Previous Page
| Next Page
|
dead body there. It is not permitted even to keep a dog in Delos.
Formerly it had the name of Ortygia. note 6
Ceos note
once contained four cities. Two remain, Iulis
and Carthae, to which the inhabitants of the others were
transferred; those of Poaeëssa to Carthae, and those of Coressia to Iulis. Simonides the lyric poet, and Bacchylides his
nephew, and after their times Erasistratus the physician, and
Ariston the Peripatetic philosopher, the imitator of Bion, note the
Borysthenite, were natives of this city.
There was an ancient law among these people, mentioned
by Menander.
Phanias, that is a good law of the Ceans; who cannot live comfortably
(or well), let him not live miserably (or ill). note
For the law, it seems, ordained that those above sixty years
old should be compelled to drink hemlock, in order that there
might be sufficient food for the rest. It is said that once
when they were besieged by the Athenians, a decree was
passed to the effect that the oldest persons, fixing the age,
should be put to death, and that the besiegers retired in consequence.
The city lies on a mountain, at a distance from the sea of about 25 stadia. Its arsenal is the place on which Coressia was built, which does not contain the population even of a village. Near the Coressian territory and Poeëessa is a temple of Apollo Sminthius. But between the temple and the ruins of Poeëessa is the temple of Minerva Nedusia, built by Nestor, on his return from Troy. The river Elixus runs around the territory of Coressia. 7
After Ceos are Naxos note and Andros, note considerable islands, and Paros, the birth-place of the poet Archilochus. Thasos note was founded by Parians, and Parium, note a city in the Propontis. In this last place there is said to be an altar worthy of notice, each of whose sides is a stadium in length.
Previous Page
| Next Page
|
Strabo, Geography (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Str.].