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LIST OF ANCIENT NAMES OF PLACES IN ATTICA.

XOAAPrOS.

XOAAIAAI \

XPT2Ab.

" YAOIAAI."0

OPTXION.

npanos.
nrrriA.

" Steph. Byz."

Tokos t%$ ' ArriKrig. To tokixov, dgv^iog. JLvtyogim Aiovvfftu'
"lyyog it' Cl^v^iotfftv igmfftv o^XacraivTo. Steph, de Urb.
" See 'Ogovo in former List."

'EAsyero xcti rj 'Arrtzri ffacrci 'Clyvy'tot,, " wg X.ugu.% <prjff)v iv ro7g
Xgoyix,o7g. * Also all Attica was called Ogygia, as Charax says
* in his Chronicles.'" Steph. "Byz."

a Sometimes written XoMuViai, as on an antique altar rcpre- c This demos was not known to Meursius. Tu^if is men-

sented at PL XV. Kg. IV. [hd.] tioned by Strabo. In Wheler's inscription, at Oxford, of the

b Plutarch, in the life of Theseus, quotes the ancient Athenian thirteen tribes just alluded to, the abbreviation YAOI is intro-

historian Clidemus, who describes the battle of the Amazons duced tinder the tribe Aiantis. See note on VaQtScu at p. 28.
at Athens. He speaks of the right wing of their army as ex- CED-]

tending as far as the Pnyx, near Chrysa:—ru <?e Ji|i^ i-go? tw * We here subjoin, as stated at page 26, note c, a newly

Tinixa xa.ro. -vnt Xgiaav vkiu. [eb.] arranged Table of the Attic Demoi.

TABLE OF THE TEN TRIBES OF ATTICA, including the names of those Demoi which are now ascertained to have
belonged to each Tribe during the most flourishing period of the Republic*.

EPEXGHIE.

Airms.

nANAIONI2.

AE0NTI2.

AKAMANTIZ

Ay^auA*?.

Ayv~v7w .

Ayyttet*

AiOaA/^a*.

Ayvov*;.

Avctyv^ovc,*

AAai A^ctipYjvicIsi;*

KovuvT^v).

A"ki{jiOV<;.

Hlpto-iSai.

Et/wpvuo?*

Agct<pr,v.

Kt-oa9»7vatoi'.

Asi^adEj.

E^woy.

Qr.fXCCKOq.

Bccry.

Kv$ygo<;.

ExctA«.

H(pccta-rlcc.

fcwdl.

Tcc^ynTroq.

Mvpfwovt;*

TLvTrvgQcti.

®0j3txo<;.

Ky>(piO-'.cc.

AtQfAStCC.

*o«.

Kurrot.

Kz^ccy,nx.Q<;.

Aa-fAK^cc xa9i/7r^9£v.

'tpxjlt**.

Ylcciccvia Kavvirspvsir.

KpWTTta.

Kstp«A:j.

Aetf&WfiOb V7TEVSp()sv.

Eptxncc.

Tlcuctvict viTzvipQzv.

Asvmoko)1.

KtKUcva.

ria^bwraoat.

y$xti*.

Tte&ffttibU

Otov Kzga,fi£iY.ov.

KvgTtobSeti*

TIt(>yce<n}.

E.<Triot,ioc •

n^obaA^Uoj.

llatovi^ai.

rio^o?.

Tv^gioai.

IxotPicc.

ST£ijia.

n^A^xE^.

ITfO(77raAT«.

tyriyovt;.

luvldact*

tyyyKiU.

rioTa/xo^.

S^>iTT0^.



KoXvTTog.



Sxa/jtboy/dat.

XoAapyof.



Kv^ccvriocci*



Xovnov,





KwAuttes.



'tSctictt.





'Otpvve\'<; •



(bptctpcwi.





IlXw9E(a.









Tifya-s-









<i>ioyot.tcc-









dnAatdat.









XoKXtocci'







OINH1X.

KEKPOniS.

innoeonNTiE.

AIANTIS.

ANTIOXTS.

*Ax^vu.

A$(JLOVQV.

Afyviu.

