[1472]. L. i. c. 2. See, also, Philost. Vit. Apollon. iii. 24. p. 114.
[1473]. Thucyd. i. 8. Tournefort, Voyage, i. 154. The Phocians, also, about the time when they founded Marseilles, distinguished themselves at once by their mercantile and piratical habits. Namque Phocenses exiguitate ac macie terræ coacti studiosius mare quam terras exercuêre: piscando, mercando plerumque etiam latrocinio maris quod illi temporibus gloriæ habebatur, vitam tolerabant. Justin. 43. 3.
[1474]. Conon. Dieg. 47. ap. Phot. Cod. 141. a. 20. Hudson, ad Thucyd. t. i. p. 302. See in Scheffer, De Re Militiâ Navali, Addenda, Lib. Prim. p. 313, a list of the nations who anciently exercised the piratical art.
[1475]. Il. η. 472, sqq. Cf. Plin. Hist. Nat. xxxiii. 1.
[1476]. Eidyll. i. 57, seq. where, for τυρόεντα, both Porson and Kiessling propose τυρῶντα. Ἄρτον τυρῶντα occurs in a fragment of Sophron. ap. Athen. iii. 75.
[1477]. Paus. iii. 12. 1-3.
[1478]. Justin, iii. 2.
[1479]. Il. ζ. 236.
[1480]. Ap. Feith, Antiq. Hom. ii. 10. 3.
[1481]. Tom. i. p. 188. ed. Bekk.