coraxicus, travel in different directions. Both flow down through the territories of the Hiberi and the Hyrcani for a long time with their beds very far apart. Later, after entering the same lake not far from the sea, they arrive at the Bay of Hyrcania in a single outlet.
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§ 3.42 The rivers Iaxartes go from the regions of the Sogdiani, through Scythia's deserts, into Scythian Bay. The former is large at its source, but the latter becomes larger by the incursion of other rivers. The latter rushes for a considerale distance from east to west, bends for the first time beside the Dahae, and, with its course turned to the north, opens its mouth between the Amardi and the Pestici.
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§ 3.43 The forests also bear other fierce animals, but they even bear tigers — Hyrcanian ones, to be sure — a savage breed of wild animal so swift that they easily, and typically, track a mounted rider, even one passing at a distance; and they do it not once only but several times, even when the trail is retraced each time right from where it began. The explanation comes from the fact that when that proverbial horseman runs off with stolen tiger cubs, and once he has let one of the several cubs go to thwart the fury of the adult animals as they near the city, these tigers pick up the abandoned cub and bring it back to their den. They go back again rather a lot and do the same thing until the fleeing thief reaches a more populous locale than the tigers dare to approach.
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§ 3.44 For quite some time it was unclear what lay beyond Caspian Bay, whether it was the same Ocean or a hostile, cold land that extended without a border and without end.
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§ 3.45 But in addition to the natural philosophers and Homer, who all said that the entire known world was surrounded by sea, there is Cornelius Nepos, who is more dependable as an authority because he is more modern. Nepos, however, adduces Quintus Metellus Celer as witness of the fact, and he records that Metellus reported it as follows. When Celer was proconsul of Gaul, certain Indians were presented to him as a gift by the king of the Boii. By asking what route they had followed to reach there, Celer learned that they had been snatched by storm from Indian waters, that they had traversed the intervening region, and that finally they had arrived on the shores of Germany. Ergo, the sea is continuous, but the rest of that same coast is frozen by the unremitting cold and is therefore deserted.
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§ 3.46 ISLANDS
Next to these shores, which we have traced from the angle of Baetica all the way here, also lie many obscure islands that have no names. Of those islands not happily passed by, though, Gades is on the Strait. That island is separated from the continent by a narrow space, as if by a river, and has an almost straight bank where it lies nearer to the mainland. Where the island faces Ocean it reaches into the sea with two promontories, and the shoreline in between recedes. On one prong it supports a temple of Aegyptian Hercules famous for its founders, its cult, its age, and its wealth. The Tyrians founded the temple, and Hercules' bones, buried there, show why the place is consecrated. The temple began its existence in the Trojan era, and time has fed its wealth.
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§ 3.47 In Lusitania are the isle of Erythia, which we are told was the home of Geryon, and other islands without fixed names. The fields of Erythia are so fertile that as soon as grain is planted, as soon as the seed falls to the ground and renews the crop, they produce at least seven harvests, sometimes even more. On the Celtic coast are a number of islands that, because they are all rich in lead, people call by one name, the Cassiterides.
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§ 3.48 In the Britannic Sea, opposite the coast of the Ossismi, the isle of Sena belongs to a Gallic divinity and is famous for its Oracle, whose priestesses, sanctified by their perpetual virginity, are reportedly nine in number. They call the priestesses Gallizenae and think that because they have been endowed with unique powers, they stir up the seas and the winds by their magic charms, that they turn into whatever animals they want, that they cure what is incurable among other peoples, that they know and predict the future, but that it is not revealed except to sea-voyagers and then only to those traveling to consult them.
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§ 3.49 Next, as to what kind of place Britain is and what kind of people it produces, information that is more certain and better established will be stated. The reason is that — lo and behold! — the greatest princeps is opening the long-closed island, and as conqueror of previously unsubdued and previously unknown peoples, the princeps brings with him the proof of his own accomplishments, since he will reveal in his triumph as much as he has laid claim to in war.
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§ 3.50 Moreover, just as we have thought until now, Britain projects between the west and the north in a wide angle and looks toward the mouths of the Rhenus. It then draws its sides back obliquely, facing Gaul with one side, Germany with the other; then returning with a continuous line of straight shore on its rear side, Britain again wedges itself into two different angles — being triangular and very much like Sicily. Britain is fiat, huge, fertile, but more generously so for what feeds sheep than for what sustains humans.
