ans or Teucri appear to have been of
Thracian
origin,
and their first monarch is said to have been Teucer.
and their first monarch is said to have been Teucer.
Charles - 1867 - Classical Dictionary
(Steph.
Buz.
, s.
v.
--Ptol.
--Sil.
ltal.
, 14,
271. )
Tricasses, a people of Gaul, northeast of the Sc-
nones, and through whose territories flows the Sequana,
or Seine, in the earlier part of its course. Their chief
city was Augusta Bona, now Troyes. (Ptol. --Amm.
Mare. , 15, 11. --Id. , 16, 2. )
? ? Tricca, a city of Thessaly, southeast of Gomphi,
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? TRI
TRI
ind founded this city (16, 41). It had a good har-
bour and extensive commerce. (/. Phocas, c. 4. --
Wcsseling, Jtin. , p. 149. )--The town wa>> taken and
destroyed in 1289 by the sultan of Egypt, but was af-
terward rebuilt, though at some distance from the
ancient site. (Abulfcda, Tab. Syr. , p. 101. ) At the
present day the sand has so accumulated that the city
la separated from the sea by a small triangular plain,
half a league in breadth, at the point of which is the
Tillage where the vessels land their goods. The com-
merce of the place consists almost entirely of coarse
silks--II. A region of Africa, on the coast of the Med-
iterranean, between the two Syncs. It received this
name from its containing three principal cities; 1. 1 li-
tis Magna, CEa, and Sabrata. The second of these
is the modern city of Tripoli. --III. A city of Pontua,
on the coast, at the mouth of the river Tripoiis, and
northeast of Cerasus, now Triboli. (Manncrt, Geogr. ,
vol. 6, pt. 2, p. 384. )--IV. A city of Lydia, on the
wcatern bank of the Meander, northwest of Hierapo-
lis, and near the confluence of the Meander and Clu-
drus. Ptolemy and Stephanus ascribe it to Carta.
Pliny and Hierocles to Lydia. Mannert considers it
to hare been a Phrygian city. {Geogr. , vol. 6, pt. 3,
p. 137. )
Triptoi. kmus, soi) of Celeus, king of Elensis, and
the same with Detnophoon. (Vid. Ores, page 330,
col. 1. ) The vanity of the people of Attica made them
pretend that corn was first known and agriculture
Art. * practised in their country. Ceres, according to
then taught Triptulemus agriculture, and rendered
him serviceable to mankind by instructing him how
to sow corn and make bread. She also, it was fabled,
gave him her chariot, which was drawn by two drag-
ons, and in this celestial vehicle he travelled over the
whole earth, and distributed corn to all the inhabitants
of the world. At his return to Eleusis, Triplolemua
restored Ceres her chariot, and is said to have estab-
lished festivals and mysteries in honour of that deity.
He reigned for some time, and after death received
divine honours. --There seems to be an allusion in the
name Triptolemus (derived probably from rpeii and
iroXt'u) to an improvement introduced in early agri-
culture by treble ploughing. (Hygin. , fab. , 147. --
I'auxan, 2, 14; *,i--Justin. 2, 6. --Apollod. , 1, 6.
-- Callim. , H. in Ccr. , 22 -- Orid, Met. , 5, 646 )
Tkiquktra. a name given to Sicily by the Latins,
from its triangular form.
Trismegistus, a celebrated Egyptian priest and
philosopher, of whom some mention has been already
made in a previous article. ( Vid. Mercurius Triame-
gistus. ) It remains but to give here a brief sketch
of his works, or, rather, of the productions that have
come down to us in his name. --1. The most cele-
brated of these is entitled " Pocmander," Hoi/iuvdpnf
(from ? Koifiriv, "pastor"), and treating "of the nature
of all things, and of the creation of the world. " Il is
in the form of a dialogue. This work is also some-
times cited under the following title, " Of the Divine
Power and Wisdom. "--2. A second work is entitled
'AoicXi/moc, " Aesculapius. " It is a dialogue between
Hermes (Mercurius) Trismegistus and his disciple,
and treats of God, man, and the universe. It bears
also the name of Aoyoc TtXeioc, but it exists only in
the shape of a Latin translation, which some critics
ascribe to Apuleius. --3. The third work has tho fol-
lowing title: 'larpo/iaOrifiaTiKd, r/ nepl naraicXiacue
? ? voaovvruv TlpoyvuaTiKu Ik Tijc /iaOri/tariKf/r rirjonj-
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? TrtO
I Ru
TRITOOENIA, i sarname of Pallas. (Vid. Minerva,
aige 849, col. 9. )
TRITON, I. a sea-deity, the son, according to He-
? iod, of Neptune and Amphitrite. (Theog. , 93U. )
Liter poets made him his father's trumpeter. Pie was
also multiplied, and we read of Tritons in the plural
number. Like the Nereides, the Tritons were degra-
ded to the nsh-form. Pausanias tells us, that the
women of Tanagra, in Breotia, going into the sea to
purify themselves for the orgies ol Bacchus, were,
while there, assailed by Triton; but, on praying to
their god, he vanquished their persecutor. Others,
be adds, said that Triton used to carry oil1 the cattle
which were driven down to the sea, and to seize all
email vessels, till the Tanagrians placing bowls of
wine on the shore, he drank of them, and, becoming
intoxicated, threw himself down on the shore to sleep,'
where, as he lay, a Tanagrian cut off his head with an
axr. He relates these legends to account for the
statue of Triton at Tanagria being headless. He then
subjoins: "I have seen another Triton among the cu-
riosities of the Romans, but it is not so large as this
of the Tanagrians. The form of the Tritons is this:
the hair of their head resembles the parsley that grows
in marshes, both in colour and in the perfect likeness
of one hair to another: the rest of their body is rough,
with small scales, and is of about the same hardness as
the skin of a fish: they have fish-gills under their
ears; their nostrils are those of a man, but their teeth
arc broader, and like those of a wild beast: their eyes
seem to me azure, and their hands, fingers, and nails
are of the form of the shells of shellfish; they have,
instead of feet, fins under their breasts and belly, like
those of the porpoise. '* (Pausan. , 9, 20, 21. --Keight-
'ey's Mythology, p. 245, scq. )--II. A river of Africa,
ising in Mount Usaleton, and, after forming in its
course the two lakes of Tritonis and Libya, discharg-
ing Us waters into the Syrtis Minor, near Tacape. It
is now the Gabs.
