Page:Arrian's Voyage Round the Euxine Sea Translated.djvu/24

Rh hundred tadia. From Callantra to the port of the Carians a hundred and eighty tadia. The ditrict urrounding this port is called Caria. From the port of the Carians to Tetriias a hundred and twenty tadia. Thence to Bizus, a deerted place, ixty tadia. From Bizus to Dionyopolis eighty tadia. From Dionyopolis to Odeus, where there is a road for hips, two hundred tadia. From Odeus to the borders of Mount Hæmus, which range of mountains is extended even into Pontus, three hundred and ixty tadia. From Hæmus to the city of Meembria ninety tadia. Here there is a road for hips. From Meembria to the city of Anchialus eventy tadia. From Anchialus to Apollonia a hundred and eighty tadia. Thee are all of them Greek cities, which lie on the left hand of thoe who ail into the Euxine ea. From Apollonia to Cherroneus ixty tadia. Here there is a road for hips. From Cherronefus to the fortres of Aulæon two hundred and fifty tadia. From Aulæon to Thynias a hundred and twenty tadia. From Thynias to Salmydeus two hundred tadia. Mention is made of this place by the elder Xenophon, who ays, that the Grecian army, which he commanded himelf, came o far in their march, when at the concluion of the expedition he engaged his army in the ervice of Seuthes the Thracian. The ame writer has decribed at length the dangers that accrue to hips at this place, from want of a good harbour; that hips forced hither by tres of weather are apt to be lot; and that the Thracians who live in the neighbourhood quarrel about the plunder of the wreck. From Salmydeus to Phrygia three hundred and thirty tadia. From Phrygia to the Cyanean ilands three hundred and twenty tadia. Thee are the Cyanean ilands, which the Poets have decribed as having been formerly moveable, and liable to change their ituation. Between thee the Argo, the firt hip on record, and which carried Jaon