Page:The geography of Strabo (1854) Volume 2.djvu/309

 B. XII. C. III. PONTUS. 301 said much before in reply to him, and we must now speak of him again. 1 He is of opinion that we ought not to understand the Halizoni without the Halys, for no auxiliaries came to Troy from the country on the other side of the Halys. First, then, we will inquire of him who are the Halizoni within the Halys, and situated " far from Alybe, where are silver mines ? " He will not be able to reply. Next we will ask the reason why he does not admit that some auxiliaries came from the country on the other side of the Halys. For if it was the case, that all the rest were living on this side the Halys, ex- cept the Thracians, nothing prevented this one body of allies from coming from afar, from the country beyond the Leuco- Syrians ? Or, was it possible for the persons immediately engaged in the war to pass over from those places, and from the country beyond them, as the Amazons, Treres, and Cim- merians, but impossible for allies to do so ? The Amazons were not allies, because Priam had fought in alliance with the Phrygians against them : " at that time, says -Priam, I was among their auxiliaries on that day, when the Amazons came to attack them." 2 The people also who were living on the borders of the country of the Amazons were not situated at so great a dis- tance that it was difficult to send for them from thence, nor did any animosity exist, I suppose, at that time to prevent them from affording assistance. 25. Nor is there any foundation for the opinion, that all the ancients agree that no people from the country beyond the Halys took part in the Trojan war. Testimony may be found to the contrary. Mseandrius at least says that Heneti came from the country of the Leuco- Syrians to assist the Tro- jans in the war ; that they set sail thence with the Thracians, and settled about the recess of the Adriatic ; and that the Heneti, who had no place in the expedition, were Cappadocians. This account seems to agree with the circumstance, that the people inhabiting the whole of that part of Cappadocia near the Halys, which extends along Paphlagonia, speak two dialects, and that their language abounds with Paphlagonian names, as 1 B. vii. c. iii. 6. B. i. c. ii. 23. 2 II. iii. 189.