TRITONIS or TRITON, a lake and river of Africa, in-
land from the Syrtis Minor. Minerva is said to have
teen called Tntonia because she first revealed herself
in the vicinity of this lake. (But consult remarks
under the article Minerva, page 849, col. 2. ) Near
the Tritonis Palus was the Libya Palits. Modern
travellers speak of a long and narrow lake in this quar-
ter, divided in two by a ford; D'Anville considers
these to be the Tritonis and Libya Palus. The mod-
ern name of the former is f'araun, and of the latter,
El-Loudeatft. (Herod. , 4, 178. --Pauaan. , 9, 33. --
Virg. ,JEn. , 2, 171. --Mela, 1, 7. )--II. An appella-
tion given to Minerva by the poets. (Virg. , jEn. , 2,
226. --Omd, Met. , 3, 127. )--III. An epithet some-
times given to the sacred olive at Athens. (. *? ','///. ,
Sylv. , 2, 7, 28. )
TRIVJA, a surname given to Diana, because she pre-
sided over places where three roads met. ( Vid. Di-
ana, and Hecate. )
TRIVICUM, a place situate among the mountains
that separate Samnium from Apulia. The little town
of Trivico, which appears on a height above the course
of the ancient Appian Way, indicates the site of this
place. (Horat. , Sat. , 1, 5, 79. )
TRIUMVIRORUM INSUH, an island in the small river
Rhenus, one of the tributaries of the Po, where the
triumvirs Antony, Lepidus, and Augustus, met to di-
vide the Roman empire after the battle of Mutina.
? ? (D,o C. w. , 46, 55. )
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? TRO
TROJA.
TKOGLOtlfTiE, an appellation denoting a people who
dwelt in caves (rpuyXn, a cave, and Suvu, to enter").
The ancients found Troglodytos in various parts of
the world, but the name remained peculiarly appropri-
ated to the inhabitants of the western coast of the Si-
nus Arabicus in /Ethiopia; and from them the entire
coast look, with the Greeks, the name of Troglodytice
(TpuyAooWdti? ). It commenced to the south of Ber-
enice, and reached to the southernmost extremity of
the gulf. (Plin. , 6, 89. -- Id. , 3, 70 --Id. , 6, 19. )
Trogus Pompeius, a Latin historian, who flourished
in the time of Augustus. He was descended from a
Gallic family, to which Pompey the Great had extend-
ed the rights of Roman citizenship, and from him, in
all probability, the name Pompeius was derived, the
family name having been Trogus. The father of the
historian was secretary to Julius Cssar. (Justin, 43,
5, 11. ) Trogus Pompeius wrote an historical work
in forty-four books, compiled from some of the best
of the ancient historical writers. An abridgment of
this work was made by Justin, and has come down to
as; hut the original work itself is lost. (Consult re-
marks under the article Justinus I. )
Tkoj a, I. a celebrated city, the capital of Troas, which
appears from Homer to have stood in the immediate
vicinity of the sources of the Scamander, on a rising
ground between that river and the Simois. The Tro-
?
ans or Teucri appear to have been of Thracian origin,
and their first monarch is said to have been Teucer.
In the reign of this king Troy was not as yet built.
Dardanus, probably a Pelasgic chief, came from the
island of Samothrace to the Teucrian territory, re-
ceived from Teucer his daughter Baticia in marriage,
together with the cession of part of his kingdom,
founded the city of Dardanus, and called the adjacent
region Dardanra. Dardanus had two sons, llus and
Erichthonius. Ilus died without issue, and was suc-
ceeded by Erichthonius, who married Asyoche, daugh-
ter of the Simois, and became by her the father of
Tros. This last, on succeeding to tho throne, called
lie country Troas or Troja, and had three sons, Ilus,
Assaracus, and Ganymedes. Ilus, having come off
victorious in certain games at the court of a neigh-
Douring monarch of Phrygia, received from the latter,
among other rewarda, a dappled heifer, and permission
to found a city wherever the heifer should lie down.
The animal, having come to a place called the " hill
of Ate" ("Arijf Xo^oc), lay down thereon, and hero,
accordingly, Ilus founded his city, which he called
Ilium, and which afterward obtained also the name of
Troy. (Apollod. , 3, 18, 1, teqa. ) This place, the
citadel of which was called Pergamus, became now
the capital of all Troas, and, during the reign of La-
omedon, the successor of Ilus, was surrounded with
walls, which the poets fabled were the work of Apollo
and Neptune. (Vid. Laomedon. ) During the reign
of this last-mentioned monarch, Troy was taken by
Hercules, assisted by Tclamon, son of . -Eacus, but
was restored by the victor to Priam, the aon of its
conquered king. (Vid. Laomedon, and Priamus. )
Priam reigned here in peace and prosperity for many
years, having a number of adjacent tribes under his
sway, until his son Paris, attracted to Laconia by the
fame of Helen's beauty, abused the hospitality of Men-
elaiis by carrying off his queen in his absence. All
the chiefs of Greece, thereupon combined their forces,
under the command of Agamemnon, to avenge this
? ? outrage, sailed with a great armament to Troy, and,
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? TROJA.
TROJA.
Such is the narrative of the Trojan war as it appeared
in the Iliad of Homer, in the Little Iliad, and in the
Dtstruetion of Troy, by the bard Arctinus. It was
a subject, however, of all others open to variation and
addition, as may be seen, in particular, from the . Fund
of Virgil, and also in the other form of the story, which
made . -? neas and Antenor to have betrayed Troy to
the Greeks. (Keightley't Mythology, p. 485, >eqq. )
3. How far the story of the Trojan War is credible.
The poems of Homer have made the story of the
Trojan war familiar to most readers long before they
are tempted to inquire into its historical basis. It is,
consequently, difficult to enter upon the present inqui-
ry without some prepossessions unfavourable to an
impartial judgment. Here, however, we must not be
deterred from stating our view of the subject, by the
certainty that it will appear to some paradoxical, while
others will think that it savours of excessive credulity.
The reality of the siege of Troy has sometimes been
questioned, we conceive, without sufficient ground,
and against some strong evidence. According to the
rules of sound criticism, very cogent arguments ought
to be required to induce us to reject as a mere fiction
a tradition so ancient, so universally received, so defi-
nite, and so interwoven with the whole mass of the na-
tional recollections as that of the Trojan war. Even
if unfounded, it must still have had some adequate oc-
casion and motive; and it is difficult to imagine what
this could have been, unless it arose out of the Greek
colonies in Asia; and in this case, its universal recep-
tion in Greece itself is not easily explained. The
leaders of the earliest among these colonies, which
were planted in the neighbourhood of Troy, claimed
Agamemnon as their ancestor; but if this had sug-
gested the story of his victories in Asia, their scene
would probably have been fi. xcd in the very region oc-
cupied by his descendants, not in an adjacent land
On the other hand, the course taken by this first (. ^. o-
lian) migration falls in naturally with a previous tradi-
tion of a conquest achieved by Greeks in this part of
Asia. We therefore conceive it necessary to admit the
reality of the Trojan war as a general fact, but beyond
this wo scarcely venture to proceed a single step. Its
cause and its issue, the manner in which it was con-
ducted, and the parties engaged in it, are all involved
in an obscurity which we cannot pretend to penetrate.
