54
OINAI.
OINOH tk AIANTIA02.
oinoh T?? mnooonN-
TIA02.
OTPYNEI2 or Otrynenses.
IIAIANIA mtrtvrtgtkt.
IIAIANIA0 vTivegOsv.
" nAIONIAAI."
nAAAHNH".
nAMBHTAAAI.
LTANAKT02.
LTANTOMATPION.
IIANOPM02e.
LTAPNH2.
« nATPOKAOT vnffog.
LIST OF ANCIENT NAMES OF PLACES IN ATTICA.
" Hesychius. See also in an inscription quoted by Meursius,
OINAI02. Rel. Att. C. XL"
Ad Eleutheras a. Strabo, Thucydides.
Ad Marathonem b. Strabo, " Ohoti"—uaa rm \x rsrga.<7r6xeug rns
met M.ccgct0aivct.
** Demost. Orat. in Leocharem. Meurs. Rel. Att. C. XI."
« LTEIPAIET2/
« nENTEAH.
nEPrASH.
ITEP2ET2.
LTEPI0OIAAI.
nEPPIAAI.
" nHAHKE2."
ni©o2.
nAH0EIA.
nNTS5.
" The country of" Demosthenes.
" V. Aristoph."
Herodot. L. I. 62. " YlaXkqndog 'Afamitis \gov. V. Steph. Byz."
" Steph. Byz. has it Hetfb£it>roLonf''
" Harpoc. Hesych., but Steph. Byz. speaks of Hamxrov, (pgovgwv
'Attixov. Panactum, an Attic castle."
" IlogTo-(Atx,vdgi. See " note on Qigixo in the former" list.
Fames autem a Boeotiis finibus aberat, cum in occidentali sui parte,
Phylem' respiceret, ut testatur Theophrastus, de Signis Tempes-
tatum, " See Spon, Liste de l'Attique."
" Steph. Byz. He does not term it a demos, though he alludes to
its inhabitants." See Xot.gix.xxcc in former list.
" Steph. Byz. Paus. and Ins. Ant. Strabo and Suidas say, it
was originally an island, and derived its name from the ferry j
the words of the latter are—'Hi* ffgorsgov o Hsigunvg vqtrog, ofav xcu
rbuvofta iiXfiQiv, into rav otamgetv. V. Meursii Piraeeus. Note b, p. 5.
*' Steph. Byz. V. note on Mendele in previous list."
" Steph. Byz."
" Usgirevs, KoXig 'Arrix^, xcu Xi^v o^uvvpuog, ov kxrurctv 'A6t}vouoi.
* Perseus, an Attic city, and a port of the same name, which the
Athenians built.' Steph. Byz."
" Steph. Byz. Also on Attic Inscriptions, Spon."
" Steph. Byz. Hesyc."
" Steph. Byz."
" Steph. Byz. Ins."
" Steph. Byz."
' The oratory ((3rjpcc) in Pnyx was constructed looking towards the
■ Gell places Eleutherse about two miles beyond Kondoura,
on the road to Thebes, between two ridges of Cithseron, and near
to which the ruins called Gyphto-Kastro, he considers to be the
CEnoe ad Eleutheras. Qed.]
b Colonel Leake remarked the ruins of an ancient demos called
Ninoe, in the valley above Marathon. Dodwell says, " Mara-
thon and (Enoe still retain their names ; the traces of the latter
are to be seen near the Cave of Pan." Leake's Researches,
p. 420. DodwelPs Travels, V. II. p. 163. [ed.]
c There is a quadriform dial in the British Museum, inscribed
to Phsedrus, a Peanian, the mathematician, who formed it, as
follows:—
(DAIAPOC ZfilAOY
riAIANIEYC EnoiE
d Pallene was a demos in the route from Athens to Marathon.
[ED.]
e We do not find Panormus in ancient authors as a demos of
Attica. It is introduced by Stuart as a port near Sunium on the
Map of Attica, and in his list of Shores, Ports, &c. Gell speaks
thus of this port in a route on the eastern coast of Attica, at
about three miles from Sunium. ". Pass three or four acres of,
ancient scoriae of the mines of Laurium, on the shore of a port,
probably once called Panormus." Itin. of Greece, p. 81. [ed.]
f The Castle of Phyle was on Mount Parnes; the passage of
Theophrastus is :—Tiis nae»»8°S t°" Ta 9T£is; Zitpvpov atit^av, teal ra.
w§°5 f»i>\-r,v QpccTTriToa titpicri, ^ei/xe^iov to cr»)^uoi/. " If that part of
Parnes towards the west wind, and opposite Phyle, be obscured
in clouds, it is the sign of bad weather." EED[]
s See plan of the site called by Stuart the Odeum of Regilla,
now generally admitted to have been the Pnyx,atPlateXXXVIII.
Chap. VII. of this volume, with remarks of the editor, [ed.]
