302 plint's h-atueal HISTOET. [Book IV. 



Bisaltae. "We tlien come to the river Stiymon^ which takes 

 its rise in Mount Haemus^ and forms the boundary of Ma- 

 cedonia : it is worthy of remark that it first discharges itself 

 into seven lakes before it proceeds onward in its course. 



Such is Macedonia, which was once the mistress of the 

 world, which once extended^ her career over Asia, Armenia, 

 Iberia, Albania, Cappadocia, Syria, Egypt, Taurus, and Cau- 

 casus, which reduced the whole of the East under her power, 

 and triumphed over the Bactri, the Medes, and the Persians. 

 She too it was who proved the conqueror of India, thus 

 treading in the footsteps of Father Liber"* and of Hercules ; 

 and this is that same Macedonia, of which our own general 

 Paulus JEmilius sold to pillage seventy-two* cities in one day. 

 So great the difference in her lot resulting from the actions 

 of two^ individuals ! 



CHAP. 18. (ll.)^TnEACE ; THE -EQEAN SEA. 



Thrace now follows, divided into fifty strategies^, and to 

 be reckoned among the most powerful nations of Europe. 

 Among its peoples whom we ought not to omit to name are 

 the Denseletae and the Medi, dwelling upon the right bank 

 of the Strymon, and joining up to the Bisaltae above ^ men- 

 tioned ; on the left there are the Digerri and a number of 

 tribes of the Bessi^, with various names, as far as the river 

 Mestus^", which winds around the foot of Mount Pan- 

 town." A few remains are still to be seen. The bay at the mouth of 

 the Strymon, now Struma or Kara-Sou, is called the G-ulf of Orphano. 



^ A Thracian people, extending fiom the river Strymon on the east 

 to Crestonica on the west. 



2 In Mount Scomius namely, one of the Hsemus or Balkan range. 



3 Under Alexander the Great. On his death liis empire was torn in 

 pieces by the contentions of his generals. 



■* In allusion to the legendary accounts of the Indian expeditions of 

 Bacchus and Hercules. 



* On the conquest of Perseus. Plutarch says that these seventy cities 

 were pillaged in one and the same hour. They were thus punished for 

 their support of Perseus. 



fi Alexander the Great and Paulus jEmihus. 



7 Or preefectures, as the Eomans called them. » jn ^j^g i^st Chapter. 



^ An extensive tribe occupying the country about the rivers Axius, 

 Strymon, and Nestus or Mestus. 



^^ This river is now called the Mesto or Zara-Sou. 