We find it impossible to adopt the poetical story of
Helen, partly on account of its inherent improbability,
? in<l partly because we arc convinced that Helen is
% merely mythological person. (Vid. Helena. ) The
common account of the origin of the war has indeed
been defended, on the ground that it is perfectly con-
sistent with the manners of the age; just as if a pop-
ular tale, whether true or false, could be at variance
with them. The feature in the narrative which ap-
pears in the highest degree improbable, setting the
character of the persons out of the question, is the in-
tercourse implied in it between Troy and Sparta. As
to the heroine, it would be sufficient to raise a strong
suspicion of her fabulous nature to observe that she is
classed by Herodotus with lo, and Europa, and Me-
dea, all of them persons who, on distinct grounds,
must clearly be referred to ihe domain of mythology.
This suspicion is confirmed by all the particulars of her
legend; by her birth; by her relation to the Divine
Twins, whose worship seems to have been one of the
most ancient forms of religion in Peloponnesus, and
? ? especially in Laconia; and by the divine honours paid
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? TROJA.
THOJA.
tionof the Greek forces in the Iliad,than on the other
parts of the poem which have a more poetical aspect,
especially as it appears to be a compilation adapted to
a liter state of things. That the numbers of the ar-
mament are, as Thucydidcs observed, exaggerated by
the poet, rn>>y easily be believed; and perhaps we may
very well dispense with the historian's supposition,
that a detachment was employed in the cultivation of
the Thracian Chersonese. "My father," says the
son of Hercules, in the Iliad, "came hither with no
more than six ships and a few men: yet he laid Ilium
waste, and made her streets desolate. " A surprising
contrast, indeed, to the efforts and success of Aga-
memnon, who, with his 1200 ships and 100,000 men,
headed by the flower of the Grecian chivalry, lay ten
years before the town, often ready to abandon the en-
terprise in despair, and who, at last, was indebted foi
victory to an unexpected favourable turn of affairs.
It has been conjectured, that, after the first calamity,
the city was more strongly fortified, and rose rapidly
in power during the reign of Priam; but this suppo-
sition can hardly reconcile the imagination to the
transition from the six ships of Hercules to the vast
host of Agamemnon. On the other hand, there is no
difficulty in believing that, whatever may have been
the motives of the expedition, the spirit of adventure
may have drawn warriors together from most parts of
Greece, among whom the southern and northern Achse-
ans, under Pelopid and . lOacid princes, took the lead,
and that it may thus have deserved the character,
which is uniformly ascribed to it, of a national enter-
prise. The presence of several distinguished chiefs,
each attended by a small band, would be sufficient
both to explain the celebrity of the achievement and
to account for the event. If it were not trespassing
too far on tha domain of poetry, one might imagine
that the plan of the Greets was the same which we
find frequently adopted in later times, by invaders
whose force was comparatively weak: that they for-
tified themselves in a post, from which they continued
'o annoy and distress the enemy till stratagem or
treachery gave them possession of the town. --Though
(here can be no doubt that the expedition accom-
plished its immediate object, it seems to be also clear
Aat a Trojan state survived for a time the fall of Hi-
mi; for an historian of gieat antiquity on this subject,
both from his age and his country, Xanthus the Lydi-
in, related that such a state was finally destroyed by
the invasion of the Phrygians, a Thracian tribe, which
:rossed over from Europe to Asia after the Trojan
? var. (Strab. , 572, 680. ) And this is indirectly con-
Srmed by the testimony of Homer, who introduces
Neptune predicting that the posterity of -"Eneas should
>ong continue to reign over the Trojans after the race
>>f Priam should be extinct. To the conquerors the
war is represented as no less disastrous in its remote
tonsequences than it was glorious in its immediate
issue. The returns of the heroes formed a distinct
circle of epic poetry, of which the Odyssey included
only a snu'll part, and they were generally full of tragi-
cal adventures. This calamitous result of a success-
ful enterprise seems to have been an essential feature
in the legend of Troy; for Hercules also, on his re-
turn, was persecuted by the wrath of Juno, and driven
out of his course by a furious tempest. If, as manv
traces indicate, the legend of Troy grew up and spread
among the Asiatic Greeks, when newly settled in the
? ? land where their forefathers, the heroes of a belter
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? TROJA.
TROJA.
w. p 273. ) The next great feature to bi
in the Homeric chorography is the poet's account of
(he rivers which flowed in the vicinity of Troy, and
discharged their waters into the Hellespont. These
are the Xanthus or Scamander, and the Simois,
*hose junction is especially alluded to. (//. , 9,774. )
And again (6. 2), where it is said that the conflict be-
tween the Greeks and Trojans took place in the plain
between the two rivers. One of the first questions,
then, to Ins considered, in reconciling the topography
of anciont Troy with the existing state of the country,
is this: Are there two streams answering to Homer's
description, which unite in a plain at a short distance
from the sea, and fall into it between the Khcelean
and Sigean promontories 1 To this question it cer-
tainly appears, from recent observations, that we must
reply in the negative. There arc two streams which
water the plain, supposed to be that of Troy, but they
do not meet, except in some marshes formed princi-
pally by the Matdere, the larger of the two, which
seems to have no exit into the Hellespont, while the
? mailer river partly flows into these stagnant pools,
and partly into the sea near the Sigean cape. (Choi-
*>! '! Gouffier. ) It appears, however, from Strabo, or,
rather, from Demetrius, whom he quotes, that when he
wrote the junction did take place; for he says, "The
Scamander and Simo'is advance, the one towards
Sigeum, the other towards Rhoateum, and, after uniting
their streams a little above New Ilium, fall into the
sea near Sigeum, where they form what is called the
Stomalimne" (597. --Compare 695). Pliny, also, when
he speaks . of the. Palaiscamander, evidently leads to
the notion that the channel of that river had under-
gone a material alteration (5, 32). The observations
of travellers afford likewise evidences of great changes
having taken place in regard to the course of these
streams; and it is said that the ancient common chan-
nel in yet to be traced, under the name of Mcndcrc,
aear the point of Kum-Kale. The ancients them-
selves were aware of considerable alteration having
taken place along the whole line of coast; for His-
tiaea of Alexandrca Troas, a lady who had written
much on the Iliad, affirmed that the whole distance be-
tween New Ilium and the sea, which Slrabo estimates
it twelve stadia, had been formed by alluvial deposite
(598); and recent researches prove that their distance
is now nearly double. (Leakc's Asia Minor, p. 295 )
The great question, however, after all, respecting the
two rivers alluded to, and on which the whole inquiry
may bo said to turn, is. Which is the Scamander. and
which the Simois of Homer '. If we refer for the so-
lution of this question to Demetrius of Scepsis, who,
from his knowledge of the Trojan district, appears to
have been best qualified to decide upon it, we shall
Snd that he looked upon the river now called Mendere
as corresponding with the Scamander of Homer, a
supposition which certainly derives support from the
similarity of names; while he considered the Simois
to be the stream now called Giumbrek-sou, which
unites with the Mcndcrc near the site of Palco Aklshi,
supposed to represent the Pagus Ilicnsium, and which
Demetrius himself identified with ancient Troy. But
it has been rightly observed by those modern writers
who have bestowed their attention on the subject, that
the similarity of names is not a convincing reason in
itself, since they have often been known to vary; and
that, after all, we must refer to the original account,
? ? where we find the characteristics of the two rivers de-
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? TROJA.
