$^% OO ''■-? L' .Oo. ■"oo^ X'*'-'*v^ # ^^^"^•^0^ Dean's Stereotype Edition. ''■ ^ 3 (/ BIBLIOTHECA CLASS ICA: OR, A DICTIONARY OF ALL THE PRINCIPAL NAMES AND TERMS RELATING TO THE GEOGRAPHY, TOPOGRAPHY, HISTORY, LITERATURE, AND MYTHOLOGY OP ANTIQUITY AND OF THE ANCIENTS WITH A CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE \\y J. LEMPRIERE, D. D. REVISED AND CORRECTED, AND DIVIDED, UNDER SEPARATE HEADS, INTO THREE PARTS: Part I. GEOGRAPHY, TOPOGRAPHY, &c. Part II. HISTORY. ANTIQUITIES, &c. Part m. MYTHOLOGY. v/. BY LORENZO L. DA PONTE AND JOHN D. OGILBY. FIFTEENTH AMERICAN EDITION, GREATLY ENLARGED IN THE HISTORICAL DEPARTME?;T, Bv LORENZO L. DA PONTE. PHILADELPHIA: J. B. LIPPTNCOTT & CO 1856. Entered accojmpi r? ire Act of Congress, in the Year One Thousarnl Elo-hi Hundred n I Fcriy-five. by W. E. Df.an, -.n ilu Clerk's O^ce of the Soul/tern District of Ncui-York. ByTiui»f« TO JOHN W. FRANCIS, A. M. M. D. Lie Profiissor of Materia Meclica, Tnslilutes of Medicine, Medical Jurisprudence, &,c. in the University of tlie State of New York; Member of the Medical and Chirurgical Society of London ; of the Wernerian Natural History Society of Edinhurgli ; of the Academy of Na- tiiral Sciences of Philadelphia; of the Lyceum of Natural History of New York; of the Historical Societies of Massachusetts and New Y'ork, &:c. &ic. This edition of LEMrKtEKE's Classical Dictioxaky, after having undergone such enlargennents and improvements as may render it less unworthy of his name, is respectftdly inscribed, by his very oflen and very much Obliged Friend. THE EDITOR. of the interior. PREFACE TO THE SEVENTH EDITION The peculiar circumstances under which the present edition of Lempriere's Classical Diction- ary is offered to the public, and the changes which have been introduced into the plan of the work, and still more in its execution, appear to demand from the editors an exposition of the views by which they have been governed, and a justification of the various alterations which they have ventured to make. They feel, however, that no apology can be required for the liber. ties which they have taken with the text of Lempriere. The design of his work, the most com- prehensive of all the publications of the class that have appeared, either in this country or in England, and which has secured to it an unequalled popularity, can hardly atone for the many glaring and pernicious inaccuracies which deface the detail ; inaccuracies misleading the n)ind, and sometimes mixed with grosser failings, to pervert the moral sense and feeling of the youthful inquirer who may have recourse to its pages. It was first in this city that the attention of the public was called to these defects, and that some attempt was made to correct them ; and the last American Edition may be considered, by the approbation with which it was received, to have as- certained and collected the public voice in favour of further amendments. More recently, the Quarterly Journal of Education undertook the task of reviewing the original book ; and that paper, published under the authority of names beyond all competition in letters, among which are tVose ofLord Brougham, Lord John Russel, Sir T. Denman, Hallam, Ilobhouvse, Maltby, Mill, and Pattison, appears to have set on it the final seal of absolute reprobation. Impressed with a full conviction of the utter worthlessness of an authority so uniA'^ersally sought after, and so inces- santly consulted, the editors of the present edition had long contemplated the publication of a volume which should resemble Lempriere's in nothing but in the outline of its plan ; in embra- cing, namely, a general account of antiquity. With this view, they proceeded to separate the Mythological from the Geographical and Historical parts, and these from each other ; in- tending, for the sake of distinctness, to treat them separately, that the certain and actual narra- tions and descriptions v/hich belong to the historian and geographer might not be blended with the fictitious or allegorical representations of the poet or raythologian. To this they were the rather induced, from observation of the inevitable and irremediable confusion produced in the mind of the youthful readers of Lempriere, as a consequence of the indiscriminate blending of these separate objects of study. Even the mind accustomed to analysis m.ay be sometimes bewil- dered, and forget the truth in its heterogeneous mixture with fable. Having accomplished this separation, they had intended tore-write every article, and to introduce such new ones as might appear requisite to make the work what it purports to bo, a complete Bibliotheca Classica. Be- fore, however, they could even prepare for the commencement of this task, by procuring from Europe the proper authorities, the call of their publisher required them to begin ; and the demand of the market, they were informed, was of so urgent a character, that unless the work could ap- pear within a limited time, it was considered as of no avail to prepare it. Tliis call the editors were not at liberty to disregard, from the nature of their contract, and from the engagements which had ai'isen out of it between their publishers and other parties not originally concnnod. The seventh edition is presented, therefoVe, with great diffidence to the public as the result of three months' labour, bestowed on it by the editors in the evenings of days devoted to profesPionil avocjtions. Under circumstances such as these, it was impossible that the whole work should be re-written, or even submitted to a perfect revision ; and as the Geographical department has always been held the most important, at the same time that it was the most incorrect in the original work, it will be observed that that department has claimed the principal care of the editors. The addi- tion of many new articles, in all, it is believed, amounting to several hundred, was the smallest part of their labour; the greater number of all those which were to be found in former edition.