Chap. 32.] ACCOUNT OF COUNTRIES, ETC. 473 



tichos\ and Temnos^. Upon the shore we come to the river 

 Titanus, and the city which from it derives its name. Grynia^ 

 also stood here on an island reclaimed from the sea and joined 

 to the land : now only its harbours are left"*. AVe then come 

 to the town of Elaea^ the river Caicus^, which flows from 

 Mysia, the town of Pitane^, and the river Canaius. The fol- 

 lowing towns no longer exist — Came^, Lysimachia^, Atarnca'", 

 Carene^\ Cisthene^^', Cilla^^ Cocylium'^^ Theba•^ Astyre'^ 



* Or the " Xew Walls." Strabo speaks of it as distant thirty stadia 

 from Larissa. 



2 Its site is unkno\^Ti ; but it must not be confounded with the place 

 of that name mentioned in the last Chapter, which stood on the sea-coast. 

 It suffered from the great earthquake in the reign of Tiberius Caesar. 



3 Or Grynium, foi'ty stadia from Myrina, and seventy from Ela^a. It 

 contained a sanctuary of Apollo with an ancient oracle and a splendid 

 temple of white marble. Parmenio, the general of Alexander, took the 

 place by assault and sold the inhabitants as slaves. It is agaiu mentioned 

 by Pliny in B. xxxii. c. 21. 



* Tliis passage seems to be in a corrupt state, and it is difficult to 

 arrive at Phny's exact meaning. 



5 The port of the Pergameni. Strabo places it south of the river 

 Caicus, twelve stadia from that river, and 120 from Pergamum. Its site 

 is imcertam, but Leake fixes it at a place called KhseU, on the road from 

 the south to Pergamum. 



^ Its modern name is said to be Ak-Su or Bakir. 



7 On the coast of the Elaitic gulf. It was almost destroyed by an 

 earthquake in the reign of the Emperor Titus. Its site is by some thought 

 to have been at SanderU. 



8 Supposed to have been situate near the modem Cape Coloni. It 

 •was here that in the war with Antiochus, B.C. 191-190, the Roman 

 fleet was hauled up for the winter and protected by a ditch or rampart. 



9 So called from Lysimachus, the son of Agathocles. 



^° A strong place opposite to Lesbos. It was on the road from Adra- 

 myttium to the plain of the Caicus. Its site is generally fixed at Dikeli 

 Koi. 



" Or Carine. The army of Xerxes, on its route to the Hellespont, 

 marched tlirough this place. Its site is unknown. 



^2 It lay outside of the bay of Adramyttium and the promontory of 

 Pyrrha. 



J3 Mentioned in the Iliad with Chryse and Tenedos. 



'^ A place called Kutchulan, or, as some \\Titc it, Cotschiolan-Kuni, 

 is supposed to occupy its site. 



15 Or Thcbc", in the viciiiity of Troy. 



J8 In the plain of Thebes between Antandros and Adramyttium. It 

 had a temple of Artemis, of which the Antandrii had the superintendence. 

 Its site does not appear to have been ascertained. 



