TABLE OF CONTENTS. 



Vll 



Departure from Assouan. — Destruction occasioned by the Locusts. — Gartaas. — 

 Remains of Antiquity. — Arrival at Taeefa. — Entrance of the Cataracts of Galab- 

 shee. — Suspicion and Jealousy expressed by the Inhabitants. — Ruins at Galabshee. — 

 Temples of Dulckey. — Greek Inscriptions relating to Mercury. — Interview with a 

 Cashief — Arrival at Deir. — Mamelukes at Dongola. — Reception by the Son of the 

 Cashief of Deir. — Ibrim. — Application of human Saliva to the Cure of Disorders. — 

 Voyage down the River, and Arrival at Seboo. — Remains of Antiquity. — Two Rows of 

 Sphinxes, and gigantic Figures in alto-relievo. — Oiffendoone. — Caravan of Gelabs, 

 or Slave Merchants. — Deboo. — Nature of the Hostilities between the People of Deboo 

 and a neighbouring Village. — Character of the Inhabitants between Philce and Ibrim. 



— Language of the Nubians. — Religion ; Dress ; Arms ; Trade. 



XXIX. On the Mines of Laurium. — Gold and Silver Coinage of the 



Athenians. — Revenue of Attica ; by the Editor and the Earl of 



Aberdeen - Page 431 



District of Laurium full of exhausted Mines and Scoriae. — Site of the smelting 

 Furnaces. — Neglect of the Mines in the Age of Augustus. — Interior Management 

 and Mode of working the Ore in the Time of the Athenians. — Incorrect Explanation of 

 the Word xoirreiv by Sperling. — Silver Money of Attica. — Weight of different Tetra- 

 drachms. — Attempt to explain the Reason of the Rudeness in Design and Execution of 

 the Silver Money of Athens. — Sources of the Athenian Revenue. — Prices of Corn 

 and Meat in Attica in different Years. — Athenian Gold Coin. — Reason why it was 

 so scarce. 



XXX. Remarks on Two sculptured Marbles brought from Amyclse ; by the 

 Earl of Aberdeen - 4£2 



XXXI. Illustration of various Greek Inscriptions, by the Editor - 458 



XXXII. On the Topography of Athens ; by Mr. Hawkins - - 480 



Line of Pausa?iias's Approach to Athens. — Position of the Pireean Gate. — Foun- 

 tain Callirhoe and Eleusinium. — Extent of the inner Ceramicus, including the Agora, 



— Situation of it to the South of the Acropolis. — Mistake of the Abbe Barthelemy. — 

 Discovery of the Site of the Academy. — The new Agora. — Gymnasium of Ptolemy. 



— Temple of Theseus. — Sacred Enclosure of Agraulus, on the East of the Acropolis. 



— Prytaneum. — Corinthian Columns of the Olympium, and History of that Temple, — 

 Pausanias returns to the Prytaneum, and begins his Third Excursion by the Street of 

 the Tripods. — Temple of Bacchus in Limnis. — Theatre. — Odeum of Themistocles. 



— Odeum of Pericles. — Temple appropriated to Ceres under two different denomi- 

 nations. - — The consistency of Pausanias 's Narrative. — Hill of the Museum. — 

 Grotto of Apollo and Pan. — Areopagus. — Reason of Pausanias s Silence respecting 

 Pnyx. — Recapitulation of the Points fxedby this Enquhy. — Remarks on the Method 

 observable in Pausanias's Description of the Antiquities, and on his Omissions. — Gene- 

 ral view of the Position of the Public Buildings and their Classification. — Refutation 

 of a new. Hypothesis, respecting the Topography of Athens, founded on a new Application 

 of the Inscriptions on the Arch of Hadrian. — On the Walls of Athens. — Their June- 



