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Callisthenes says, that the Arimi from whom the mountains in the neighbourhood have the name of Arima, are situated near the Calycadnus, note and the promontory Sarpedon close to the Corycian cave. 7
The monuments of the kings lie around the lake Coloë. At Sardes is the great mound of Alyattes upon a lofty base, the work, according to Herodotus, note of the people of the city, the greatest part of it being executed by young women. He says that they all prostituted themselves; according to some writers the sepulchre is the monument of a courtesan.
Some historians say, that Coloë is an artificial lake, designed to receive the superabundant waters of the rivers when they are full and overflow.
Hyptaepa note is a city situated on the descent from Tmolus to the plain of the Caÿster. 8
Callisthenes says that Sardes was taken first by Cimmerians, then by Treres and Lycians, which Callinus also,
the elegiac poet, testifies, and that it was last captured in the
time of Cyrus and Croesus. When Callinus says that the
incursion of the Cimmerians when they took Sardes was
directed against the Esioneis, the Scepsian (Demetrius) supposes the Asioneis to be called by him Esioneis, according to.
the Ionian dialect; for perhaps Meonia, he says, was called
Asia, as Homer describes the country,
in the Asian meadows about the streams of Caÿster. note
Il. ii. 461.
The distinguished natives of Sardes were two orators of the same name and family, the Diodori; the elder of whom was called Zonas, who had pleaded the cause of Asia in many suits. At the time of the invasion of Mithridates the king, he was accused of occasioning the revolt of the cities from him, but in his defence he cleared himself of the charge.
The younger Diodorus was my friend; there exist of his
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Strabo, Geography (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Str.].