Cliap. 29.] ACCOUOT OF COrNTEIES, ETC. 
463 
dos\ and tlie former site of Palaeomyndos ; also Nariandos, 
Neapolis^, Caryanda^, the free town of Termera"^, Bargyla^, 
and the town of lasus^, from which the lasian Grulf takes 
its name. 
Caria is especially distinguished for the fame of its places 
in the interior ; for here are Mylasa'^, a free town, and that 
of Antiochia^, on the site of the former towns of Sym- 
msethos and Cranaos : it is now surrounded by the rivers 
Mseander^ and Orsinus^^. In this district also was formerly 
Mseandropolis^^ ; we find also Eumenia^^, situate on the river 
CludroSjthe river Glaucus^^, the town of Lysias andOrthosa^'*, 
^ Its ruins are to be seen at the port called Grmnishlu. This was a 
Dorian colony on the coast of Caria, founded probably on the site of the 
old town of the Leleges. 
2 It has been suggested that this was only another name for the new 
town of Myndos, in contradistinction to Palseomyndos, or "oldMyndos." 
^ Scylax the geographer is supposed to have been a natiye of this 
place. The town is supposed to have been built partly on the mainland 
and partly on an island. Pastra Limani is supposed to have been the 
harbour of Caryanda. 
A Dorian city on the Promontory of Termerium. 
^ Situate near lasus and Myndos. Leake conjectures that it may have 
been on the bay between Pastra Limane and Asyn Kalesi. There was a 
statue here of Artemis Cindyas, under the bare sky, of which the incre- 
dible story was told that neither rain nor snow ever fell on it. 
^ See note on the last page. 
Its ruins are to be seen at the spot still called Melasso. It was a 
very flourishing city, eight miles from the coast of the Grulf of lasus, and 
situate at the foot of a rock of fine white marble. It was partly destroyed 
in the Roman civil wars by Labienus. Its ruins are very extensive. 
^ Hamilton has fixed the site of this place between four and five miles 
south-east of Kuyuja, near the mouth of the valley of the Kara-Su. The 
surrounding district was famous for the excellence of its figs. The city 
was built by Antiochus, the son of Seleucus. 
9 Now called the Mendereh or Meinder. 
Pococke thinks that the present Jenjer is the Orsinus, while Mannert 
takes it to be the Hadchizik, a little winding river that falls into the 
Mseander. Now called Gruzel-Hissar, according to Ansart. 
On the road from Dorylgeum to Apamea, It is said to have received 
its name from Attains II., who named the town after his brother and 
predecessor Eumenes II. Its site is known as Ishekle, and it is still 
marked by numerous ruins and sculptures. 
^3 A tributary of the Mseander. Its modern name is not mentioned. 
^'^ Mannert takes the ruins to be seen at Jegni-Chehr to be those of 
ancient Orthosia. The town of Lysias does not appear to have been 
identified. 
