Page:Arrian's Voyage Round the Euxine Sea Translated.djvu/16

Rh Xenophon the elder has decribed at large the port and ituation of Calpe, and informed us, that there is there a cool and pure pring, and woods of timber fit for building hips, and wild animals.

From the port of Calpe to Rhoe, a harbour for mall veels, twenty tadia. From Rhoe to Apollonia, a mall iland at a little ditance from the Continent, twenty tadia. In this mall iland there is a port. From hence to Chelæ twenty tadia. From Chelæ to the place where the river Sangarius flows into the Pontus an hundred and eighty tadia. From thence to the mouths of the Hyppius an hundred and eighty tadia. From Hyppius to the mart of Lillium an hundred tadia. From Lillium to Elæum ixty tadia. From Elæum to another mart called Cales an hundred and twenty tadia. From Cales to the river Lycus eighty tadia. From Lycus to Heraclea, a Dorian Greek city, a colony of the Megareans, twenty tadia. Here there is a harbour for hips. From Heraclea to a place called Metroum eighty tadia. From Metroum to Poidæum forty tadia. From Poidæum to the Tyndaridæ forty-five tadia. From the Tyndaridæ to Nymphæum fifteen tadia. From Nymphæum to the river Oxinas thirty tadia. From the river Oxinas to Sandaraca, a port for mall veels, ninety tadia. From Sandaraca to Crenides ixty tadia. From Crenides to the mart of Pylla thirty tadia. From Pylla to Tios, an Ionian Greek city, ituated on the ea, and a colony of the Mileians, ninety tadia. From Tios to the river Billæus twenty tadia. From Billæus to the river Parthenius an hundred tadia. The country o far is inhabited by the Thracian Bithynians, of whom Xenophon has made mention in his Memoirs, as the mot warlike of the Aiatics, and from whom the army of the Greeks uffered much, after the Arcadians had eparated themelves from the other diviion of the army, commanded by ophus