tfae character of tr. e Meniere, which takes iis rise in a
deep cave below the highest summit of Mount Ida,
and, after a tortuous course, between steep and craggy
banks, of nearly thirty miles, in a rugged bed, which
is nearly dry in summer, finds its way into the plain
of Bounarbachi. It is true, that when Demetrius of
Scepsis wrote, which is some years after the defeat of
Anliochus by the Romans {Strab. , p. 593), the Men-
dere certainly bore the nainr. of Scamander, for he de-
scribes the source of that river in Mount Ida very ac-
carately {up. Slrabo, p. 602). I should admit, also,
that the Scamander, which, according to Herodotus,
was drained by the army of Xerxes (42), is the Men-
dere: Hellanicus likewise was of this opinion lap.
Schol. II. , 21, 242); but this objection may be fairly
disposed of by supposing that the name of Scamander,
which is certainly much oftencr mentioned in Homer,
had, in process of time, been transferred to the river
whose course was longer, and body of water more con-
luierable; whereas it is impossible, I conceive, to get
over the difficulty presented by Homer's description of
the double sources of the Scamander. The question
may be fairly summed up in this way: either we must
allow that Homer drew his local descriptions from real
scenes, or that he only applied historical names to fan-
ciful and ideal localities; in the latter case, all our in-
terest in the comparative topography of Troy ceases,
and it is a fruitless task to look for an application of
the imagery traced by the poet to the actual face of
things. But if a striking resemblance does present it-
self, we are bound, in justice to the poet, to take our
stand on that ground, and, without regarding any hy-
pothesis or system which may have been advanced
or framed in ancient times, to seek for an application
}f the remaining local features traced in the Iliad in
the immediate vicinity of the sources of Bounarbachi.
Here, then, travellers have observed, a little above
these springs and the village of the same name, a hill
riiing from the plain, generally well calculated for the
(Ho of a large town, and, in particular, satisfying many
of the local requisites which the Homeric Troy must
have possessed; such as a sufficient distance from the
sea, and an elevated and commanding situation. This
is evident from the epithets r'/vepoeooa, aiireivrj, and
bjpvoecoa, which are so constantly applied to it. If
we, besides, have a rock behind the town answering
the purpose of such a citadel as tho Pergainus of Troy
is described to have been, " Yi. ipyap. oc dupy," rising
precipitously above the city, and presenting a situation
of great strength, we shall have all that the nature of
the poem, even in its historical character, ought to lead
us to expect. (Compare Voy Pitt. , 2, 238, and the
plan there given. ) With respect to minor objects al-
luded to by Homer in the course of his poem, such as
the tombs or mounds of litis, . Esyetcs, and Myrina,
the Scopie and Erincus, or grove of wild fig-trees, it
is, perhaps, too much to seek to identify, as the French
topographers have somewhst fancifully done, with pres-
ent appearances. It is certain that such indications
cannot be relied upon, since the inhabitants of New
Ilium, who also pretended that their town stood on the
site of ancient Troy, boasted that they could show,
close to their walls, these dubious vestiges of antiqui-
ty. {Slrabo, 599. ) With respect to the objection
which may bo brought against the situation here as-
signed to ancient Troy, . that it would not have been
possible for the flight of Hector to have taken place
round the walls, as the poet has represented it, since
? ? the heights of Bounarbachi are skirted to the northeast
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? TROPHOMUS
TJJ B
rowed up b) the earth. (Pausan. , 1. c. ) According , Orcham, p. 198, 150, scgq. , 242. -- Strata, 421. -
lo Pindar, when they had finished the temple of Del- ! Liv. , 45, 27. )--The same trick related above in the
phi, they asked a reward of the god. He promised to case of I Km us, is said to have been played off or
give it on the seventh day, desiring them, meanwhile, Augeas, king of Elis, by Trophoniu>, the ttepiun o
to live cheerful and happy. On the seventh day they ; Agamedes, the Arcadian architect. (Charax, ap
died in their sleep. (Pmd. , ap. Plut. , de Cons. --Op. , . Schol. ad Arittoph. , tfub. , 509. ) It also formed as
vol. 7, p. 335, nl. HuHcii. ) There was a celebrated episode in the Telegonia; and there is likewise a very
oracle of Trophonius at Lebadea in Bo3otia. During | strong similarity between it and the legend related by
a great drought, the Boeotians were, it is said, directed Herodotus of the Egyptian king Rhampsinilus (2,121).
the god at Delphi lo seek aid of Trophonius in Leb-
adea. They came thither, but could find no oracle;
one of them, however, happening lo see a awarm of
bees, they foiU>>>ed them to a chasm in the earth, which
proved to be the place sought. (Pausan. , 9, 40. )
The writer just quoted gives a detailed account of the
mode of consulting this oracle, from his own personal
observation (9, 39). After going through certain cere-
monies, the individual who sought to inquire into fu-
turity was conducted to a chasm in the earth resem-
bling an oven, and a ladder was furnished him by which
to descend. After reaching the bottom of the chasm,
he lay down on the ground in a certain posture, and
was immediately drawn within a cavern, as if hurried
away by the vortex of a most rapid river. Then he ob-
tained the knowledge of which he was in quest.
