Archteologi* Attic*Lib. i.Cap. i. 3
wilbeare me out.aThucydides reports that k is mar.iseft that al a Lib. i. P-2-
Greece was not-/3*i8«/«s o/x«aV'«5 sirmly inhabited , but that
there were continual! pilgrimages, or removings of the inha-
bitants9forsaking their sormer place?, being driven out by a
ih-onger and greater number. Wherefore when there
was no sase trasfique or commerce by fea or land, each ma-
nured his grounds sor to have provent, alone to ferve for
prefent necessity, dst:r':ng no more them srom hand to
mouth, it being uncertaine how foon they might be com-
pelled to get them thence. Whereupon they did more will- .
ingly change their feats; not taking grievous that sharpe
.charge, vexeres migrate colonic Be gone ye ancient Boores. But
•the more sertile foyle had hard bickrings. Thejfaly,Bzotia>&.
a great part os Pelopnnefus, except Arcadia, was often invar
ded,& the old Lords expelled. T»» >5y ■ aV}«mj# in n 'nn*M-
*«'. But Attica,by reafon of'the thinnefse or barremefse os the
ground wjis always inhabited by the fume men (fnone it feems
being willing to leave his better,fora worfe)«ot affording fv.ell
to contention. Out of which peace (prung up fo great a multi-
tude, that Attica even now (warming, and J ^Si? 'iw>not
able to containe and feed fo many, is conftrained to fend forth
Colonies into Ionia, a region of Afia the leffe, which is repo r-
ted by the Greeks to borrow denomination from Ion the fbn
otXuthus, or, as the Poets fay,Apollo & Crevfa, who in the
words o{TLvrij>ides is thought to be c^-f'^t 'An*'/®-
the maker or founder of Afia.The mother Ionia (for fo 1 plea e r
to say) kept not ssill her sormer name. For in procefle of CT r" j ?_
time (lie owned^ax'^;sr6Jc7<eo»,as dStrabo faKS^roAllgiif? j 1,1.9.53.397".
according to ePaufan'm who was the sirft King thereos, by e in Art. p.2.
fTzetzes on Lycofhron called Aliens. But gVionCkrif jim /Pag. jj.
brings a more natural! reason than this, why it was Acr^a. i °rat- £•
Acta signiiies a (hore,both in Greeks 8c * Latine speech. Now p ttJs. n'5-
becaule all of it within a little, was walked with th 1 sea, and //scrabo 1.9.
;&«M7m'j, it might challenge umo'itfelse Aaxa. Pisa p. 391.
A 2 wtet
wilbeare me out.aThucydides reports that k is mar.iseft that al a Lib. i. P-2-
Greece was not-/3*i8«/«s o/x«aV'«5 sirmly inhabited , but that
there were continual! pilgrimages, or removings of the inha-
bitants9forsaking their sormer place?, being driven out by a
ih-onger and greater number. Wherefore when there
was no sase trasfique or commerce by fea or land, each ma-
nured his grounds sor to have provent, alone to ferve for
prefent necessity, dst:r':ng no more them srom hand to
mouth, it being uncertaine how foon they might be com-
pelled to get them thence. Whereupon they did more will- .
ingly change their feats; not taking grievous that sharpe
.charge, vexeres migrate colonic Be gone ye ancient Boores. But
•the more sertile foyle had hard bickrings. Thejfaly,Bzotia>&.
a great part os Pelopnnefus, except Arcadia, was often invar
ded,& the old Lords expelled. T»» >5y ■ aV}«mj# in n 'nn*M-
*«'. But Attica,by reafon of'the thinnefse or barremefse os the
ground wjis always inhabited by the fume men (fnone it feems
being willing to leave his better,fora worfe)«ot affording fv.ell
to contention. Out of which peace (prung up fo great a multi-
tude, that Attica even now (warming, and J ^Si? 'iw>not
able to containe and feed fo many, is conftrained to fend forth
Colonies into Ionia, a region of Afia the leffe, which is repo r-
ted by the Greeks to borrow denomination from Ion the fbn
otXuthus, or, as the Poets fay,Apollo & Crevfa, who in the
words o{TLvrij>ides is thought to be c^-f'^t 'An*'/®-
the maker or founder of Afia.The mother Ionia (for fo 1 plea e r
to say) kept not ssill her sormer name. For in procefle of CT r" j ?_
time (lie owned^ax'^;sr6Jc7<eo»,as dStrabo faKS^roAllgiif? j 1,1.9.53.397".
according to ePaufan'm who was the sirft King thereos, by e in Art. p.2.
fTzetzes on Lycofhron called Aliens. But gVionCkrif jim /Pag. jj.
brings a more natural! reason than this, why it was Acr^a. i °rat- £•
Acta signiiies a (hore,both in Greeks 8c * Latine speech. Now p ttJs. n'5-
becaule all of it within a little, was walked with th 1 sea, and //scrabo 1.9.
;&«M7m'j, it might challenge umo'itfelse Aaxa. Pisa p. 391.
A 2 wtet