404 PELOPONNESUS. 
CI *AP. towns and villages, and constantly assailing a 
v ,- - traveller upon his arrival : indeed, sometimes 
it became a question with us, whether Ibrahim 
or Cordki were the most intelligent and useful 
Tchohadar. 
The At Coroni, turning towards the east, we had 
' on ' the first sight of the HIEROX. Its general 
disposition may have been anticipated by the 
Reader, in the description already given of the 
features QiEpidauria. It is a small and beautiful 
Mountains, valley, surrounded by high mountains ; one of 
superior magnitude bounding the prospect on 
its eastern side. This, from its double summit, 
consisting of two rounded eminences, may 
be the mammillary mountain, thence called 
TITTHION, by Pausanias 1 , from nrQog; which 
word, among a great variety of other instances 
proving the common origin of the two lan- 
guages 2 , we have retained in our word teat ; 
(1) "Of Jt tiffit iirig TO aA.^0;, TO <n TIT0IOT, HOU triftn ot(ta%g(Uwi 
K.vvovitr, MaXearau 3k 'AXX<vt { It aurtf. Pausan. Corinth. C. 27. 
pp. 174, 175. Lips. 1696. 
(2) The nation from whom the Greeks were descended, and the 
ancestors of the English, spoke dialects of the same language The 
numberless proofs that might be adduced of this, are foreign to the 
object of this publication ; but, as to an authority for the common 
origin of the two colonies, the author is proud to refer to his Grand- 
father's learned work on " the Connection of the Roman and Saxon 
Coins;" 
