430 K^rchaologh x^stthd. Lib. 5. Cap. 13."
poore Trojans, and the fad sruits os cheWarre , speaksos
such a thing done by the Virgins at the river Scamandar.
9 TZurip. He'en, a 'teti 0 7r«s sAo* much
llnlesTeyou had rather think it was done ("according to the
cosrome) to the dead bodies of their friends, that lay there-
in. 1 shouid have told you that besore tbey cut their haire^
(I rrieane when they went out Ephebi) they first took a vef-
sell of Wine (ai$iv oik, faies Hesjcbius) and having confecra*
ted it to the honour of Hercules, they began a health in ic
to the company there prefent. This ceremony, tbey called
to itviTt'ia* from the Wine. And here it may not be amifle,
to mention the diftindion, which you {hall find in the Poets
of two feverall waies of cutting os their haire, in nse among
the Greeks. The one was Kw@, when they did but pare their
haire, as they would doe the borders in a garden: the other
called ma.pov, when they stiaved it so closetothe skinne,
that they made the head look like a <w«pw, a Skjffe&r a boar.
When they came to be two yeares puberes, ShJinis h,3bp7m,
( as Demcfthexes calls it) or twenty yeares old;tivJpis \w$-
•Xi^.mv they wrote men, or they became/#» juris, and their
names were regiftred by the Demarche in his An^iuf^m W-
*pu&, in A/bo Lexiardico, a book wherein he kept the names
osallthose that belonged to his Demm,\x. had this name mt^.
$ K%%io)i, (or <? Khngm>) app^p, because as soone as any ones
name was written therein, he might be masttr of an essate
kimselfe is he had it.Besides this book, there was rnvdmov Trvfyov
a table os box-wood, wherein every one was to set down of
whuDemtn he was, together with the name os his Father.
Now as sor the women, they were not wont to beentred in-
to any tribe, till the time when they came to be Married,and
that in the month os Gam/ion, whereas the men wereentred
in the Month olTjanepsion.
CAP.
poore Trojans, and the fad sruits os cheWarre , speaksos
such a thing done by the Virgins at the river Scamandar.
9 TZurip. He'en, a 'teti 0 7r«s sAo* much
llnlesTeyou had rather think it was done ("according to the
cosrome) to the dead bodies of their friends, that lay there-
in. 1 shouid have told you that besore tbey cut their haire^
(I rrieane when they went out Ephebi) they first took a vef-
sell of Wine (ai$iv oik, faies Hesjcbius) and having confecra*
ted it to the honour of Hercules, they began a health in ic
to the company there prefent. This ceremony, tbey called
to itviTt'ia* from the Wine. And here it may not be amifle,
to mention the diftindion, which you {hall find in the Poets
of two feverall waies of cutting os their haire, in nse among
the Greeks. The one was Kw@, when they did but pare their
haire, as they would doe the borders in a garden: the other
called ma.pov, when they stiaved it so closetothe skinne,
that they made the head look like a <w«pw, a Skjffe&r a boar.
When they came to be two yeares puberes, ShJinis h,3bp7m,
( as Demcfthexes calls it) or twenty yeares old;tivJpis \w$-
•Xi^.mv they wrote men, or they became/#» juris, and their
names were regiftred by the Demarche in his An^iuf^m W-
*pu&, in A/bo Lexiardico, a book wherein he kept the names
osallthose that belonged to his Demm,\x. had this name mt^.
$ K%%io)i, (or <? Khngm>) app^p, because as soone as any ones
name was written therein, he might be masttr of an essate
kimselfe is he had it.Besides this book, there was rnvdmov Trvfyov
a table os box-wood, wherein every one was to set down of
whuDemtn he was, together with the name os his Father.
Now as sor the women, they were not wont to beentred in-
to any tribe, till the time when they came to be Married,and
that in the month os Gam/ion, whereas the men wereentred
in the Month olTjanepsion.
CAP.