OINAI.
OINOH tk AIANTIA02.
oinoh T?? mnooonN-
TIA02.
OTPYNEI2 or Otrynenses.
IIAIANIA mtrtvrtgtkt.
IIAIANIA0 vTivegOsv.
" nAIONIAAI."
nAAAHNH".
nAMBHTAAAI.
LTANAKT02.
LTANTOMATPION.
IIANOPM02e.
LTAPNH2.
« nATPOKAOT vnffog.
LIST OF ANCIENT NAMES OF PLACES IN ATTICA.
" Hesychius. See also in an inscription quoted by Meursius,
OINAI02. Rel. Att. C. XL"
Ad Eleutheras a. Strabo, Thucydides.
Ad Marathonem b. Strabo, " Ohoti"—uaa rm \x rsrga.<7r6xeug rns
met M.ccgct0aivct.
** Demost. Orat. in Leocharem. Meurs. Rel. Att. C. XI."
« LTEIPAIET2/
« nENTEAH.
nEPrASH.
ITEP2ET2.
LTEPI0OIAAI.
nEPPIAAI.
" nHAHKE2."
ni©o2.
nAH0EIA.
nNTS5.
" The country of" Demosthenes.
" V. Aristoph."
Herodot. L. I. 62. " YlaXkqndog 'Afamitis \gov. V. Steph. Byz."
" Steph. Byz. has it Hetfb£it>roLonf''
" Harpoc. Hesych., but Steph. Byz. speaks of Hamxrov, (pgovgwv
'Attixov. Panactum, an Attic castle."
" IlogTo-(Atx,vdgi. See " note on Qigixo in the former" list.
Fames autem a Boeotiis finibus aberat, cum in occidentali sui parte,
Phylem' respiceret, ut testatur Theophrastus, de Signis Tempes-
tatum, " See Spon, Liste de l'Attique."
" Steph. Byz. He does not term it a demos, though he alludes to
its inhabitants." See Xot.gix.xxcc in former list.
" Steph. Byz. Paus. and Ins. Ant. Strabo and Suidas say, it
was originally an island, and derived its name from the ferry j
the words of the latter are—'Hi* ffgorsgov o Hsigunvg vqtrog, ofav xcu
rbuvofta iiXfiQiv, into rav otamgetv. V. Meursii Piraeeus. Note b, p. 5.
*' Steph. Byz. V. note on Mendele in previous list."
" Steph. Byz."
" Usgirevs, KoXig 'Arrix^, xcu Xi^v o^uvvpuog, ov kxrurctv 'A6t}vouoi.
* Perseus, an Attic city, and a port of the same name, which the
Athenians built.' Steph. Byz."
" Steph. Byz. Also on Attic Inscriptions, Spon."
" Steph. Byz. Hesyc."
" Steph. Byz."
" Steph. Byz. Ins."
" Steph. Byz."
' The oratory ((3rjpcc) in Pnyx was constructed looking towards the
■ Gell places Eleutherse about two miles beyond Kondoura,
on the road to Thebes, between two ridges of Cithseron, and near
to which the ruins called Gyphto-Kastro, he considers to be the
CEnoe ad Eleutheras. Qed.]
b Colonel Leake remarked the ruins of an ancient demos called
Ninoe, in the valley above Marathon. Dodwell says, " Mara-
thon and (Enoe still retain their names ; the traces of the latter
are to be seen near the Cave of Pan." Leake's Researches,
p. 420. DodwelPs Travels, V. II. p. 163. [ed.]
c There is a quadriform dial in the British Museum, inscribed
to Phsedrus, a Peanian, the mathematician, who formed it, as
follows:—
(DAIAPOC ZfilAOY
riAIANIEYC EnoiE
d Pallene was a demos in the route from Athens to Marathon.
[ED.]
e We do not find Panormus in ancient authors as a demos of
Attica. It is introduced by Stuart as a port near Sunium on the
Map of Attica, and in his list of Shores, Ports, &c. Gell speaks
thus of this port in a route on the eastern coast of Attica, at
about three miles from Sunium. ". Pass three or four acres of,
ancient scoriae of the mines of Laurium, on the shore of a port,
probably once called Panormus." Itin. of Greece, p. 81. [ed.]
f The Castle of Phyle was on Mount Parnes; the passage of
Theophrastus is :—Tiis nae»»8°S t°" Ta 9T£is; Zitpvpov atit^av, teal ra.
w§°5 f»i>\-r,v QpccTTriToa titpicri, ^ei/xe^iov to cr»)^uoi/. " If that part of
Parnes towards the west wind, and opposite Phyle, be obscured
in clouds, it is the sign of bad weather." EED[]
s See plan of the site called by Stuart the Odeum of Regilla,
now generally admitted to have been the Pnyx,atPlateXXXVIII.
Chap. VII. of this volume, with remarks of the editor, [ed.]