271. )
Tricasses, a people of Gaul, northeast of the Sc-
nones, and through whose territories flows the Sequana,
or Seine, in the earlier part of its course. Their chief
city was Augusta Bona, now Troyes. (Ptol. --Amm.
Mare. , 15, 11. --Id. , 16, 2. )
? ? Tricca, a city of Thessaly, southeast of Gomphi,
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? TRI
TRI
ind founded this city (16, 41). It had a good har-
bour and extensive commerce. (/. Phocas, c. 4. --
Wcsseling, Jtin. , p. 149. )--The town wa>> taken and
destroyed in 1289 by the sultan of Egypt, but was af-
terward rebuilt, though at some distance from the
ancient site. (Abulfcda, Tab. Syr. , p. 101. ) At the
present day the sand has so accumulated that the city
la separated from the sea by a small triangular plain,
half a league in breadth, at the point of which is the
Tillage where the vessels land their goods. The com-
merce of the place consists almost entirely of coarse
silks--II. A region of Africa, on the coast of the Med-
iterranean, between the two Syncs. It received this
name from its containing three principal cities; 1. 1 li-
tis Magna, CEa, and Sabrata. The second of these
is the modern city of Tripoli. --III. A city of Pontua,
on the coast, at the mouth of the river Tripoiis, and
northeast of Cerasus, now Triboli. (Manncrt, Geogr. ,
vol. 6, pt. 2, p. 384. )--IV. A city of Lydia, on the
wcatern bank of the Meander, northwest of Hierapo-
lis, and near the confluence of the Meander and Clu-
drus. Ptolemy and Stephanus ascribe it to Carta.
Pliny and Hierocles to Lydia. Mannert considers it
to hare been a Phrygian city. {Geogr. , vol. 6, pt. 3,
p. 137. )
Triptoi. kmus, soi) of Celeus, king of Elensis, and
the same with Detnophoon. (Vid. Ores, page 330,
col. 1. ) The vanity of the people of Attica made them
pretend that corn was first known and agriculture
Art. * practised in their country. Ceres, according to
then taught Triptulemus agriculture, and rendered
him serviceable to mankind by instructing him how
to sow corn and make bread. She also, it was fabled,
gave him her chariot, which was drawn by two drag-
ons, and in this celestial vehicle he travelled over the
whole earth, and distributed corn to all the inhabitants
of the world. At his return to Eleusis, Triplolemua
restored Ceres her chariot, and is said to have estab-
lished festivals and mysteries in honour of that deity.
He reigned for some time, and after death received
divine honours. --There seems to be an allusion in the
name Triptolemus (derived probably from rpeii and
iroXt'u) to an improvement introduced in early agri-
culture by treble ploughing. (Hygin. , fab. , 147. --
I'auxan, 2, 14; *,i--Justin. 2, 6. --Apollod. , 1, 6.
-- Callim. , H. in Ccr. , 22 -- Orid, Met. , 5, 646 )
Tkiquktra. a name given to Sicily by the Latins,
from its triangular form.
Trismegistus, a celebrated Egyptian priest and
philosopher, of whom some mention has been already
made in a previous article. ( Vid. Mercurius Triame-
gistus. ) It remains but to give here a brief sketch
of his works, or, rather, of the productions that have
come down to us in his name. --1. The most cele-
brated of these is entitled " Pocmander," Hoi/iuvdpnf
(from ? Koifiriv, "pastor"), and treating "of the nature
of all things, and of the creation of the world. " Il is
in the form of a dialogue. This work is also some-
times cited under the following title, " Of the Divine
Power and Wisdom. "--2. A second work is entitled
'AoicXi/moc, " Aesculapius. " It is a dialogue between
Hermes (Mercurius) Trismegistus and his disciple,
and treats of God, man, and the universe. It bears
also the name of Aoyoc TtXeioc, but it exists only in
the shape of a Latin translation, which some critics
ascribe to Apuleius. --3. The third work has tho fol-
lowing title: 'larpo/iaOrifiaTiKd, r/ nepl naraicXiacue
? ? voaovvruv TlpoyvuaTiKu Ik Tijc /iaOri/tariKf/r rirjonj-
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? TrtO
I Ru
TRITOOENIA, i sarname of Pallas. (Vid. Minerva,
aige 849, col. 9. )
TRITON, I. a sea-deity, the son, according to He-
? iod, of Neptune and Amphitrite. (Theog. , 93U. )
Liter poets made him his father's trumpeter. Pie was
also multiplied, and we read of Tritons in the plural
number. Like the Nereides, the Tritons were degra-
ded to the nsh-form. Pausanias tells us, that the
women of Tanagra, in Breotia, going into the sea to
purify themselves for the orgies ol Bacchus, were,
while there, assailed by Triton; but, on praying to
their god, he vanquished their persecutor. Others,
be adds, said that Triton used to carry oil1 the cattle
which were driven down to the sea, and to seize all
email vessels, till the Tanagrians placing bowls of
wine on the shore, he drank of them, and, becoming
intoxicated, threw himself down on the shore to sleep,'
where, as he lay, a Tanagrian cut off his head with an
axr. He relates these legends to account for the
statue of Triton at Tanagria being headless. He then
subjoins: "I have seen another Triton among the cu-
riosities of the Romans, but it is not so large as this
of the Tanagrians. The form of the Tritons is this:
the hair of their head resembles the parsley that grows
in marshes, both in colour and in the perfect likeness
of one hair to another: the rest of their body is rough,
with small scales, and is of about the same hardness as
the skin of a fish: they have fish-gills under their
ears; their nostrils are those of a man, but their teeth
arc broader, and like those of a wild beast: their eyes
seem to me azure, and their hands, fingers, and nails
are of the form of the shells of shellfish; they have,
instead of feet, fins under their breasts and belly, like
those of the porpoise. '* (Pausan. , 9, 20, 21. --Keight-
'ey's Mythology, p. 245, scq. )--II. A river of Africa,
ising in Mount Usaleton, and, after forming in its
course the two lakes of Tritonis and Libya, discharg-
ing Us waters into the Syrtis Minor, near Tacape. It
is now the Gabs.
