Page:The geography of Strabo (1854) Volume 2.djvu/320

 312 STRABO. CASAUB. 561. answers the double purpose of a city and a fortress. It is a high rock, precipitous on all sides, descending rapidly down to the river : on the margin of the river, where the city stands, is a wall, and a wall also which ascends on each side of the city to the peaks, of which there are two, united by nature, and completely fortified with towers. In this circuit of the wall are the palace, and the monuments of the kings. The peaks are connected together by a very narrow ridge, in height five or six stadia on each side, as you ascend from the banks of the river, and from the suburbs. From the ridge to the peaks there remains another sharp ascent of a stadium in length, which defies the attacks of an enemy. Within the rock are reservoirs of water, the supply from which the inhabitants cannot be deprived of, as two channels are cut, one in the direction of the river, the other of the ridge. Two bridges are built over the river, one leading from the city to the sub- urbs, the other from the suburbs to the country beyond ; for near this bridge the mountain, which overhangs the rock, ter- minates. A valley extends from the river ; it is not very wide at its commencement, but afterwards increases in breadth, and forms the plain called the Chiliocomon (The Thousand Villages). Next is the Diacopene, and the Pimolisene, the whole of which is a fertile district extending to the Halys. These are the northern parts of the country of the Ama- senses, and are in length about 500 stadia. Then follows the remainder, which is much longer, extending as far as Baba- nomus, and the Ximene, 1 which itself reaches to the Halys. The breadth is reckoned from north to south, to the Zelitis and the Greater Cappadocia, as far as the Trocmi. 2 In Ximene there is found fossile salt, (aXee, Hales,) from which it is supposed the river had the name of Halys. There are many ruined fortresses in my native country, and large tracts of land made a desert by the Mithridatic war. The whole of it, however, abounds with trees. It affords pasture for horses, and is adapted to the subsistence of other animals ; the whole of it is very habitable. Amaseia was given to the kings, but at present it is a (Roman) province. 1 West of KosehDagh. 2 Situated between the Kizil Irmak and the river Delidsche Irmak, a tributary of the former.