[496]. Xen. Hellen. vi. 6. 6. Athen. i. 24.
[497]. Athen. vii. 9. i. 55. Plut. Alcib. § 12.
[498]. Athen. i. 55.
[499]. Schol. Aristoph. Eq. 107. Etym. Mag. 683. 30, seq.
[500]. Il. η. 467, sqq.
[501]. Poll. vi. 15. x. 72.
[502]. Schol. Aristoph. Vesp. 151; and Thurian. Nub. 331.
[503]. Suid. v. Καπν. t. i. p. 1370.
[504]. Dioscor. v. 10.
[505]. “The district of Cydonia must have been celebrated for its wine in ancient times, for we find on many of its coins a bunch of grapes, or the head of Dionysos. Some of them also exhibit a female head adorned with a chaplet of vine-leaves. I found a beautiful silver coin of Cydonia in the possession of the interpreter of the French Consulate, and the female head seen on its obverse was thus ornamented.” Pashley, Travels in Crete, vol. i. p. 23.