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§ 3.51 It supports groves and meadows and colossal rivers that sometimes flow to the sea, sometimes back again, with alternating currents, and certain other rivers that produce gems and pearls. It supports peoples and their kings, but all are uncivilized. The farther from the sea, the more ignorant they are of other kinds of wealth, being wealthy only in sheep and land, and — whether for beauty or for some other reason — they have their bodies dyed blue.
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§ 3.52 They produce, nevertheless, the causes of war and actual wars, and they take turns harassing one another constantly, mainly because they have a strong desire to rule and a strong drive to expand their holdings. They make war not only on horseback or on foot but also from two-horse chariots and cars armed in the Gallic fashion — they call them covinni — on which they use axles equipped with scythes.
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§ 3.53 On the far side of Britain, Iuverna 31 is more or less equal in area, but it is oblong with equally extended lateral coastlines. Its climate is hideous for ripening seeds, but the island is so luxuriant with grass — not only abundant but sweet — that sheep stuff themselves in a fraction of the day, and unless they are kept from the pasture, they burst from feeding too long. Its inhabitants are undisciplined and ignorant of all virtue, to a greater degree than any other nation, and they are very much inexperienced in piety.
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§ 3.54 The thirty Orcades are separated by narrow spaces between them; the seven Haemodae extend opposite Germany in what we have called Codanus Bay; of the islands there, Scandinavia, which the Teutoni still hold, stands out as much for its size as for its fertility besides.
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§ 3.55 Because of the sea's tidal ebb and flow, and because the distance between them is sometimes covered by waves and other times bare, what faces the Sarmatae sometimes seems to be islands and at other times seems to be one continuous land mass.
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§ 3.56 In addition to what is handed down in legend, I discover — in authors whom I am not embarrassed to follow — that on these islands are the Oeonae, who feed only on oats and the eggs of marsh birds, and that the Hippodes, with their equine hooves, are also there, and the Panotii too, who for clothing have big ears broad enough to go around their whole body (they are otherwise naked).
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§ 3.57 Thule is located near the coast of the Belcae, who are celebrated in Greek poetry and in our own. On it — because there the sun rises far from where it will set — nights are necessarily brief, but all winter long they are as dark as anywhere, and in summer, bright. All summer the sun moves higher in the sky at this time, and although it is not actually seen at night, the sun nevertheless illuminates adjacent places when its radiance is dose by; but during the solstice there is no night, because at that time the sun is now more visible and shows not only its brilliance but most of itself too.
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§ 3.58 Talge, on the Caspian Sea, is fertile without being cultivated and is abundant in every root crop and fruit, but the local peoples consider it an abomination and a sacrilege to touch what grows there. They think that these things have been prepared for the gods and must be saved for the gods. Alongside those coasts that we have called deserted lie a number of equally deserted islands, which, being without names of their own, are called the Scythian Islands.
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§ 3.59 INDIA AND THE EAST
The route curves from here to the Eastern Sea and to the earth's eastern rim. This coast, which is first impassable because of the snows and then uncultivated because of the monstrous savagery of the inhabitants, reaches from Scythian Point to Point Colis. The Androphagoe and the Sacae are Scyths, and they are separated by a region that is uninhabitable because it is teeming with wild animals.
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§ 3.60 Next, monstrous beasts again render vast tracts unsafe all the way to Mt. Tabis, which overhangs the sea. At a distance from there the Taurus Range rises. The Seres are in between, a people full of justice and best known for the trade they conduct in absentia, by leaving their goods behind in a remote location.
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§ 3.61 India is situated not only on the Eastern Sea but also on the south-facing sea that we have called the Indian Ocean, and it is bounded from this point by the Taurus Range and on the west by the Indus. India occupies a coastline that equals a sail of sixty days and nights. It is so remote from our regions that in a certain part of India neither north star is visible and — again different from elsewhere — shadows fall to the south.