TRITONIS or TRITON, a lake and river of Africa, in-
land from the Syrtis Minor. Minerva is said to have
teen called Tntonia because she first revealed herself
in the vicinity of this lake. (But consult remarks
under the article Minerva, page 849, col. 2. ) Near
the Tritonis Palus was the Libya Palits. Modern
travellers speak of a long and narrow lake in this quar-
ter, divided in two by a ford; D'Anville considers
these to be the Tritonis and Libya Palus. The mod-
ern name of the former is f'araun, and of the latter,
El-Loudeatft. (Herod. , 4, 178. --Pauaan. , 9, 33. --
Virg. ,JEn. , 2, 171. --Mela, 1, 7. )--II. An appella-
tion given to Minerva by the poets. (Virg. , jEn. , 2,
226. --Omd, Met. , 3, 127. )--III. An epithet some-
times given to the sacred olive at Athens. (. *? ','///. ,
Sylv. , 2, 7, 28. )
TRIVJA, a surname given to Diana, because she pre-
sided over places where three roads met. ( Vid. Di-
ana, and Hecate. )
TRIVICUM, a place situate among the mountains
that separate Samnium from Apulia. The little town
of Trivico, which appears on a height above the course
of the ancient Appian Way, indicates the site of this
place. (Horat. , Sat. , 1, 5, 79. )
TRIUMVIRORUM INSUH, an island in the small river
Rhenus, one of the tributaries of the Po, where the
triumvirs Antony, Lepidus, and Augustus, met to di-
vide the Roman empire after the battle of Mutina.
? ? (D,o C. w. , 46, 55. )
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? TRO
TROJA.
TKOGLOtlfTiE, an appellation denoting a people who
dwelt in caves (rpuyXn, a cave, and Suvu, to enter").
The ancients found Troglodytos in various parts of
the world, but the name remained peculiarly appropri-
ated to the inhabitants of the western coast of the Si-
nus Arabicus in /Ethiopia; and from them the entire
coast look, with the Greeks, the name of Troglodytice
(TpuyAooWdti? ). It commenced to the south of Ber-
enice, and reached to the southernmost extremity of
the gulf. (Plin. , 6, 89. -- Id. , 3, 70 --Id. , 6, 19. )
Trogus Pompeius, a Latin historian, who flourished
in the time of Augustus. He was descended from a
Gallic family, to which Pompey the Great had extend-
ed the rights of Roman citizenship, and from him, in
all probability, the name Pompeius was derived, the
family name having been Trogus. The father of the
historian was secretary to Julius Cssar. (Justin, 43,
5, 11. ) Trogus Pompeius wrote an historical work
in forty-four books, compiled from some of the best
of the ancient historical writers. An abridgment of
this work was made by Justin, and has come down to
as; hut the original work itself is lost. (Consult re-
marks under the article Justinus I. )
Tkoj a, I. a celebrated city, the capital of Troas, which
appears from Homer to have stood in the immediate
vicinity of the sources of the Scamander, on a rising
ground between that river and the Simois. The Tro-
?
ans or Teucri appear to have been of Thracian origin,
and their first monarch is said to have been Teucer.
In the reign of this king Troy was not as yet built.
Dardanus, probably a Pelasgic chief, came from the
island of Samothrace to the Teucrian territory, re-
ceived from Teucer his daughter Baticia in marriage,
together with the cession of part of his kingdom,
founded the city of Dardanus, and called the adjacent
region Dardanra. Dardanus had two sons, llus and
Erichthonius. Ilus died without issue, and was suc-
ceeded by Erichthonius, who married Asyoche, daugh-
ter of the Simois, and became by her the father of
Tros. This last, on succeeding to tho throne, called
lie country Troas or Troja, and had three sons, Ilus,
Assaracus, and Ganymedes. Ilus, having come off
victorious in certain games at the court of a neigh-
Douring monarch of Phrygia, received from the latter,
among other rewarda, a dappled heifer, and permission
to found a city wherever the heifer should lie down.
The animal, having come to a place called the " hill
of Ate" ("Arijf Xo^oc), lay down thereon, and hero,
accordingly, Ilus founded his city, which he called
Ilium, and which afterward obtained also the name of
Troy. (Apollod. , 3, 18, 1, teqa. ) This place, the
citadel of which was called Pergamus, became now
the capital of all Troas, and, during the reign of La-
omedon, the successor of Ilus, was surrounded with
walls, which the poets fabled were the work of Apollo
and Neptune. (Vid. Laomedon. ) During the reign
of this last-mentioned monarch, Troy was taken by
Hercules, assisted by Tclamon, son of . -Eacus, but
was restored by the victor to Priam, the aon of its
conquered king. (Vid. Laomedon, and Priamus. )
Priam reigned here in peace and prosperity for many
years, having a number of adjacent tribes under his
sway, until his son Paris, attracted to Laconia by the
fame of Helen's beauty, abused the hospitality of Men-
elaiis by carrying off his queen in his absence. All
the chiefs of Greece, thereupon combined their forces,
under the command of Agamemnon, to avenge this
? ? outrage, sailed with a great armament to Troy, and,
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? TROJA.
TROJA.
Such is the narrative of the Trojan war as it appeared
in the Iliad of Homer, in the Little Iliad, and in the
Dtstruetion of Troy, by the bard Arctinus. It was
a subject, however, of all others open to variation and
addition, as may be seen, in particular, from the . Fund
of Virgil, and also in the other form of the story, which
made . -? neas and Antenor to have betrayed Troy to
the Greeks. (Keightley't Mythology, p. 485, >eqq. )
3. How far the story of the Trojan War is credible.
The poems of Homer have made the story of the
Trojan war familiar to most readers long before they
are tempted to inquire into its historical basis. It is,
consequently, difficult to enter upon the present inqui-
ry without some prepossessions unfavourable to an
impartial judgment. Here, however, we must not be
deterred from stating our view of the subject, by the
certainty that it will appear to some paradoxical, while
others will think that it savours of excessive credulity.
The reality of the siege of Troy has sometimes been
questioned, we conceive, without sufficient ground,
and against some strong evidence. According to the
rules of sound criticism, very cogent arguments ought
to be required to induce us to reject as a mere fiction
a tradition so ancient, so universally received, so defi-
nite, and so interwoven with the whole mass of the na-
tional recollections as that of the Trojan war. Even
if unfounded, it must still have had some adequate oc-
casion and motive; and it is difficult to imagine what
this could have been, unless it arose out of the Greek
colonies in Asia; and in this case, its universal recep-
tion in Greece itself is not easily explained. The
leaders of the earliest among these colonies, which
were planted in the neighbourhood of Troy, claimed
Agamemnon as their ancestor; but if this had sug-
gested the story of his victories in Asia, their scene
would probably have been fi. xcd in the very region oc-
cupied by his descendants, not in an adjacent land
On the other hand, the course taken by this first (. ^. o-
lian) migration falls in naturally with a previous tradi-
tion of a conquest achieved by Greeks in this part of
Asia. We therefore conceive it necessary to admit the
reality of the Trojan war as a general fact, but beyond
this wo scarcely venture to proceed a single step. Its
cause and its issue, the manner in which it was con-
ducted, and the parties engaged in it, are all involved
in an obscurity which we cannot pretend to penetrate.
