Strabo, Geography (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Str.].
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nia, according to Apollodorus, by the Araxes, note but rather by the Cyrus note and Moschican mountains. note The expedition of the Egyptians into Ethiopia note and Colchis. The migration of the Heneti, note who passed from Paphlagonia into the country bordering on the Adriatic Gulf. Similar emigrations were also undertaken by the nations of Greece, the Ionians, Dorians, Achaians, and Aeolians; and the Aenians, note now next neighbours to the Aetolians, formerly dwelt near Dotium note and Ossa, beyond the Perrhaebi; note the Perrhaebi too are but wanderers here themselves. Our present work furnishes numerous instances of the same kind. Some of these are familiar to most readers, but the migrations of the Carians, the Treres, the Teucrians, and the Galatae or Gauls, note are not so generally known. Nor yet for the most part are the expeditions of their chiefs, for instance, Madys the Scythian, Tearko the Ethiopian, Cobus of Trerus, Sesostris and Psammeticus the Egyptians; nor are those of the Persians from Cyrus to Xerxes familiar to every one. The Kimmerians, or a separate tribe of them, called the Treres, have frequently overrun the countries to the right of the Euxine and those adjacent to them, bursting now into Paphlagonia, now into Phrygia, as they did when, according to report, Midas note came to his death by drinking bull's blood. Lygdamis led his followers into Lydia, passed through Ionia, took Sardis, but was slain in Cilicia. The Kimmerians and Treres frequently made similar incursions, until at last, as it is reported, these latter, together with [their chief] Cobus, were

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Strabo, Geography (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Str.].
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