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1 B.C. 204
2 For this practice when ships were setting sail with ceremony v. Cicero N.D. III. 51 fin.; cf. Servius on Aeneid V. 238; Macrobius Sat. III. ii. 2 ff.
3 This headland, now Cap Bon (Ras Adar), marks the eastern entrance to the Bay of Tunis. It is 45 miles from Carthage, and is the nearest point to Sicily. Cf. Pliny N.H. V. 23 f.; Strabo XVII. iii, 13, 16; Mela I. 34.
4 B.C. 204
5 I.e. farther along the coast. Cf. Caesar B.G. IV. 36 fin. He meant -inside the Bay (not towards the Emporia), there being no harbour on either side of the Cape. His order to the helmsmen (at Lilybaeum, xxv. 12) to steer for the Emporia was probably a ruse (cf. note there); or it merely named a rendezvous in case the convoy should be scattered. A complete change in his plan for the campaign could not be made suddenly.
6 I.e. of Apollo, translating Polybius' τον̂ καλον̂ ἀκροτήριον (III. xxii. 5), who in the same passage has τὸ καλὸν ἀκροτήριον(xxiii. 1). Cf.Apollinis, XXX. xxiv. 8; Pliny N.H. l.c.; Mela I. 34; ᾿απολλώνιον, Dio Cass. (Zonaras) IX. xii. 3 and Strabo XVII. l. c. The modern name is Ras Sidi Ali el Mekki.
7 Inside the Cape, probably near modern Porto Farina, not far from Utica; Appian Pun. 13 fin.
8 Cf. xxv. 3. We may, however, suspect a slip of Livy's memory, or an error in verification of a source. See p. 316, n. 1.
9 North-west of the Prom. Mercurii (Hermaeum) and about 30 miles north-east of Carthage, now el Djamur (also called Zembra); XXX. xxiv. 9, 11 f.; Strabo II. v. 19 fin.; VI. ii. 11 fin. Pliny has two Aegimoeroe, V. 42.
10 B.C. 204
11 This entire statement about storm and wreck is disproved by a fragment (41) of Coelius' Book VI preserved by Nonius s.v. metari, p. 199 L. The fragment unquestionably refers to this landing. Cf. H. Peter, Hist. Rom. Rell. I. 159; Gsell op. cit. 212.
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