We find it impossible to adopt the poetical story of
Helen, partly on account of its inherent improbability,
? in<l partly because we arc convinced that Helen is
% merely mythological person. (Vid. Helena. ) The
common account of the origin of the war has indeed
been defended, on the ground that it is perfectly con-
sistent with the manners of the age; just as if a pop-
ular tale, whether true or false, could be at variance
with them. The feature in the narrative which ap-
pears in the highest degree improbable, setting the
character of the persons out of the question, is the in-
tercourse implied in it between Troy and Sparta. As
to the heroine, it would be sufficient to raise a strong
suspicion of her fabulous nature to observe that she is
classed by Herodotus with lo, and Europa, and Me-
dea, all of them persons who, on distinct grounds,
must clearly be referred to ihe domain of mythology.
This suspicion is confirmed by all the particulars of her
legend; by her birth; by her relation to the Divine
Twins, whose worship seems to have been one of the
most ancient forms of religion in Peloponnesus, and
? ? especially in Laconia; and by the divine honours paid
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? TROJA.
THOJA.
tionof the Greek forces in the Iliad,than on the other
parts of the poem which have a more poetical aspect,
especially as it appears to be a compilation adapted to
a liter state of things. That the numbers of the ar-
mament are, as Thucydidcs observed, exaggerated by
the poet, rn>>y easily be believed; and perhaps we may
very well dispense with the historian's supposition,
that a detachment was employed in the cultivation of
the Thracian Chersonese. "My father," says the
son of Hercules, in the Iliad, "came hither with no
more than six ships and a few men: yet he laid Ilium
waste, and made her streets desolate. " A surprising
contrast, indeed, to the efforts and success of Aga-
memnon, who, with his 1200 ships and 100,000 men,
headed by the flower of the Grecian chivalry, lay ten
years before the town, often ready to abandon the en-
terprise in despair, and who, at last, was indebted foi
victory to an unexpected favourable turn of affairs.
It has been conjectured, that, after the first calamity,
the city was more strongly fortified, and rose rapidly
in power during the reign of Priam; but this suppo-
sition can hardly reconcile the imagination to the
transition from the six ships of Hercules to the vast
host of Agamemnon. On the other hand, there is no
difficulty in believing that, whatever may have been
the motives of the expedition, the spirit of adventure
may have drawn warriors together from most parts of
Greece, among whom the southern and northern Achse-
ans, under Pelopid and . lOacid princes, took the lead,
and that it may thus have deserved the character,
which is uniformly ascribed to it, of a national enter-
prise. The presence of several distinguished chiefs,
each attended by a small band, would be sufficient
both to explain the celebrity of the achievement and
to account for the event. If it were not trespassing
too far on tha domain of poetry, one might imagine
that the plan of the Greets was the same which we
find frequently adopted in later times, by invaders
whose force was comparatively weak: that they for-
tified themselves in a post, from which they continued
'o annoy and distress the enemy till stratagem or
treachery gave them possession of the town. --Though
(here can be no doubt that the expedition accom-
plished its immediate object, it seems to be also clear
Aat a Trojan state survived for a time the fall of Hi-
mi; for an historian of gieat antiquity on this subject,
both from his age and his country, Xanthus the Lydi-
in, related that such a state was finally destroyed by
the invasion of the Phrygians, a Thracian tribe, which
:rossed over from Europe to Asia after the Trojan
? var. (Strab. , 572, 680. ) And this is indirectly con-
Srmed by the testimony of Homer, who introduces
Neptune predicting that the posterity of -"Eneas should
>ong continue to reign over the Trojans after the race
>>f Priam should be extinct. To the conquerors the
war is represented as no less disastrous in its remote
tonsequences than it was glorious in its immediate
issue. The returns of the heroes formed a distinct
circle of epic poetry, of which the Odyssey included
only a snu'll part, and they were generally full of tragi-
cal adventures. This calamitous result of a success-
ful enterprise seems to have been an essential feature
in the legend of Troy; for Hercules also, on his re-
turn, was persecuted by the wrath of Juno, and driven
out of his course by a furious tempest. If, as manv
traces indicate, the legend of Troy grew up and spread
among the Asiatic Greeks, when newly settled in the
? ? land where their forefathers, the heroes of a belter
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? TROJA.
TROJA.
w. p 273. ) The next great feature to bi
in the Homeric chorography is the poet's account of
(he rivers which flowed in the vicinity of Troy, and
discharged their waters into the Hellespont. These
are the Xanthus or Scamander, and the Simois,
*hose junction is especially alluded to. (//. , 9,774. )
And again (6. 2), where it is said that the conflict be-
tween the Greeks and Trojans took place in the plain
between the two rivers. One of the first questions,
then, to Ins considered, in reconciling the topography
of anciont Troy with the existing state of the country,
is this: Are there two streams answering to Homer's
description, which unite in a plain at a short distance
from the sea, and fall into it between the Khcelean
and Sigean promontories 1 To this question it cer-
tainly appears, from recent observations, that we must
reply in the negative. There arc two streams which
water the plain, supposed to be that of Troy, but they
do not meet, except in some marshes formed princi-
pally by the Matdere, the larger of the two, which
seems to have no exit into the Hellespont, while the
? mailer river partly flows into these stagnant pools,
and partly into the sea near the Sigean cape. (Choi-
*>! '! Gouffier. ) It appears, however, from Strabo, or,
rather, from Demetrius, whom he quotes, that when he
wrote the junction did take place; for he says, "The
Scamander and Simo'is advance, the one towards
Sigeum, the other towards Rhoateum, and, after uniting
their streams a little above New Ilium, fall into the
sea near Sigeum, where they form what is called the
Stomalimne" (597. --Compare 695). Pliny, also, when
he speaks . of the. Palaiscamander, evidently leads to
the notion that the channel of that river had under-
gone a material alteration (5, 32). The observations
of travellers afford likewise evidences of great changes
having taken place in regard to the course of these
streams; and it is said that the ancient common chan-
nel in yet to be traced, under the name of Mcndcrc,
aear the point of Kum-Kale. The ancients them-
selves were aware of considerable alteration having
taken place along the whole line of coast; for His-
tiaea of Alexandrca Troas, a lady who had written
much on the Iliad, affirmed that the whole distance be-
tween New Ilium and the sea, which Slrabo estimates
it twelve stadia, had been formed by alluvial deposite
(598); and recent researches prove that their distance
is now nearly double. (Leakc's Asia Minor, p. 295 )
The great question, however, after all, respecting the
two rivers alluded to, and on which the whole inquiry
may bo said to turn, is. Which is the Scamander. and
which the Simois of Homer '. If we refer for the so-
lution of this question to Demetrius of Scepsis, who,
from his knowledge of the Trojan district, appears to
have been best qualified to decide upon it, we shall
Snd that he looked upon the river now called Mendere
as corresponding with the Scamander of Homer, a
supposition which certainly derives support from the
similarity of names; while he considered the Simois
to be the stream now called Giumbrek-sou, which
unites with the Mcndcrc near the site of Palco Aklshi,
supposed to represent the Pagus Ilicnsium, and which
Demetrius himself identified with ancient Troy. But
it has been rightly observed by those modern writers
who have bestowed their attention on the subject, that
the similarity of names is not a convincing reason in
itself, since they have often been known to vary; and
that, after all, we must refer to the original account,
? ? where we find the characteristics of the two rivers de-
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? TROJA.
