230 MOUNTAIN PASSES. 



the remains, though far out of the position which 

 geographers have hitherto assigned to that city, 

 in their comments on the march of the Consul 

 Manlius, who conquered it on his way from 

 Cibyra into Pamphylia. The site of these ruins 

 near the entrance of the pass leading from 

 Milyas to Pamphylia, by which the Roman 

 army must have come, and their unfortified con- 

 dition, which would account for the flight of the 

 inhabitants at the approach of the Consul, and 

 the consequent easy plunder of their town as 

 recorded by Livy,* leave little doubt respecting 

 our determination of their name. 



Opposite Evdeer Khan two deep valleys open 

 from the Solymian Mountains into the plain 

 of Adalia. They are separated by a craggy 

 peak called Gule-look Dagh, the summit of 

 which is five thousand feet above the level of 

 the sea. The chain, continuing to the northward, 

 nowhere exceeds that elevation, but declines 

 towards the north-west corner of the plain, where 

 there is another opening or valley, which our guide 

 called Dooshamarez, and which is probably the 

 pass General Koehler ascended on his route to 

 the highlands of Pisidia. Of the two passes 

 * Livy. xxxviii. 1 6. 