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§ 3.62 Moreover, it is fertile and teems with a different type of human being and other animals. It sustains ants that are no smaller than the biggest dogs, ants that reportedly guard, like griffins, gold that is mined from deep within the earth, and that pose the greatest threat to anyone who touches it. India also sustains monstrous snakes that with their bite and the winding constriction of their bodies can stop an elephant in its tracks. It is so rich in some places and has such productive soil that in this country honey drips from the leaves, trees bear wool, and rafts of split bamboo even convey, like ships, two persons at a time, some even conveying three at a time.
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§ 3.63 The dress and customs of the inhabitants vary a good deal. Some dress in linen or what we have called wool, others in the skins of birds or wild animals. One subculture goes naked; another covers only their private parts. Some are short and puny, others so tall and huge in body that routinely and with ease they even use elephants — the biggest ones there — in the same way we use horses.
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§ 3.64 Certain individuate think it right to kill no animal at all and to eat no meat at all, and fish alone is used to sustain certain others. Some kill their parents (when they are on the verge of decline) like sacrificial animate before the parents decline from age and illness, and it is both morally right and absolutely pious to feast on the viscera of the slain parents.
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§ 3.65 By contrast, when disease or old age have set in, the old and infirm withdraw far from the others and without any fear at all await death in isolation. More prudent individuate, those who are involved emotionally in the practice and pursuit of wisdom, do not wait for death but happily and gloriously bring it on by hurling themselves onto fires.
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§ 3.66 Of the cities they inhabit — and there are quite a lot of them — Nysa (Nagarahara] is the most famous and the biggest. Of its mountains, Meros [Mar-Koh] is sacred to Jupiter. Those two places have special renown for the following reason: they think that Liber was born in that city and that he was suckled in a cave on this mountain. And for this reason either their traditional material or plain error has forced Greek writers to say that Liber was placed in Jupiter's thigh.
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§ 3.67 The Palibothri hold the coastline from Point Tamus to the Ganges. From the Ganges to Point Colis, except where it is too hot to be inhabited, are found black peoples, Aethiopians so to speak. From Point Colis to the Indus the shores are straight, and peoples live there who are timorous and quite prosperous because of the sea's riches.
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§ 3.68 Tamus is a spur that the Taurus raises; Colis is the second angle on the eastern part and begins the side that faces south; the Ganges and the Indus are rivers. The Ganges originates from many sources in the Haemodes Range, and as soon as it has formed a single bed, it becomes the greatest of all rivers and gets even wider in some places. It is ten miles wide where it flows in its narrowest bed, and it spreads into seven mouths.
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§ 3.69 The Indus rises in the Propanisus Range and in fact admits other rivers, the most famous being the Cophes, Acesinus, and Hydaspes. It carries in its broad span a single river born of several streams. As a result of this circumstance the Indus roughly equals the Ganges in size. Later, after it has circumvented a huge mountain chain by making several sweeping bends, the river descends a second time, straight and uninterrupted, until it divides left and right and makes its outlet to the sea through two widely separated mouths.
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§ 3.70 Alongside Point Tamus is the island of Chryse, beside the Ganges the island of Argyre. The first has golden soil — so the old writers have handed down — the other has silver soil. Moreover, as seems to be the case really, either the name comes from the fact, or the legend comes from the designation. Taprobane is said to be either a very large island or the first part of the second world, but because it is inhabited, and because no one reportedly has circumnavigated it, the latter interpretation is as good as true.
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§ 3.71 Opposite the mouths of the Indus are the so-called Islands of the Sun, so unlivable that the pressure of the atmosphere instantly sucks the life out of anyone who enters, and between the rivers' very mouths is the district of Patalene, which is unbearable in some places because of the heat and lacks inhabitants. From there the district of Ariane, itself impassable and deserted, stretches to the beginning of the Red Sea. Its land is more like ashes than dust, and that is why the rivers that trickle through it are scarce and scant. We are told that its best-known rivers are the Tubero and the Arusaces.
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§ 3.72 THE PERSIAN GULF, RED SEA, AND ARABIAN GULF
The Greeks call the Red Sea the Erythra Thalassa either because it is that color or because Erythras ruled there as king. It is a stormy, rough sea, and deep; it has monsters to a greater extent than all the other seas. At first the Red Sea thrusts the receding shoreline in evenly, and there is a considerably wide gulf with the result that the sea does not go farther inland. But twice it breaks through those receding banks, and the second time it creates two gulfs.
