[428] Herodotus, II. 177.—Diodorus Siculus, I. 31.
[429] A measure great enough to make thirty loaves. (Franz, Corpus Inscript. Græcarum, III. 303.—Polybius, V. 79.)
[430] Böckh, Staatshaushaltung der Athener, I. xiv. 15.
[431] Flavius Josephus, Jewish Antiquities, XII. 4.
[432] Athenæus, V. p. 203.
[433] Appian (Preface, § 10).—We may, nevertheless, judge from the following data of the enormity of the sums accumulated in the treasuries of the kings of Persia. Cyrus had gained, by the conquest of Asia, 34,000 pounds weight of gold coined, and 500,000 of silver. (Pliny, XXXIII. 15.)—Under Darius, son of Hystaspes, 7,600 Babylonian talents of silver (the Babylonian talent = 7,426 francs [£297]) were poured annually into the royal treasury, besides 140 talents devoted to the pay of the Cilician cavalry, and 360 talents of gold (14,680 talents of silver), paid by the Indies. (Herodotus, III. 94.)—This king had thus an annual revenue of 14,500 talents (108 millions of francs [£4,320,000]). Darius carried with him in campaign two hundred camels loaded with gold and precious objects. (Demosthenes, On the Symmories, p. 185, xv. p. 622, ed. Müller.)—Thus, according to Strabo, Alexander the Great found in the four great treasuries of that king (at Susa, Persia, Pasargades, and Persepolis) 180,000 talents (about 1,337 millions of francs [£53,480,000]).
[434] Polybius, V. 89.
[435] Strabo, XVII. 1.
[436] Strabo, XVII. 1.
[437] Strabo, XVI. 4; XVII.