[2226] Palermo.
[2227] Castel-à-Mare.
[2228] Capo Boeo.
[2229] Probably ruins at the embouchure of the Platani. Groskurd also gives for it Bissenza.
[2230] At the mouth of the Fiume di Girgenti. Virgil calls Agrigentum by the Greek name, Æn. iii. 703,
“Arduus inde Acragas ostentat maxima longe
Mœnia, magnanimûm quondam generator equorum.”
[2231] As the distance from Agrigentum to Camarina greatly exceeds another 20 miles, Kramer supposes that the words, “and to Gela, 20,” have been omitted by the copyist.
[2232] Torre di Camarana.
[2233] The Paris MS. No. 1393, used by the French translators, has 33; the Paris MS. 1396, and the Medici plut. 28, No. 5, give 20 miles.