[3522] See end of B. ii.
[3523] See end of B. iv.
[3524] A writer on Stones, of this name, is also mentioned by Plutarch and Stobæus, but no further particulars are known of him. He is mentioned in Chapter [11] of this Book.
[3525] Mentioned also in Chapter [11] of this Book. A person of this name is quoted by the Scholiast on Apollonius Rhodius as the author of a work on Libya; from which he is supposed to have been a native of Africa.
[3526] Beyond the mention made of him in Chapter [11] of this Book, as a contemporary of Pliny, no further particulars are known.
[3527] A native of Patara in Lycia, who wrote a Description of the Earth, and a collection of the Oracles given at Delphi. See Chapter [11] of this Book.
[3528] Beyond the mention made of him in Chapter [11] of this Book, nothing relative to this writer seems to be known.
[3529] See end of B. ii.
[3530] Mithridates VI., Eupator, or Dionysus, King of Pontus, and the great adversary of the Romans, commonly known as Mithridates the Great. His notes and Memoirs were brought to Rome by Pompey, who had them translated into Latin by his freedman Pompeius Lenæus. See end of B. xiv.: also B. vii. c. 24, B. xxiii. c. 77, B. xxv. cc. 3, 27, 79, B. xxxiii. c. [54], and Chapters [5] and [11] of the present Book.