^, being entirely re-written in this. The geography of Italy and Greece has recently been admira- bly illustrated by the research and the labours of many learned scholars ; but no writer has suc- ceeded in describing more accurately or more eloquently the interesting cilies, rivers, and moun- tains, of those countries, all equally connected with the most pleasing associations of tlie clas- sical scholar, than the Rev. J. A Cramer, in his Geographical descriptions of Ancient Italy and Greece. The results of this able antiquary's investigations the editors have freely transferred to their pages, having put to the test of a strict comparison with the ancient authorities the passa- ges of which they have thus availed themselves. This may detract in some measure from the originality of their work, but it is confidently presumed that it will greatly add to its value. The editors, however, believe that whatever they may have now first introduced, and with wliatevcr exactness they may have corrected the original articles, they have performed in that a less useful work than in the scrupulous care with which they have removed from their pages tlie ofiensiva matter with Avhich those of the first author were so profusely stained, and which were not tho. roughly eradicated in any subsequent edition. of the ^nt eriop. PART I. GEOGRAPHY, TOPOGRAPHY, &c. AB ABvE, an ancient city of Phocis, at no great di:stance from Elatea, and to the right of that city going towards Opus. It was early ce- lebrated for an oracle and temple of Apollo, held in great esteem and veneration. The temple, being richly adorned with treasures and various otierings, was sacked and burned by the Per- sians. Having been restored, it was again con- sumed in the Sacred War by the B(Eotians. But Pausanias asserts that it was. but half destroy- ed at first, and, like many other Grecian temples, was suffered to remain in that condition as a monument of Persian hostility. It was treated with great favour by the Romans, vv^ho conced- ed to it peculiar privileges, out of veneration to the deity there worshipped. The ruins of the place are pointed out by Sir W. Gell, in his Itinerary, near the village of Exarcho. Cra- vier^ Anc. Greece. — Strabo, 445. — Soph. (Ed. Tyr. mi.— Herod. 1, 46 ; 8, 134 ; 8, 33.— Z?i- od. Sic. 16, 530.— Pausan. 10, 3 mid 35. Abalus, an island supposed to have been si- tuated in the German ocean, on whose shores, according to some of the ancients, the spring- tides deposited amber. The same island is called Baltia by Timosus. Pli7i. 37, 2. Aeantia. Vid. Abantes, Part II. Abarimon, a country of Scythia, near mount Imaus. Plin. 7> c. 2. Abas and Abus, I. a mountain of the greater Armenia, probably Ararat, a part of the Ala- Dag. That part of the Euphrates, sometimes called the Arsanias, and into which the smaller river of that name empties, has its source in this mountain. Plin. 5, 24. — D'Anville. — Malte- Brun. II. A river of Armenia Major, where Pompey routed the Albani. Vid. Parts II. and III. Abasa, an island in the Red Sea, near iEthi- opia. Paus. 6, c. 26. Abasitis, a part of Mysia in Asia. Slrab. Abassena. Vid. Abyssinia. Abatos, an island in the lake near Memphis in Egypt, abounding with flax and papyrus. Osiris was buried there. Lucan. 10, v. 323. Abdera, I. a town of Hispania Bastica, built by the Carthaginians. Strab. 3. II. A mari- time city of Thrace, to the east of the Nes- tus, founded originally by Timesius of Clazo- menoe, and subsequently recolonized by a large body of Teians from Ionia. Abdera was al- ready a large and wealthy town when Xerxes aiTJ ved there on his way into Greece ; returning whence he presented the town with his golden Rcymetar and train, as an acknowledgement of the reception he had met with there. Abdera wa.s the limit of the Odrysian empire to the west. It continued to increase in prosperity and i -pa**' nee until it became engaged in hostili- AB ties with the Triballi, who had gained an as- cendancy over the Odrysae and the other na- tions of Thrace. According to Diodorus, Abde- ra at length fell into the hands of Eumenes king of Pergamus, through the treachery of Pytho, one of its conmianders. In Pliny's time it was considered a free city; and the circumstance of having given birth to the philosophers Democri- tus and Protagoras added to its celebrity. In the middle ages it degenerated into a sm.all town, to which the name of Polystylus was attached, according to the Byzantine historian C iiropa- late. Its ruins are said to exist near the Cape Baloustra. Cramer, Anc. Greece. — Strab. 7, 120; 8, 120; 2,91.— Diod. Sic. lb,AlQ.