[977]. Simon Grunau, Preussische Chronik, Tract. ii. cap. iii. § 2, p. 66, ed. M. Perlbach. This passage was pointed out to me by Mr. H. M. Chadwick.
[978]. Pausanias, v. 1. 4, vi. 20. 9.
[979]. Apollodorus, Epitoma, ii. 4-9, ed. R. Wagner (Apollodorus, Bibliotheca, ed. R. Wagner, pp. 183 sq.); Diodorus Siculus, iv. 73; Pausanias, v. 1. 6 sq., v. 10. 6 sq., v. 14. 7, v. 17. 7 sq., v. 20. 6 sq., vi. 21. 7-11.
[980]. Pausanias, vi. 21. 3.
[981]. Pausanias, v. 13. 1-6, vi. 20. 7.
[982]. Pausanias, iii. 12. 1, 20. 10 sq.
[983]. Pindar, Pyth. ix. 181-220, with the Scholia.
[984]. Pindar, Pyth. ix. 195 sqq.; Pausanias, iii. 12. 2.
[985]. Apollodorus, iii. 9. 2; Hyginus, Fab. 185; Ovid, Metam. x. 560 sqq.
[986]. E. Schuyler, Turkistan (London, 1876), i. 42 sq. This and the four following examples of the bride-race have been already cited by J. F. McLennan, Studies in Ancient History (London, 1886), pp. 15 sq., 181-184. He supposes them to be relics of a custom of capturing women from another community.