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Κῖνυψ. H. describes the territory of Kinyps at length in c. 198, where he compares its fertility to that of Babylonia; it became proverbial (cf. Ovid, ex Pont. ii. 7. 25). Hence the Greeks tried to colonize it (v. 42. 3) but failed. The river is identified with the Wad El Kháhan (Beechey, p. 62 seq.), east of Leptis, which has some pretensions to the title of river. It was thought to rise only about four miles from the sea, and H.'s distance (over twenty miles) was explained by coast subsidence; for this cf. Beechey, p. 272, ‘We have already observed the sea appears to have made great advances on the whole line of coast of North Africa,’ and Hogarth, A. A. L. p. 138. Later exploration, however (G. J. ix. 633), shows that the river rose further inland, and so confirms H.'s figure.

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