INDEX. 



521 



Strabo, the geographer, his 

 birth-place, ii. fi — his 

 work quoted, i. 117, 134 

 141,171,188,223,225,231 

 236, 281, 292, 293, 297, 300 

 301,311,313,315,316,317. 

 323, 328, 329, 332, 334, 344, 

 376, 422, 424, 447, 449, 452, 

 454, 458, 459, 464, 466, 468. 

 473, 478, 485, 486, 487. 488. 

 491; ii. 3, 4, 5 8, 11. 12, 

 32, 34, 70, 71, 73. 90, 96 

 traiu) of Lamp.sacus, ii. 242. 



Strainers for wine, iv. 475. 



Strategies, ii. 19. 



Stratiotes, v. 68. 



Stratonice, vi. 278, 279. 



Stratonicus, vi. 139, 184, 185, 

 187. 



Strawberry, iii, 320. 



Strength, instances of ex- 

 traordinary, ii. 160, 161. 



Strepsiceros, ii. 347 ; iii. 44. 



Strictura, vi. 207. 



Strigil, V. 145. 



Strix, iii. 82. 



Strix scops, ii. 530, 531. 



Strombi, vi. 49. 



Stromboli, i. 222. 



Strongyle, i. 222. 



Strongylion, vi. 183, 184. 



Stropliiolum, iv. 304, 305. 



Strumus, v. 148, 149, 150, 

 241. 



Struthea, iii. 293. 



Struthiocaraelus, ii. 478, 479. 



Struthion, v. 39, 40. 



Struthopodes, ii. 131. 



Strychiion, iv. 384, 385; v. 

 241, 266. 



Strymon, i. 302, 303. 



Stubbing, iv. 66. 



Stucco, vi. 374. 



Studiosus, the gladiator, iii. 

 86. 



Studious men, hellebore for, 

 V. 97, 98. 



Stuppa, iv. 136. 



Sturgeon, ii. 383, 384, 398, 

 399 ; vi. 66. 



Stymmata, iii. 161. 



Stymphalis, i. 133; iii. 43. 



Stymphalus, i. 286. 

 -Styptics, v. 48. 



Styx, i. 136 ; v. 470. 



Suani, ii. 11, 22. 



Suari, ii. 46. 



Subdialia, vi. 377, 



Subiaco, i. 234, 235. 



Subis, ii. 493. 



Subjugus, v. 469. 



Sublaqtieum, i. 234. 



Sublician Bridge, vi. 345. 



Subsolanus, i. 73; iv. 116. 



Snbtegulana, vi. 377. 



Subulo, iii. 44. 



Suckers of trees, iii. 463. 



SuculiB, i. 67 ; iv. 87. 



Sudines, vi. 385. 



Sudis, vi. 66. 



Sudras, ii. 44. 



Suessa Pometia, i. 204 — it 

 destruction, ii. 154. 



Suessiones, i. 354. 



Suet, v. 326, 327. 



Suetonius Paulinus, i. 382, 

 497. 



Suevi, i. 347. 



Suez, i. 423. 



Suffocations, hysterical, iii. 

 75. 



Sugar, iii. 114. 



Suilli, iv. 430. 



Sulmo, i. 231; iii. 529; vi. 

 208. 



Sulphate of lime, vi. ,376. 



Sulphur, vi. 291, 292, 293. 



Sulphur-wort, v. 126. 



Sulpicius Gallus, i. 36. 



Sulpicius, Servius, v. 367. 



Sumach, iii. 179, 180— used 

 for preparing leather, 180 

 — remedies derived from, 

 V. 38. 



Summanus, i. 82; v. 391. 



Summer flowers, iv. 437, 

 438, 439. 



Summer honey, iii. 13. 



Sun, an account of the, i. 

 34, 38, 39, 50, 51— several 

 seen at once, 62, 63 — prog- 

 nostics derived from the, 

 iv. 417, 418, 419. 



Sun-dial, the first at Rome, 

 ii. 238 — in the Campus 

 Martins, vi. 334, 335. 



Sunfish, vi. 24. 



Sunflower, iv. 413, 414, 415. 



Sunium, i. 289. 



Supercilia, iii. 55. 



Superdcies, how calculated 

 by Pliny, ii. 109. 



Superfoetation, ii. 144, 349, 

 543 



Supernatia, iii. 294. 



Superstition, i. 23, 24. 



Superstitions. See " Absur 

 dities," aud " Magic." 



Superstitious beliefs, rela- 

 tive to animals, v. 366 

 367— of various kinds, 283 

 -286, 298, 299. 



Supplication, attitudes of, 

 iii. 88. 



Sura, Mamilius, ii. 355,554. 



Sura, the proconsul, ii. 147. 



Surnames, derived from 

 trees, iii. 440 — from agri- 

 culture, iv. 5. 



Surrentum, i. 197 — wines of, 

 iii. 241 ; iv. 470. 



Sus babiroussa, ii. 345. 



Snsa, ii. 62, 79. 



Susinum, iii. 163, 165. 



Sutlej, ii. 41, 47. 



Swallows, i. 307 ; ii. 505. 506. 

 521 — avoid the city of 

 Thebes, 505— used for car- 

 rying messages, 505 — :in 

 account of, 513, 514 — at 

 the mouth of the Nile, 514 

 — incapable of being 

 taught, 526. 



Swallow-wort, v. 56, 114. 



Swammerdamquoted.ii 428. 



Swans, ii; 502, 503— their 

 singing, 503. 



Sweat, the, iii. 78. 



Sweet apples, iv. 497. 



Sweet wines, iii. 248, 249, 

 250. 



Sweet-scented calamus, iii. 

 144 — sweet-scented rush, 

 iii. 144 ; iv. 364. 



Sweet-wort, iii. 274. 



Swiftness, in runners, ii. 

 161— in animals, iii. 67. 



Swine, living, giuiwed by 

 mice, iii 76^of illyricuni, 

 have solid hoof.s, 89 — eat 

 serpents, 97 — their mo<le 

 of feeding, 349, 350— tiie 

 grease of, v. 324, 325, 326. 



Swordfish, ii. 359, 390 ; vi. 8. 



Syagri, iii. 175. 



Sybaris, i. 224 — the destrnc- 

 tion of, ii. 163 — the caval- 

 ry of, 318. 



Sybaris, the river, v. 476. 



Syce, V. 261. 



.Sycitis, vi, 461. 



Syeiie, i. 107, 414, 415— ii. 97. 

 ygaros, li. 88. 



Sylla, the Dictator, i. 85, 

 206, 316; v. 206; vi. 323, 

 389 — his success aud 

 dreadful death, ii. 190, 191 

 — his memoirs, iv. 394— 

 his triumph, vi. 76. 



Symbol!, Port of the, i. 334. 



Syme, i. 484. 



Sympathy, iv. 206 ; v. i ; vi. 

 12, 13, 407. 



Symphyton petrseon, v. 231, 

 232. 



Symplegades, i. 338. 



Symplegma, vi. 314. 



Synnophitis, vi. 449. 



Synochitis, vi. 461. 



Synodontitis, vi. 457, 459. 



Synodus, vi. 457. 



Syphax, i. 385. 



Syracuse, i. 217. 



Syrbotse, ii. 101, 134. 



Syreon, v. 71, 72. 



Syria described, i. 423 — .\n- 

 tiochia described, i. 436 — 

 the trees of, iii. 178. 