-Ex- cerpt. 3.— Plin. 4, l\.—Ponip. Mel. 2, 2.—Cic. ad Attic 4. 16. Abella, now Avella, a town of Campania, whose inhabitants were called Abellani. Its nuts, called avellana, and also its apples, were famous. Virg. yEn. 7, v. 740. —Sll. 8, v. 544. Abia, a maritime town of Messenia, suppos- ed to be the ancient Ira mentioned by Homer. Pausan. 4, 30.- II. 1, 150. Abila, or Abyla, a mountain of Africa, in that part which is nearest to the opposite moun- tain called Calpe, on the coast of Spain, only eighteen miles distant. These two mountains are called the columns of Hercules, and were said formerly to be united, till the hero separa- ted them and made a communication between the Mediterranean and Atlantic scels. Strab. 3.— Mela, 1, c. 5, 1. 2, c. 6.— Plin. 3. Abnoba, a mountain of Germany, now the Black mountain. It is sometimes, though in- correctly, given in the plural, as mountains of Germany. The Danube has its source in this spur of the Lepontine Alps, which forms the southern extremity of the Hercynian range, Bossi Cost.de Germ. — Tacit. Germ. 1. — Avien. Abobrica, I. a town of Lusitania. Plin. 4, c. 20. II. Another in Spain. Abonitichos, now Ainehboli, a town of Paphlagonia towards the northern boundary, and nearly midway between east and west. The later writers among the Greeks called it lonopolis. Abobras. Vid. Chaboras. Abrotoncim, a town of Africa, near the Syr- tes. Plin. 5, 4. Abrus, a city of the Sapsei. Paus. 7, c. 10. AssiNTHn, a people on the coasts of Pontus. Herodot. 6, c. 34. Absorus, the principal of the Absyrtides, with a town of the same name. Absyrtides lNSL-r.;E, otherwise the Brigei- des, four islands on the coast of Histria. Their modem names are Cherso, Oscro, Ferosvm and CJuio. Vid. Absyrtus, Part III. 7 AB GEOGRAPHY. AC Abus, a river of Britain, now the Humber, dividing the Brigantes of the modern York- shire, from the Coritani of Lincolnshire. Camhd. Brit. — Heyl. Cosm. Abydos, I. a to^Ti of Asia, on the borders of the Hellespont in the lesser Mysia, not far from the mouth of the Simois, built, as pretended, by the Milesians under the auspices of Gyges king of Lydia. The strait by which the Asiatic coast is here divided from Europe is so narrow, that Abydos appeared from a distance as one town with Sesios, which stood upon the other side. The actual width was seven stadia; but D'Anville asserts that these were the shortest of the three measures of that denomination. It was here that Xerxes constructed his celebrat- ed bridge of boats for the transportation of his innumerable hosts. Poetry and history com- bined to render this place interesting to the an- cients, and both in modern times concur to ren- der it as interesting to us. Recent experiments, moreover, have added probability to the story of Leander's gallantry ; for the passage of the fiel- lespontby an expert swimmer has been proved to be easily practicable. Abydos being attacked by the Macedonian king Philip, the inhabit- ants devoted themselves to death rather than fall into the hands of their enemy. For three days this slaughter continued ; the king of Ma- cedon forbidding his soldiers to leave the town, lest the citizens should then desist from their vo- luntary self-immolation. Abydos again became famous for its firm and vigorous resistance whenbesiegedby the Turks under Orchan, the son of Othman. The treason of the gover- nor's daughter, who had become enamoured of a young Turk among the besiegers, is said alone to have occasioned the fall of the place. Since that time the to'mi has remained in pos- session of the Turks, who under Mahomet II. erected the two castles of the Dardanelles for the defence of Constantinople by sea. These forts do not exactly occupy, as many have be- lieved, the sites of the ancient Abydos and Ses- tos ; the on]y remains of the former being now the ruins at a spot called Nagara. Mela. — Just. 2, 13.— Plin.— Herod. 7, 36.—Polijb. 16, 29, 35. — Liv. 31, 17. II. A to^Ti of 'Eg}^pt, alDout seven miles from the borders of the Nile to- Avards Libya. Its modern name, Madfune, is expressive of its dilapidation, and of the ruins which alone remain of its original splendour. Ii was famous as the residence of Memnon, and for a temple of Osiris. D'Anville consi- ders it the Oasis Magna, and sa3^s, that in the lime of the Lower Empire it was used as a place of banishment. Plin. 5, 9. Abyla. Vid. Abila. Abyssinia, a large division of Africa, little known to the ancients. In its least unstable limits it corresponds to the southern part of Ethiopia s)ipra -Sg}'ptum. This situation and extent would make its eastern boundary'' the Red Sea, with an indefinite limit upon every other side. The name of Ethiopia, given to the country of which Abyssinia is but a portion, was from the Greek, aiid Abyssinia is the Ara- bic name, which the inhabitants reject. All history of this country is unsatisfactorv; but an organized government of some kind existed among the Abyssmians at least as early as the time of Solomon, as is proved bv the 8 scripture account of queen Sheba's visit to that king. AcACEsiuM, a to\^Ti of Arcadia. Mercury, surnamed Acacesius, was worshipped there. Pans. 8, c. 3, 36, &c. AcADEMiA, I. a part of the Ceramicus with- out the city, from which it was distant about six stadia. Its name was derived from the hero Academus. 'Ey il/