BOOK V, xwui. io2-xxi.\'. 105 



Egyptian Sea, and on the north by Paphlagonia; 

 the length of this part he made 470 miles and the 

 breadth 320 miles. The other half he bounded on 

 the east by Lesser Armenia, on the west by Phrygia, 

 Lvcaonia and Pamphylia, on the north by the Province 

 of Pontus and on the south by the Pamphylian Sea, 

 making it 575 miles long and 325 miles broad. 



XXIX. On the adjcuning coast is Caria and tlien caria. 

 lonia and beyond it AeoUs. Caria entirely surrounds 

 Doris, encircHng it right down to the sea on both 

 sides. In Caria are Cape Pedahum and the river 

 Glaucus, with its tributarv the Telmedius, the towns 

 of Daedala and Crya, the latter a settlement of 

 refugees, the river Axon, and the town of Calynda. 

 The river Indus, rising in the mountains of the 

 CibjTatae, receives as tributaries 60 streams that 

 are constantly floAWng and more than 100 mountain 

 torrents. There is the free town of Caunos, and then 

 Pyrnos, Port Cressa, from which the isLmd of Rhodes 

 is 20 miles distant, the phice Loryma, the towns of 

 Tisanusa, Paridon and Larymna, Thymnias Bay, 

 Cape Aphrodisias, the toAvn of Hydas, Schoenus 

 Bay, and the district of Bubassus ; there was formerly 

 a town Acantlius, otherwise named Dulopolis. On a 

 promontory stand the free city of Cnidus, Triopia, 

 and then Pegusa, also called Stadia. After Pegusa 

 begins Doris. 



But before we go on it may be as well to describe 

 the back parts of Caria and the jurisdictions of 

 tlie interior. One of these is called Cibyratica ; the 

 actual town of Cibyra belongs to Phrygia, and is the 

 centre for 25 city-states, the most famous being the 

 city of Laodicea. Laodicea is on the river Lycus, 

 its sides being washed by the Asopus and the Caprus ; 



299 



