[106] See McCrindle’s Alexander, 157, 369, 378, 398. Compare St. Martin Geog. Grecque et Latine de l’Inde, 102. [↑]
[107] Strabo, XV. I. 8 and 24, Hamilton’s Translation, III. 76, 95. [↑]
[108] References to the vines of Nysa and Meros occur in Strabo, Pliny, Quintus Curtius, Philostratus, and Justin: McCrindle’s Alexander in India, 193 note 1, 321, and 339. Strabo (Hamilton’s Translation, III. 86) refers to a vine in the country of Musikanus or Upper Sindh. At the same time (Ditto, 108) Strabo accepts Megasthenês’ statement that in India the wild vine grows only in the hills. [↑]
[109] The Kathaioi Malloi and Oxydrakai are (Arrian in McCrindle’s Alexander, 115, 137, 140, 149) called independent in the sense of kingless: they (Ditto, 154) sent leading men not ambassadors: (compare also Diodorus Siculus and Plutarch, Ditto 287, 311): the Malloi had to chose a leader (Q. Curtius, Ditto 236). [↑]
[110] Káthiáwár Gazetteer, 138. [↑]
[111] Káthiáwár Gazetteer, 137. [↑]
[112] Cutch Gazetteer, 80. [↑]
[113] Cutch Gazetteer, 81. [↑]