Page:The geography of Strabo (1854) Volume 1.djvu/495

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B. vn. c.v. 1. ILLYRIA. 481 beginning from the inner recess of the Adriatic, and extend- ing to the Sacred mouth of the Danube. This part contains Greece, Macedonia, Epirus, and the people who live above them, extending to the Danube and to the two seas (the Adriatic and the Euxine Sea) on each side. On the Adriatic are the Illyrians ; on the Euxine Sea, as far as the Propontis 1 and Hellespont, are the Thra- cians, and the Scythian or Keltic tribes intermixed with them. We mustbegin from the Danube, and treat of the countries which follow next in order to those already de- scribed, that is to say, the parts contiguous to Italy, the Alps, the Germans, the Dacians, and the Getce. These may be divided into two parts. For the mountains of Illyria, Pasonia, and Thrace, may be considered as form- ing, as it were, a single line, parallel to the Danube, and extending from the Adriatic to the Euxine. To the north of this line is the country included between the Danube and the mountains. To the south is Greece and the barbarous tract contiguous to these mountains. Near the Euxine Sea is Mount Haamus, 2 the largest and the highest of the mountains in that quarter, and divides Thrace nearly in the middle. According to Polybius, both seas may be seen from this mountain ; but he is mistaken, for the distance to the Adriatic is considerable, and many things obstruct the view. Almost the whole of Ardia 3 lies near the Adriatic, Paaonia is in the middle, and all this country consists of elevated ground. On the side towards Thrace, it is bounded by Rhodope, 4 a mountain next in height to Haemus ; on the other side to the north is Illyria, and the country of the Autariatae, 5 and Dardania. 6 I shall first describe Illyria, which approaches close to the Danube, and to the Alps which lie between Italy and Germany, 1 Sea of Marmora. 2 The Veliki Balkan. 3 The southern part of Dalmatia bounded by the Narenta, which takes its source in the Herzogovina. 4 Called Monte Argentaro by the Italians, Basilissa by the Greeks, Rulla by the Turks. Baudrand. Despoto Dagh. 5 Occupied the neighbourhood of the river Titius, Kerca, which dis- charges itself near Siberico. 6 The mountainous country south of Servia. VOL. i. 2 i