CALYNDA. 



43 



are such as we might expect to receive a dis- 

 tinctive name. Taking all these circumstances 

 into consideration, it does not appear unreason- 

 able to urge the identity of Cadyanda and 

 Calynda, without laying any stress on some 

 slight analogy of name. Many of the cities of 

 Lycia had two names, as Xanthus, which was 

 also called Arna and Antiphellus, of which Hebes- 

 sus was the more ancient appellation. It is very 

 probable that in like manner Cragus and Sidyma 

 were the earlier and later names of the same 

 place, as has been suggested by Colonel Leake 

 in his valuable remarks on Mr. Hoskyn's paper. 

 Certainly if there ever was a city of importance 

 named Cragus, situated among the mountains 

 so called, it must have been Sidyma, for as- 

 suredly no site of any consequence escaped 

 us during our exploration of those mountains. 



Before leaving Hoozoomlee we visited the style 

 or obelisk to the east of the village, alluded to 

 in the concluding chapter of Fellows 1 " Lycia." 

 It appears to have been covered by Lycian 

 characters, but they have almost all been ob- 

 literated. It is square, ten feet high by three 

 feet eight inches broad. It has no excavation 

 on the summit, and stands on a base, three feet 



