[7] Nearly all the letters in the [XIth] and [XIIth] Books of the Variae are headed 'Senator Praefectus Praetorio.'
'Adtollit se diva Lacinia contra,
Caulonisque arces, et navifragum Scylaceum.'
(iii. 552-3.)
[9] p. 375: ed. Oxon. 1807.
[10] Pliny (Hist. Nat. iii. 10) says: 'Dein sinus Scylacius et Scyllacium, Scylletium Atheniensibus, cum conderent, dictum: quem locum occurrens Terinaeus sinus peninsulam efficit: et in eâ portus qui vocatur Castra Annibalis, nusquam angustiore Italia XX millia passuum latitudo est.'
[11] I take the two following paragraphs from Lenormant's La Grande Grèce, pp. 342-3.
[12] The reference is given by Köpke (Die Anfänge des Königthums, p. 88) as 'De scr. ecc. 212 Bibliotheca Ecclesiastica, ed. Fabricius, p. 58;' by Thorbecke (p. 8) as 'Catalogus seu liber scriptorum ecclesiasticorum, Coloniae 1546, p. 94.' Franz (p. 4) quotes from the same edition as Köpke, 'De script. eccl. c. 212 in Fabricii biblioth. eccl., Hamburgi 1728, iii. p. 58.'
[13] The Anecdoton Holderi.
[14] Cassiodorus the First, born about 390; the Second, about 420; the Third, about 450.
[15] Or possibly 501.