Page:Travels & discoveries in the Levant (1865) Vol. 1.djvu/407

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NOTES.
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28 Compare the Athenian dedication to the Nymphs by the πλυνεῖς, Böckh, Corp. Inscript. No. 455.
29 Xenophon, Hist. Grsec. i. 6.
30 Thueyd. iii. 3.
31 Pococke, ii. pt. 2, p. 15. Böckh, C. I. No. 2182. Pkhn, p. 218.
32 In the Dionysiac theatre at Athens several rows of chairs inscribed with the names of chief magistrates and priests have been recently discovered; casts of two of these may be seen in the Elgin Room of the British Museum. See also Böckh, C. I. 5-308, 5369, for the inscriptions in the theatre at Syracuse.
33 Suidas, s. v. Λεσβώναξ Strabo, xiii. p. 617.
34 See my History of Discoveries at HaUcaruassus, &c. p. 712.
35 Ælian, Var. Hist. vii. 15.
36 No. 216G.
37 Strabo, xiii. p. 618. Plin. N. H. v. 31, § 39.
38 See the description of this site in M. Boutan's Memoir on Mytilene. See also Prokesch von Osten, Deukwürdigkeiteu aus dem Orient, iii. p. 350.
39 On the return of exiles to Lesbos in the time of Alexander the Great, see Böckh, C. I. No. 2166; Plehn, pp. 77, 78.
40 Hence in the ancient Diræ the formula ἐμοὶ δὲ ὃσια. See my History of Discoveries, p. 723.
41 Archestrat. ap. Athenæum, iii. p. III, F.
42 This wall is described by M. Boutan in his memoir already cited, p. 318.
43 Hist. Anim. v. 10, 2, and 13, 10.
44 On this law of custom, see a memoir by Mr. Hawkins, in Walpole's Travels in Turkey, London, 1820, p. 392.
45 Homer, Hymn, in Bacchum, 44. Ovid, Met. iii. 582. Apollod. iii. 5, § 3.
46 Deiotarus is the name of two nilers of Galatia in the 1st century B.C. With the name Allobogiona may be compared Bogodiataros, the name of a Galatian chief (Strabo, xii. p. 567); Tolistobogii, one of the three principal tribes of Galatia; and Phuibagina, the name of a town among the Trocmi in the same province, according to Ptolemy.
47 Strabo, xiii. p. 617. See the map in Plehn's work. M. Boutan places Ægiros at Xero Castro, near Parakoila, on the western side of the Gulf of Kalloni, where he found a Greek Acropolis,