tfae character of tr. e Meniere, which takes iis rise in a
deep cave below the highest summit of Mount Ida,
and, after a tortuous course, between steep and craggy
banks, of nearly thirty miles, in a rugged bed, which
is nearly dry in summer, finds its way into the plain
of Bounarbachi. It is true, that when Demetrius of
Scepsis wrote, which is some years after the defeat of
Anliochus by the Romans {Strab. , p. 593), the Men-
dere certainly bore the nainr. of Scamander, for he de-
scribes the source of that river in Mount Ida very ac-
carately {up. Slrabo, p. 602). I should admit, also,
that the Scamander, which, according to Herodotus,
was drained by the army of Xerxes (42), is the Men-
dere: Hellanicus likewise was of this opinion lap.
Schol. II. , 21, 242); but this objection may be fairly
disposed of by supposing that the name of Scamander,
which is certainly much oftencr mentioned in Homer,
had, in process of time, been transferred to the river
whose course was longer, and body of water more con-
luierable; whereas it is impossible, I conceive, to get
over the difficulty presented by Homer's description of
the double sources of the Scamander. The question
may be fairly summed up in this way: either we must
allow that Homer drew his local descriptions from real
scenes, or that he only applied historical names to fan-
ciful and ideal localities; in the latter case, all our in-
terest in the comparative topography of Troy ceases,
and it is a fruitless task to look for an application of
the imagery traced by the poet to the actual face of
things. But if a striking resemblance does present it-
self, we are bound, in justice to the poet, to take our
stand on that ground, and, without regarding any hy-
pothesis or system which may have been advanced
or framed in ancient times, to seek for an application
}f the remaining local features traced in the Iliad in
the immediate vicinity of the sources of Bounarbachi.
Here, then, travellers have observed, a little above
these springs and the village of the same name, a hill
riiing from the plain, generally well calculated for the
(Ho of a large town, and, in particular, satisfying many
of the local requisites which the Homeric Troy must
have possessed; such as a sufficient distance from the
sea, and an elevated and commanding situation. This
is evident from the epithets r'/vepoeooa, aiireivrj, and
bjpvoecoa, which are so constantly applied to it. If
we, besides, have a rock behind the town answering
the purpose of such a citadel as tho Pergainus of Troy
is described to have been, " Yi. ipyap. oc dupy," rising
precipitously above the city, and presenting a situation
of great strength, we shall have all that the nature of
the poem, even in its historical character, ought to lead
us to expect. (Compare Voy Pitt. , 2, 238, and the
plan there given. ) With respect to minor objects al-
luded to by Homer in the course of his poem, such as
the tombs or mounds of litis, . Esyetcs, and Myrina,
the Scopie and Erincus, or grove of wild fig-trees, it
is, perhaps, too much to seek to identify, as the French
topographers have somewhst fancifully done, with pres-
ent appearances. It is certain that such indications
cannot be relied upon, since the inhabitants of New
Ilium, who also pretended that their town stood on the
site of ancient Troy, boasted that they could show,
close to their walls, these dubious vestiges of antiqui-
ty. {Slrabo, 599. ) With respect to the objection
which may bo brought against the situation here as-
signed to ancient Troy, . that it would not have been
possible for the flight of Hector to have taken place
round the walls, as the poet has represented it, since
? ? the heights of Bounarbachi are skirted to the northeast
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? TROPHOMUS
TJJ B
rowed up b) the earth. (Pausan. , 1. c. ) According , Orcham, p. 198, 150, scgq. , 242. -- Strata, 421. -
lo Pindar, when they had finished the temple of Del- ! Liv. , 45, 27. )--The same trick related above in the
phi, they asked a reward of the god. He promised to case of I Km us, is said to have been played off or
give it on the seventh day, desiring them, meanwhile, Augeas, king of Elis, by Trophoniu>, the ttepiun o
to live cheerful and happy. On the seventh day they ; Agamedes, the Arcadian architect. (Charax, ap
died in their sleep. (Pmd. , ap. Plut. , de Cons. --Op. , . Schol. ad Arittoph. , tfub. , 509. ) It also formed as
vol. 7, p. 335, nl. HuHcii. ) There was a celebrated episode in the Telegonia; and there is likewise a very
oracle of Trophonius at Lebadea in Bo3otia. During | strong similarity between it and the legend related by
a great drought, the Boeotians were, it is said, directed Herodotus of the Egyptian king Rhampsinilus (2,121).
the god at Delphi lo seek aid of Trophonius in Leb-
adea. They came thither, but could find no oracle;
one of them, however, happening lo see a awarm of
bees, they foiU>>>ed them to a chasm in the earth, which
proved to be the place sought. (Pausan. , 9, 40. )
The writer just quoted gives a detailed account of the
mode of consulting this oracle, from his own personal
observation (9, 39). After going through certain cere-
monies, the individual who sought to inquire into fu-
turity was conducted to a chasm in the earth resem-
bling an oven, and a ladder was furnished him by which
to descend. After reaching the bottom of the chasm,
he lay down on the ground in a certain posture, and
was immediately drawn within a cavern, as if hurried
away by the vortex of a most rapid river. Then he ob-
tained the knowledge of which he was in quest.