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§ 3.73 The one nearer to the lands under discussion is called the Persian Gulf; the farther one is the Arabian Gulf. Where the Persian Gulf receives the sea, it encloses its large mouth with two straight sides, like a neck, and then, encompassing the sea with a great ring of shoreline as the land pulls back over a vast expanse and in equal degree everywhere, the gulf makes the form of a human head appear.
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§ 3.74 The mouth of the Arabian Gulf is narrower and its interior width smaller; its inner recess extends somewhat farther, and its sides are much longer. This gulf penetrates far inland until it virtually reaches Aegypt and Mt. Casius in Arabia, after becoming at a particular point less and less wide and narrower the more it penetrates.
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§ 3.75 From what we have described here to the Persian Gulf, except where the Chelonophagi linger, are deserts. On the gulf itself are located the Carmanii on the right of those sailing in. They have no regular clothes or fruit, no flock or fixed abodes. They dress in fish skins, eat fish meat, and are hairy all over except for their heads. The Cedrosi inhabit the interior, and after them, the Persae. The Saetis [Rud-Gez] reaches the sea through the territory of the Carmanii, and beyond it are the Sandis.
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§ 3.76 Directly opposite the mouth to the sea are the territory of the Babylonians, that of the Chaldaeans, and two famous rivers, the Tigris nearer to Persia and, farther away, the Euphrates.
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§ 3.77 The Tigris descends as it originated, and it goes right through to the coast. Not only does the Euphrates emerge from an immense open mouth where it rises, but it even falls over a broad expanse. It does not, as a consequence, cut through the fields immediately but spreads out in pools over a wide area. For a long time it is sluggish with standing water and extends without a bed. Later it really is a river when it breaks through the rim of these standing pools, and once it is taken by banks, it is swift and roaring and goes west through Armenia and Cappadocia, on its way to Our Seas if the Taurus did not stop it.
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§ 3.78 From there the Euphrates turns south, and first it enters Syria, then Arabia. It does not last all the way to the sea and as a result dies off in an insignificant trickle even though in some places it is huge and navigable. The Euphrates never makes a distinct outlet as other rivers do but dwindles off.
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§ 3.79 A stretch of land that runs between both seas surrounds the other shore of the Persian Gulf. It is called Arabia Eudaemon and it is narrow but very productive of cinnamon, incense, and other scents. The Sabaeans occupy the greater part of it, the Macae the part nearest the mouth and across from the Carmanii. Forests and cliffs roughen the seafront between the mouths of the two gulfs. A number of islands are located in the middle region of this gulf, but Ogyris is more famous than all the others because the funerary monument of King Erythras is on it.»
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§ 3.80 The Arabs surround the second gulf on all sides. On the right, and in order for anyone who enters the gulf, are the cities of Charra, Arabia, and Adanus ; on the other side, from the reentrant angle, the first Berenice, between the Bay of Heroopolis and the Bay of Strobilus; then, between Point Maenorenon and Point Coloba, Philoteris and Ptolemais; farther on, Arsinoe and the other Berenice; then a forest that produces the ebony tree and perfumes; and then a man-made river, which is worth reporting because it is drawn from the Nile in a canal.
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§ 3.81 Outside the gulf, but nevertheless on the Red Sea's main bay, one locale is infested with brute beasts and is therefore a wasteland; and the Panchaei, whom they call Ophiophages because they eat snakes, live in another. There were Pygmies to the interior, a diminutive species that became extinct from fighting the cranes for the crops they had planted.
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§ 3.82 There are many kinds of flying creatures and many kinds of snakes. The snakes most worth remembering are they emerge at a fixed time of year from the muck of the congealed swamps, that they head for Aegypt by flying in a great swarm, and that on their very entry into its borders they are intercepted in a hostile formation and defeated in a fight by the birds they call ibises.
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§ 3.83 Of the birds, the Phoenix, always unique, is especially worth mentioning. It is not conceived by copulation or born through parturition, but after it has lasted continuously for a lifetime of five hundred years, the Phoenix lies down on a funeral pile heaped up with different scents and decomposes.
