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country. Its largest mountain is Cyllene. note Its perpendicular height, according to some writers, is 20, according to others, about 15 stadia.
The Arcadian nations, as the Azanes, and Parrhasii, and other similar tribes, seem to be the most ancient people of Greece. note
In consequence of the complete devastation of this country,
it is unnecessary to give a long description of it. The cities,
although formerly celebrated, have been destroyed by continual wars; and the husbandmen abandoned the country at
the time that most of the cities were united in that called
Megalopolis (the Great City). At present Megalopolis itself
has undergone the fate expressed by the comic poet;
the great city is a great desert.
There are rich pastures for cattle, and particularly for horses
and asses, which are used as stallions. The race of Arcadian
horses, as well as the Argolic and Epidaurian, is preferred
before all others. The uninhabited tracts of country in Aetolia
and Acarnania are not less adapted to the breeding of horses
than Thessaly.
2
Mantinea owes its fame to Epaminondas, who conquered the Lacedaemonians there in a second battle, in which he lost his life. note
This city, together with Orchomenus, Heraea, Cleitor, Pheneus, Stymphalus, Maenalus, Methydrium, Caphyeis, and Cynaetha, either exist no longer, or traces and signs only of their
existence are visible. There are still some remains of Tegea,
and the temple of the Alaean Minerva remains. The latter
is yet held in some little veneration, as well as the temple of
the Lycaean Jupiter on the Lycaean mountain. But the places
mentioned by the poet, as
Rhipe, and Stratia, and the windy Enispe,
are difficult to discover, and if discovered, would be of no use
from the deserted condition of the country.
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Strabo, Geography (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Str.].