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Black earth gave up, that the race of mortals might exist.
”Asius, unknown ___location. [5] Pelasgus on becoming king invented huts that humans should not shiver, or be soaked by rain, or oppressed by heat. Moreover; he it was who first thought of coats of sheep-skins, such as poor folk still wear in Euboea and Phocis. He too it was who checked the habit of eating green leaves, grasses, and roots always inedible and sometimes poisonous. [6] But he introduced as food the nuts of trees, not those of all trees but only the acorns of the edible oak. Some people have followed this diet so closely since the time of Pelasgus that even the Pythian priestess, when she forbade the Lacedaemonians to touch the land of the Arcadians, uttered the following verses:—“In Arcadia are many men who eat acorns,
Who will prevent you; though I do not grudge it you.
”It is said that it was in the reign of Pelasgus that the land was called Pelasgia.
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Peloponnesus (Greece) (2)
Messenia (Greece) (2)
Arcadia (Greece) (2)
Troy (Turkey) (1)
Troezen (Greece) (1)
Sicyon (Greece) (1)
Olympia (Greece) (1)
Lacedaemon (Greece) (1)
Euboea (Greece) (1)
Epidaurus (Greece) (1)
Elis (Greece) (1)
Dyme (Greece) (1)
Argive (Greece) (1)
Achaia (Greece) (1)
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- Cross-references to this page
(4):
- A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities (1890), REX
- A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities (1890), SACERDOS
- A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities (1890), THESMOPHO´RIA
- Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), ARCA´DIA