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§ 3.84 Next, after congealing from the moisture of its putrefying limbs, the bird conceives itself and is reborn from itself. When the Phoenix has reached maturity, it carries the bones of its former body, shut inside a ball of myrrh, to Aegypt, and in what they call the City of the Sun, it puts the ball on the burning pyre of an altar and consecrates it in a memorable funerary ritual. That promontory by which the sea is enclosed there is impassable because of the Aceraunian Canyons.
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§ 3.85 AFRICA'S OUTER COASTS The Aethiopians reside beyond there. They occupy the land of Meroe, which the Nile makes into an island by embracing it in its first ambit. Because they have a lifetime longer than ours by almost half, certain Aethiopians are called Macrobii. Others are called Automoles, because they came here from Aegypt; they are beautiful in physique and worship body and strength exactly as other peoples worship the best virtues.
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§ 3.86 They have the custom of choosing by appearance and strength the chief they are to obey at all costs. Among these people there is more gold than copper, and for that reason they consider gold less valuable. They bedeck themselves with copper, but for criminals they make chains out of gold.
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§ 3.87 It is a place always bursting with sumptuous banquets. Because, as pleases them, it is lawful for anyone who wants to eat to do so, they call the place Heliou Trapeza (table of the Sun), and they claim that everything that has been served there is replenished by a miracle.
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§ 3.88 There is a lake from which bodies, once they have been immersed, continue to shine as brightly as if they had been oiled. The same water is used for drinking. The water is so clear and so incapable of supporting what falls or is thrown into it that the water does not allow even leaves that fall from the closest branches to float on its surface but takes them right to the very bottom. There are also very fierce animals, namely, variegated wolves of every color and sphinxes of the sort we have heard about. There are amazing birds, horned tragopaties and pegasuses with equine ears.
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§ 3.89 Moreover, nothing noteworthy meets those who follow the shores eastward. Everything is a wasteland, defined by desolate mountains, and more a riverbank than an oceanfront. After that, there is a huge tract without inhabitants. For quite a long time it was uncertain whether there was sea beyond and whether the earth had a periphery, or whether, with the seawaters eliminated, Africa extended without end.
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§ 3.90 Hanno the Carthaginian, however, was dispatched by his people to explore it. When he had exited Our Sea through the mouth of Ocean and circumnavigated a great part of it, he had reported back that Africa was deficient not in sea but in the hustle and bustle of human life. In the time of our ancestors, while running away from King Lathyrus of Alexandria, a certain Eudoxus set out from the Arabian Gulf by this sea, as Nepos affirms, and he sailed all the way to Gades. That is why its coasts are, to a certain extent, known.
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§ 3.91 There are, then, on the other side of what we have just called wastelands, mute peoples for whom nodding their head is a substitute for speaking. Some make no sound with their tongue. Others have no tongues. Still others have lips that even stick together except for a hollow reed beneath their noses through which to drink by means of a straw, and when the desire for eating comes over them, they reportedly suck in, one by one, kernels of the grain that grows all over.
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§ 3.92 To some, fire was so unfamiliar before Eudoxus arrived, and seemed so amazing, and pleased them so much, that they really even felt like embracing the flames and hiding the burning sticks in their clothing until it did them harm.
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§ 3.93 Beyond them a bend of the great seacoast encloses a large island on which they tell that only women live. These women are hairy all over and essentially fertile without having sex with men; they have such a rough and brutish character that chains can barely prevent certain ones from resisting. Hanno reported this information, and because he had brought back leather skinned from the ones he slaughtered, credibility has been given to it.
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§ 3.94 Beyond this bay a tall mountain, Theón Ochéma, as the Greeks call it, burns with perpetual fire.
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§ 3.95 Beyond the mountain, there is a verdant hill, which extends over a long stretch on a long coastline; from this hill are to be seen the fields — more extensive than can be taken in completely — that belong to the Goat-Pans and Satyrs. As a result, this explanation has received credence: although there is nothing civilized on this hill, no place of residence, no footprints, and although by day there is only a solitary wasteland and an even emptier silence, nevertheless by night fires flare up close together and are revealed like a sizable army camp, and they shake cymbals and beat drums, and horns are heard that sound louder than human ones.
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§ 3.96 Then the Aethiopians again. These people, the Hesperioe by name, are not at this point the rich ones we have mentioned, and being smaller and uncouth, they are not very much like them in physique. In their territory there is a spring that is at least credible as the Nile's source. The spring is called Nuchul by the locals and can apparently be called by no other name, but it has been mispronounced by the barbarian mouth. It also nurtures papyrus and animals that are rather small, in fact, but all of the same species.
