458 
PLUS-y'S KATUEAL HTSTOET 
[Book Y. 
On passing Telmessus we come to the Asiatic or Carpa- 
thian Sea, and the district which is properly called Asia. 
Agrippa has divided this region into two parts ; one of which 
he has bounded on the east by Phrygia and Lycaonia, on the 
west by the ^gean Sea, on the south by the Egyptian Sea, 
and on the north by Paphlagonia, making its length to be 
473 miles and its breadth 820. The other part he has 
bounded by the Lesser Armenia on the east, Phrygia, Ly- 
caonia, and Pamphylia on the west, the province of Pontus 
on the north, and the Sea of Pamphylia on the south, making 
it 575 miles in length and 325 in breadth. 
CHAP. 29 CAEIA. 
Upon the adjoining coast is Caria^ then Ionia, and beyond 
it ^olis. Caria surrounds Doris, which lies in the middle, 
and runs down on both sides of it to the sea. In it^ is the 
Promontory of Pedalium^, the river Glaucus^, into which 
the Telmedium^ discharges itself, the towns of Dsedala^, 
Crya^, peopled by fugitives, the river Axon^, and the town 
of Calynda^ 
small stream that flows into the Horzoom Tchy. In B. xxxv. c. 17, Pliny 
mentions a kind of chalk found in the vicinity of this place. Its ruins 
are still to be seen, but they are not striking. 
^ In the south-west corner of Asia Minor, bounded on the north and 
north-east by the mountains Messagis and Cadmus, dividing it from 
Lydia and Phrygia, and adjoining to Phrygia and Lycia on the south-east. 
2 Caria. 
3 Now Cape Grhinazi. It was also caUed Artemisium, from the temple 
of Artemis or Diana situate upon it. 
^ Discharging itself into the bay of Telmissus, now Makri. 
^ "Telmissus" is the reading here in some editions. 
^ Situate in the district of Caria called Persea. It was also the name 
given to a mountainous district. In Hoskyn's map the ruins of Dsedala 
are placed near the head of the Grulf of Griaucus, on the west of a small 
river called Inegi Chai, probably the ancient Ninus, where Dsedalus was 
bitten by a water- snake, in consequence of which he died. 
7 On the Grulf of Glaucus : Stephanus however places it in Lycia. 
Mela speaks only of a promontory of this name. 
* Leake places this river immediately west of the Grulf of Griaucus. 
^ Placed by Strabo sixty stadia from the sea, west of the Gulf of 
Glaucus, and east of Carinus. Its site is uncertain, but it may possibly 
be the place discovered by Fellows, which is proved by inscriptions to 
have been called Cadyanda, a name otherwise unknown to us. This Hes 
