.SOO FROM TITHOREA, 
CHAP, defik. Other towns of the Locri might be men- 
■ tioned, whose situation was even more remote ; 
and towards the south, some of them belonging 
even to the fiiid inhabitants' of Locris, the 
Loan Ozolce upon the Gulph of Corinth. The 
reason why so little notice has been taken of 
Bodonitza, is, that travellers visiting Turco- 
Chorio, and thence proceeding towards the north, 
have gone by Mola along the coast; although 
the antient paved causeway leading to Thermo- 
pylce from Elatea follow this defile of Mount 
CEta. If we have recourse to Latin authors for 
our information respecting Bodonitza, and am.ong 
these to Livy, in the hope that a place so 
remarkable has not escaped the notice of an his- 
torian, who has written an elaborate description 
of all the country in the neighbourhood of Ther- 
mopyl(F ; we shall be far from arriving at any 
thing decisive. With regard to Mount CEta, we 
are told by him^ that the range of mountains 
(1) Ai'TcC C.I Ka) Ta^i'avrss >,o^e?, t» ta ro toZ 'Hiaffou ;i.\riiM0i. x,u,i tu) 
u'/.y.ui Kivrecvpeo*' uv u'To Tris ffrfTTihovus (pair': to u-iro ty) pi^v toZ i-.o^ov "zptxTX^'' 
f/.iyov SuiraJStf, «ai S^ofi^ov; 'ix"' v%i'>p f>ii^- A/a Ss rcZre sea) 'OZ0AA2 xa- 
?.uir6ai TO 'iCic; ■ S'.rabon. Geog. lib. ix. p. 61 9. ed. Oxon. 
(2) " Idjugum, sicut Apennini dorso Italia dividitur, ita mediam 
Giaeciam dirimit Extremes ad orieiitem montes Gl tam 
vocant : quorum quod altissimum est, Callidrotno?i ajipellatur ; in 
cujusvalle adMaliacum sinum vergente iter est non latius quam sexa- 
ginta passus. Hasc una militaris via est," &c. Livio, Hist. lib. xxxvi. 
*:. IT), lorn. HI. p. 266. cd. Crevier. 