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§ 3.97 While other rivers turn toward Ocean, this one alone runs east into the midlands, and it is uncertain where it ends. From that fact it is inferred that the Nile originates at this spring, moves for quite a distance through inaccessible terrain, and is therefore undiscovered in that interval, but that it reappears where there is access. By inference again, the interval where the river is hidden from view creates the effect that on this side the river appears to give way to another river, while on the far side it appears to spring from a different place.
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§ 3.98 The catoblepas is not a large wild animal, but it can scarcely hold up its own large and very heavy head, and it therefore moves around with its face very much to the ground. This animal is born among these Aethiopians and is even worthier of report because of its unique power, namely, that to look it in the eye is deadly even though the catoblepas never ever behaves violently by attacking and biting.
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§ 3.99 Off their coast are the Gorgades Islands, once the home, they say, of the Gorgons. They are bounded by the projection of the mainland known as Hesperu Ceras.
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§ 3.100 From that point begins the oceanfront that faces west and is bathed by the Atlantic Ocean. The Aethiopians take up its first part, but no one takes up the middle, which is either parched, covered with sand, or infested with snakes. Islands that the Hesperides reportedly lived in are located off the coast of the parched region.
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§ 3.101 On the sandy part is Mt. Atlas, which rises abruptly. It is, in fact, precipitous (with its deep-cut cliffs everywhere), inaccessible, and more impenetrable the higher it rises. Mt. Atlas rises right into the clouds since its peak is higher than can be seen, and it reportedly not only reaches the sky and the stars with its peak but even holds them up.
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§ 3.102 Opposite the sandy part, the Fortunate Isles abound in spontaneously generated plants; and with various ones always producing new fruit in rapid succession, the islands nourish people who want for nothing, and whose islands are more blissfully productive than others are. One of the islands is primarily famous for the uniqueness of its two springs: those who have sipped the one laugh to death; the cure for those so affected is to drink from the other.
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§ 3.103 Next after the stretch that the wild beasts infest are the Himantopodes, hunched and rubber-legged, who reportedly slither rather than walk; then the Pharusii, who were well-off in the days when Hercules went to the Hesperides, but who are now squalid and, except for eating mutton, very poor.
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§ 3.104 Hereafter richer fields and lovely meadows abound in citron, terebinth, and ivory. Not even the coasts of the Nigritae and the Gaetuli, who are quite nomadic, are infertile. Those coasts are very famous for purple and murex — the most effective dyeing materials. Anything they have dyed is instantly recognizable anywhere.
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§ 3.105 The remainder is the outer coast of Mauretania and Africa's extreme corner as it comes to its last point. The region is richly endowed, but less so, with those same sources of wealth. As to the rest, it is even richer in soil and so fertile that it not only yields in extreme abundance the kinds of grain that are sown but also puts forth freely some kinds that are not sown.
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§ 3.106 Here Antaeus reportedly ruled as king. A sign — and quite a famous one — of this legend is also visible, namely, the modest hill that looks like a man reclining on his back, which the locals report is the funeral mound of Antaeus. As a consequence, when any part of the hill has become eroded, the rains regularly sprinkle the ground, and they keep coming until the eroded sections are restored.
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§ 3.107 Some humans occupy the forests, but being less nomadic than those we have just mentioned, others live in cities. The wealthiest cities, albeit the wealthiest among small ones, are considered to be Gilda, Volubilis, and Banasa, all far from Ocean, but nearer to it Sala and Lixos , which is right on the Lixus River. Farther on is the colony of Zilia, and the Zilia River, and the place we started from, Point Ampelusia, which now turns into Our Strait, which is the terminus both of this work and of the Atlantic coastline.
ENDORSEMENT: POMPONIUS MELA'S THREE BOOKS ON CHOROGRAPHY HAVE BEEN COPIED OUT WITH GOOD RESULTS. I, FL. RUSTICIUS HELPIDIUS DOMNULUS, SENATOR AND ADVISOR IN THE IMPERIAL CONSISTORY, HAVE CORRECTED THEM AT RAVENNA.