Page:The geography of Strabo (1854) Volume 2.djvu/23

 B. vni. c. in. 12. GREECE. ELIS. 15 a certain district in the territory of the Epeii appears to be designated, which the Caucones, a different nation from that in Triphylia, possessed, and who perhaps extended even as far as the Dymean territory.] But it was not proper to omit, whence Dyme had the name Cauconitis, nor why the river was called Caucon, because the question is, who the Caucones 1 were, to whom Minerva says, she is going to recover a debt. For if we understand the poet to mean those in Triphylia about Lepreum, I know not how this is probable ; whence some persons even write the passage, " where a large debt is owing to me in the sacred Elis." This will appear more clearly, when we describe the Pisatis, and after it Triphylia as far as the confines of Messenia. 12. Next to the Chelonatas is the long tract of coast of the Pisatse ; then follows a promontory, Pheia ; there was also a small town of this name ; " by the walls of Pheia about the stream of the Jardanes," a for there is a small river near it. Some writers say, that Pheia is the commencement of the Pisatis. In front of Pheia is a small island and a harbour ; thence to Olympia by sea, which is the shortest way, is 120 stadia. Then immediately follows another promontory, [Icthys,] projecting very far towards the west, like the Chelonatas ; from this promontory to Cephallenia are 120 stadia. Next the Alpheius discharges itself, at the distance from the Chelonatas of 280, and from the Araxus of 545, stadia. It flows from the same places as the Eurotas. There is a village of the name of Asea in the Megalopolitis, where the two sources, whence the above-mentioned rivers issue, are near to one another. After running under the earth the dis- tance of many stadia, they then rise to the surface, when one takes its course to Laconia, the other to the Pisatis. The Eurotas reappears at the commencement of the district Ble- minates, flowing close beside Sparta, and passing through a long valley near Helos, which the poet mentions, empties itself between Gythium, the naval arsenal of Sparta, and Acraea. But the Alpheius, after receiving the Celadon, (Ladon ?) and Erymanthus, and other obscure streams, pursues its course through Phrixa, and the Pisatis, and Triphylia, close to Olympia, 1 Book vii. ch. vii. 2. 2 II. vii. 135.