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1 It is difficult to say what chain of mountains, if indeed any in particular, he would designate by this name. Parisot remarks that these mountains would seem to belong rather to the region of poetry and fable than of fact, and states that it is pretty clear that the Balkan chain, the districts in which the Danube takes its rise, the Alps, the Pyrenees, the Hercynian mountains, and even the chain of Taurus and Caucasus, have at different times been described or mentioned under the name of Riphæan Mountains. It was evidently Pliny's belief that the great Northern or Scythian Ocean skirted the northern shores of Asia, a little above the latitude perhaps of the northern extremity of the Caspian. In B. iv. c. 26, we find him crossing these, perhaps imaginary, mountains, and then proceeding to the left, along, as he supposes, the extreme northern shores of Europe; here he seems to start from the same point, but turns to the right, and proceeds along the northern, eastern, and southern shores of Asia.
2 North-east.
3 I. e. more to the west.
4 See B. iv. c. 26.
5 The extremity of the supposed shores of the Hyperborei
6 D'Anville supposes that he means the headland called Cande-Noss or Kanin-Noss, in the White Sea. Parisot, who thinks that Pliny had no idea of the regions which lie in those high latitudes, supposes that he refers to Domnes-Ness in the Baltic, and that by the Carambucis he means the river Niemen.
7 Ansart thinks that he means the Dwina, which falls into the Gulf of Archangel.
8 Previously mentioned in c. 7.
9 For a full description of them, see B. iv. c. 26.
10 See the Note to c. 7, p. 15. This description is borrowed from that given by Herodotus. Their sacred character has been explained as referring to the class or caste of priests among this Eastern people, whoever they may have been.
11 Ansart thinks that the Cicianthi, the Georgi, and the Amazons, inhabited the modern governments of Archangel and Vologda. It seems almost akin to rashness to hazard a conjecture.
12 It has been already stated that the Caspian Sea was, in one portion of it, so called, and in another the Hyrcanian Sea .
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- Cross-references to this page
(1):
- Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), OCE´ANUS SEPTENTRIONA´LIS
- Cross-references in general dictionaries to this page
(4):
- Lewis & Short, Pĕnĭus
- Lewis & Short, Phthīrŏphăgi
- Lewis & Short, Sannigae
- Lewis & Short, Singanĭa