KETENNA. 31 



ing fact may interest you as a corroboration. 

 Two or three of these coins contained either the 

 whole or part of the letters KET, the commence- 

 ment of Ketenna, unquestionably the true ortho- 

 graphy of the name of that city, the people of 

 which Strabo calls Catenneans, and other authors 

 Etennians.* 



" I left this place on a Tuesday morning. I had 

 a hint on the Sunday night that the people were 

 afraid of what I was about, and they wished I 

 would go on the following day : I told them that I 

 was going the day after the morrow ; but that, if 

 they said another word upon the subject, I would 

 stay a week, and send to my friend the Pacha of 

 Adalia (at Stenez), till one of the Greek muleteers 

 should return with a cavass to take their Aga down 

 to Stenez, and teach him how he -was to treat us 

 Frank travellers, and make him pay all the ex- 

 penses of my delay and the cavass's journey ; that 

 I was surprised that they were afraid of me, when 

 they were all so civil. Of course, after this, they 

 immediately retired, and took some supper with 

 my men, and said ' Allah ! ' 



" I have scarcely time or space to describe pro- 



* Their territory lay to the east of Selge, towards the con- 

 fines of Cilicia and Isauria. Cramer, ii. p. 312. 