"Apifca 8.

Alythia,,

BovtgLScu.

Al^ovi.

A{AOl%CtVT£iOC.

Svgycovldcci,

AAwttex^.

EniKvipYxricc*

AA&} Al^VVlhq.

Avccxctuz*

KvKuXa.

Af&q>iT(>6'7rir).

Qgict.

AcntSuXiccci,

AXL^QVC,.

MccgaQw,

3A)>d(p\v<rTo<;*

l7r7roTa.(Aci<!)cut

Evifixiatti*

AeXEXeIO,-

OlvOYi.

Arrji/y}.

AccKiataoct .

Mea/tij.

J£A&fi0£«

Rippiem*

Uvea.

Aovaia.

BvirtTt}'

Etevo-ig.

PcCfA,VOV$.

©opai.

"O*

Etf&f*

Egoiccaat.

TiTax/oat.

It4 9.

n?^iQo7§ai.

XvttccXtittoi;.

QvfjLairoiooci.

TgtKOgvQos,

Kp*4f<%.

nn^sa.

TptfffAt?$<

Kfijsia^ai.

<&ct\ypov.

KoAww?.

Tvf>(At$<zi.

<t>\vce.

K.01A1?.

YuipQcti.

Aekxov.

<t>V?PJ.



Kongo*; .
Ko§i^aAAo$.

OTov AexeAfixo;1.



Aguxowvga-

MEAatVE^.

riaAAijv^.

ri£VTEA>3.







<Pt;^ ....

1 The number of tribes was increased from four as established by Cecrops to
ten, after the expulsion of the Pisistratidas by Cleisthenes, in the 67. 3 Oly. 509
B. c, the names of which remained in use beyond the period of the dissolution oi
the Roman empire. In this table the usual order of the tribes is adopted as seen
on the marbles. During the time of the thirteen tribes, the Ptolcmais intervened
between those of Leontis and Acamantis, the Adrianis was introduced between
that last named and the Oineis, and that of Attalis after the Antiochis.

2 Vide Boeckhii Corpus Inscriptionum Grsecarum, Vol. I. p. 158.

* It is singular that this demos should not be of the tribe Erechtheis, as it
equally received its name from Erechtheus King of Athens. It is supposed by
some critics that 'Epxtix (the only authority for which demos appears to be Ste.
phanus of Byzantium) is erroneously introduced ior'E^ux, the name of a demos
of the same tribe omitted by Stephanus, which would better correspond with the
alphabetical series of his work. In the Hesychius of Alberti in a note on 'E^s/as,
it is observed: " apud Stephanum pessime [et contra seriem] 'Ep%tix legitur; —
but as in the context of that author, he states that the name originated from
Erechtheus (««■» 'Ef lyjiu;). five words derived from which name immediately follow,

and preclude the possibility of incorrectness in the MSS.; we are therefore justi-
fied in retaining 'E^xeix in the list of demoi. V. Steph. Byz. Meurs. de Pop.
Att. Hesyc. ed. Alb. 1746.

4 Corp. Ins. Grasc. V I. p. 158. * Pocock. Inscr. P. I. p. 56, n. 63.

6 " Suidas TlkaxieSxs appellat, sed cum in depravatum cujusdam auctoris co-
ncern ineidisse censeo." Vide A. Berkelii Comment, in Steph. Byz. Meurs.
Rel. Att. C. XI.

• Corp. Ins. Grac. V. I. p. 216.

8 Aphidna is, by Stephanus Byzantinus, placed in the tribe Leontis. Hesy-
chius gives it to the tribe Ptolemais. Sir G. Wheler's inscription of the thirteen
tribes, shews that it was subsequently in the Hadrianis ; but a more early inscription
copied by Dr. Chandler at Athens, doubtless at an age when Athens was free,
proves that it then belonged to the tribe Aiantis. See Wheler's Travels, p. 400,
Chandler Ins. Grac. Part II. Ins. CVII.

0 Although the ancient lexicographers agree in placing this demos in the
tribe Acamantis, yet marbles, the preferable authority, record it as of the tribe
Antiochis, in which it is here inserted.

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