[108] Now the Mosti-Skari, according to D’Anville.
[109] Still called Savastopoli, according to Hardouin.
[110] This must not be confounded with the other place of the same name mentioned in the present Chapter. See p. [10].
[111] Hermoläus suggests Pityus as the correct reading.
[112] The Sanni Heniochi; one of these nations has been already mentioned in the last page.
[113] Inhabited anciently by the Coli, and constituting the northern portion of ancient Colchis.
[114] In B. v. c. 27.
[115] Or nation “with the black cloaks,” from some peculiarity in their dress.
[116] This was the great trading-place of the wild tribes in the interior; and so numerous were they, that the Greeks asserted that there were seventy different languages spoken in the market of Dioscurias.
[117] Whence the appellation Heniochi, from the Greek ἡνιοχὸς.