488 PELOPONNESUS. 
CHAP, mile and seven furlongs) from that city. But 
VIII. . J 
* T he places it to the left 1 of the city, and upon 
the lower part 2 of a mountain near ^.Jloiving stream 
called Eleutherion. The last observations do 
not permit us to consider the remains of this 
structure as being any part of the Her&um ; as 
they are situate in the plain, and not close to 
any rivulet or water-course. But near to this 
structure there was another Ruin, whose 
foundations more resembled the oblong form 
of a temple : it was built with baked bricks, 
and originally lined with marble. Here, 
then, there seems every reason to believe we 
Hieron discovered the remains of the whole Hieron 
of Ceret 
Mysias. o f Ceres Mysias, noticed by Pausanias in his 
road from Mycenie to ^4rgos, by a description 
very applicable to these Ruins. He says 3 the 
building had no roof, but contained within 
another temple of brick-work; and that the 
traveller going thence towards Argos, arrived 
at the river Inachus. In the different facts the 
Reader may have collected from this and the 
preceding Chapter concerning the remains of 
(1) Vid. Pausan. in Corinth, c.17- p. 147. Ed. Kulrnii. 
(2) Ibid. 
(3) Ibid. 
