Strabo, Geography (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Str.].
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the statue that closes its eyes. It must, however, require a good courage, not to assert that it appeared to have closed its eyes, as that at Troy turned away its eyes from beholding the violence offered to Cassandra, but to show it in the act of winking:—but it is much more daring to make so many statues of the Minerva rescued from Ilium, as those who describe them affirm, for there is a Minerva said to be Trojan in the sense of having been rescued from that city, not only at Siris, but at Rome, at Lavinium, and at Luceria. The scene, too, of the daring of the Trojan female captives is assigned to many different places and appears incredible, although it is by no means impossible. There are some who say that Siris, and also that Sybaris on the Trionto, note were founded by the Rhodians. Antiochus says that the site of Siris having become the subject of a contention between the Tarentini and the Thurii, on that occasion commanded by Cleandridas the general who had been banished from Lacedaemon, the two people came to a composition, and agreed to inhabit it in common, but that the colony note should be considered as Tarentine; however, at a subsequent period both the name and the locality were changed, and it was called Heraclea. note 15

Next in order is Metapontium, note at a distance of 140 stadia from the sea-port of Heraclea. It is said to be a settlement of the Pylians at the time of their return from Ilium under Nestor; their success in agriculture was so great, that it is said they offered at Delphi a golden harvest: note they adduce, as a proof of this foundation, the offerings of the dead sacrificed periodically to the Neleïdae; note but it was destroyed by

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