Page:Arrian's Voyage Round the Euxine Sea Translated.djvu/89

Rh which I uppoe to be the one called (probably from that circumtance) Peudoiizoma, by Pliny and Ptolemy.

Ditance according to Arrowmith's chart,

Laurie and Whittle's chart varies but little, and thee calculations are a kind of mean between thoe of Arrian and of Ptolemy. It is poible that the river may have changed its coure, and ome of the mouths be blocked up, or choaked with oil and and, brought down by the current.

The fifth mouth of Arrian is the ame with the iixth of Pliny and of Ptolemy. Strabo makes even mouths, and about 300 tadia, or about 37½ Greek miles, or 34¼ Englih miles from the firt to the eventh. He reckons the order of them in an oppoite direction to Arrian, as he counts the mot outherly to be the firt.

From the fifth mouth to the city of Itria 500 tadia. Strabo ays, that from Pence to Itria is 500 tadia. D'Anville makes it to be 400 tadia only, which is nearly the ditance which a place called Vitar, or Vitwar, meaures on modern maps. Perhaps this may be the ite of the ancient city of Itria, or Iiropolis, although the ditances do not exactly agree. From