[53] Dörpfeld, ‘Die Propyläen 1 und 2,’ A. Mitt. X. 1885, pp. 38 and 131 and see my Mon. and Myth. Ancient Athens, p. 353.
[54] Dörpfeld, A. Mitt. XXVII. 1902, p. 405.
[55] The number of these gates is of course purely conjectural. The sketch in [Fig. 15] which I owe to the kindness of Prof. Dörpfeld gives five only on the western slope. The line of the walls HJK is suggested by remains of the 6th century B.C. which probably occupy the site of still earlier Pelasgic fortifications (see [p. 35 note 2]). Of the remaining gates one would probably be near where the Asklepieion was later built and one or more on the north slope.
[56] Lucian, Bis Accus. 9 μικρὸν ὑπὲρ τοῦ Πελασγικοῦ.
[57] Herod. VIII. 52.
[58] Lucian, Piscator 42.
[59] See Mon. and Myth. Ancient Athens, p. 299.
[60] Op. cit. p. 152.
[61] Polem. ap. Schol. Oed. Col. 489 καθάπερ Πολέμων ἐν τοῖς πρὸς Ἐρατοσθένην φησίν, οὕτω ... κριὸν Ἡσύχῳ ἱερὸν ἥρω ... οὗ τὸ ἱερόν ἐστι παρὰ τὸ Κυλώνειον, ἐκτὸς τῶν ἐννέα πυλῶν. The MS. has Κυδώνιον, the emendation, which seems certain, is due to C. O. Mueller.
[62] Plut. Vit. Solon. XII. and Thucyd. I. 126.