Page:The geography of Strabo (1854) Volume 2.djvu/348

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340 STRABO. CASAUB. 582. war, about the time of the return of the Heracleidae to Pelo- ponnesus. Then Archelaus the son of Penthilus conducted the -ZEolian colonies across the sea to the present Cyzicene, near Dascylium. Gras his youngest son proceeded as far as the river Granicus, and, being provided with better means, transported the greater part of those who composed the expe- dition to Lesbos, and took possession of it. On the other side, Cleuas, the son of Dorus, and Malaus, who were descendants of Agamemnon, assembled a body of men for an expedition about the same time as Penthilus, but the band of Penthilus passed over from Thrace into Asia be- fore them ; while the rest consumed much time near Locris, and the mountain Phricius. At last however they crossed the sea, and founded Cyme, to which they gave the name of Phri- conis, from Phricius, the Locrian mountain. 4. The ./Eolians then were dispersed over the whole coun- try, which we have said the poet calls the Trojan country. Later writers give this name to the whole, and others to a part, of uEolis ; and so. with respect to Troja, some writers under- stand the whole, others only a part, of that country, not entire- ly agreeing with one another in anything. According to Homer, the commencement of the Troad is at the places on the Propontis, reckoning it from the -ZEsepus. According to Eudoxus, it begins from Priapus, and Artace, situated in the island of the Cyziceni opposite to Priapus, and thus he contracts the boundaries [of the Troad]. Darnastes contracts them still more by reckoning its commencement from Parium. 1 He extends the Troad as far as Lectum. But different writers assign different limits to this country. Charon of Lampsacus diminishes its extent by three hundred stadia more, by reckoning its commencement from Practius, for this is the distance between Parium and Practius, but protracts it to Adramyttium. It begins, according to Scylax of Caryanda, at Abydos. There is the same diversity of Thucydides, in the same chapter, and in the space of a few lines, speaks of the return of the Boeotians to their own country, as having taken place sixty years after the capture of Troy; and of the return of the Heracleidee to the Peloponnesus, as having taken place eighty years after the same event ; it is probable that Strabo, who followed Thucydides, substituted, through inattention, one number for another. 1 Kamaraes, or Kemer. (Kamar, Arab, the Moon.)