[2123] According to Pouqueville the ruins of Tymphæa are to be seen near the village of Paliouri, four miles from Janina.
[2124] Ephyre, a town of the Agræi, is also mentioned by Strabo, but nothing whatever is known of it.
[2125] The main body of the Perrhæbi were a people of Thessaly.
[2126] Dolopia, now called Anovlachia, was properly reckoned part of Epirus.
[2127] They are probably not the same people as the inhabitants of Atrax in Thessaly, which will be found mentioned in the 15th Chapter of this Book.
[2128] The most famous city of Ætolia in its day, and the residence of Œneus, father of Meleager and Tydeus, and grandfather of Diomedes. The greater part of its inhabitants were removed by Augustus to his new city of Nicopolis. Leake supposes its ruins to be those seen by him at Kurt-Aga, to the east of the river Evenus.
[2129] Now called the Fidaris.
[2130] Pouqueville supposes the site of Macynia to have been that of the modern Koukio-Castron, and that of Molycria the present Manaloudi.
[2131] Probably the present Varassova; there was a town called Chalcis, or Hypochalcis, at its foot. The present Kaki-Skala was probably the mountain of Taphiassus.
[2132] Opposite the Promontory of Rhium, at the entrance of the Corinthian Gulf. It is now called the Castle of Roumelia, or the Punta of the Dardanelles of Roum Ili.