FOOTNOTES:
[193] Herod. iv. c. 42.
[194] Herod. iv. c. 33.
[195] It is probable that Sataspes got as far as the Gulf of Guinea, and was then stopped by the south-east trade-winds. It is to avoid these that our ships, bound to India via the Cape of Good Hope, stand across to South America.
[196] Plin. ii. 169.
[197] Strab. ii. 81.
[198] Larachi or Al Arish, on the coast of Marocco.
[199] Humboldt, in confirmation of this statement, quotes the case of a counterpart for the horse’s head belonging to the Gades-ship, referred to by Eudoxus, as having occurred in the remains of a ship of the Red Sea, which was brought to Crete by westerly currents, according to the account of the trustworthy Arabian historian Masudi.—Humboldt’s “Cosmos,” vol. ii. p. 389.
[200] Periplus of the Erythræan Sea, vol. ii. p. 189 et seq.
[201] Numbers xx. 14.
[202] Judges viii. 24-26.
[203] Macpherson, i. pp. 7, 8.
[204] Heeren, Gen. Introd. p. xxv.
[205] Herod. i. 1.
[206] Ezek. xxvii. v. 7.
[207] Herod. v. 52.
[208] These are the greater and lesser Záb.
[209] Referring, probably, to the numerous canals this great conqueror cut, for purposes of irrigation as well as navigation, between the Euphrates and Tigris.
[210] “Royal stations” were the abodes of the king’s couriers. Cf. Herod. viii. 98. These couriers were very rapid, like the Indian harkâreh of the present day. Strabo (xv. p. 725) states that Alexander’s order for the execution of Parmenio, given near Herât, was conveyed eight hundred and fifty miles in eleven days, to Ecbatana. The present route from Smyrna to Baghdad, is nearly the same as that described by Herodotus, from Sardes to Susa; it turns a little to the N., to avoid the arid deserts about the Upper Euphrates and the Upper Tigris, and passes Sart (Sardes), Allah Shehr (Philadelphia), Kaisariyeh, Malatiyeh, Diarbekr, Mosul, Arbil (Arbela), and Kerkuk (Circesium). If Herodotus went to Babylon, he would have gone by this route as far as the river Gyndes (Diyala), where the route from Babylon to Ecbatana crossed it, as is clear from the account of the march of Cyrus. (Herod. i. 189.)
[211] Strabo, xvi. 766.
[212] 1 Kings ix. 18.
[213] Plin. v. 87. Procop. Bell. Pers. ii. 5. Gibbon, c. xi,
[214] Xenoph. Anab. i. 4, 11.
[215] Plin. vi. 144.
[216] Plin. vi. 28.
[217] Strab. xvi. 779. Diod. Sic. xix. 98.
[218] See note on principal canals of Babylonia, by Sir H. C. Rawlinson, in Rawlinson’s Herodotus, i. p. 571.
[219] It is not distinctly stated anywhere that Tyre was actually taken; but the inference from Ezek. c. xxvi. is that it was—or the prophecy has remained unfulfilled.
[220] Isaiah, xliii. 14.
[221] Heeren, i. p. 438.
[222] Herod. i. 183.
[223] Arrian, vii. 7.
[224] Arrian, iii. 16.
[225] Pliny, vi. 17.
[226] Strabo, p. 782.
[227] Herod. iii. chap. 24.
[228] Plin. vi. 102.
[229] Itin. Antonin. p. 172.
[230] Belzoni, “Travels,” ii. p. 36.
[231] Plin. vi. 104.
[232] Herod. ii. 20, compared with vi. 140; vii. 168. Plin. vi. 102.
[233] Pliny, ibid.
[234] Hippalus is believed to have lived in the reign of the Emperor Claudius.—Vincent, i. pp. 47-49.
[235] Plin. vi. 101.
[236] Dr. Vincent’s “Periplus,” p. 288.
[237] Plin. xii. 83.
[238] Plin. ix. 119-121. Gibbon, ch. 3.
[239] Arrian, the merchant, must not be confounded with the famous Arrian of Nicomedia; nothing is, however, known about him.
[240] Pliny, vi. 82.
[241] Dr. Vincent’s “Periplus,” vol. ii. p. 170.
[242] Diodorus, iii. 46.
[243] “Periplus,” vol. ii. p. 317.
[244] Pliny, vi. 104, identified by Welsted with Hisn Ghorab, ii. p. 421.