100 George Dahl, 



we are probably justified in inferring that some calamity depopu- 

 lated Dor sometime after the middle of the fourth century. Later, 

 however, the city must have been reestablished, for we read of 

 bishops of Dor in the following centuries. 



TABULA PEUTINGERIANA. 



Dor appears on the Tabula Peutingeriana' under the form 

 Thora\ The distance from Thora to Cesaria is indicated as VIII 

 miles, from Thora to Ptolomaide as XX miles. The former of 

 these distances is approximately correct, the latter not large 

 enough by several miles^ 



This interesting map of military roads of the western Roman 

 Empire is named after the Augsburg recorder, Konrad Peutinger, 

 who obtained it in 1508 from its discoverer. This particular copy 

 was made in the 13th century; the original in its present form 

 goes back probably to the fourth century A.D.\ 



STEPIIAX OF BYZANTIUM. 



Stephan of Byzantium", the author of a geograi)hical dictionary 

 called " Ethnica," is supposed to have lived in the fifth centnry\ 

 Included in the abridgement of this work now extant is a chapter 

 on Awpos, TToXis ^oivLKr}<; ("Dor, a city of Phoenicia"). The chapter 

 mainly consists (in addition to a discussion of the ethnic of the 

 town's name) of quotations fi'om Greek Avriters. These quotations 

 have been fully treated above', so that there is no need for their 

 further discussion here. 



While Stephan has preserved in his quotations from the authors 

 he cites valuable bits of information regarding Dor, he leaves us 

 in the dark concerning the Dor of his own day. Like most ancient 

 Avritei's he is not consistently critical in his methods, and his testi- 



1 Ed. Desjardins (1868), segment IX. 



^ See above, p. 17. 



^Guerin, Sam. 2:314. 



^ Teuflfel-Schwabe, Hist, of Rom. Lit. (Eng. Trans. 1891-2), II, §412:6; 

 Enc. Brit. s.v. Konrad Peutinger. 



5 Ed. Meineke, 1849, pp. 254 ff. 



" Lippincott" s Pron. & Biog. Diet, on the name. 



■" Hecataeus, see p. 62: Josejihus, pp. 66 ff.; Claudius lolaus, pp. 94 f.; 

 Artemidorus, p. 63; Apollodorus, p. 63; Alexander Epbesius, p. 64; Charax, 

 p. 97 ; Pausanias, pp. 97 f . ; Craterus, pp. 62 f . 



