After passing the last, we come to the Gates of Caucasus,[1]
by many persons most erroneously called the Caspian Passes;
a vast work of nature, which has suddenly wrenched asunder
in this place a chain of mountains. At this spot are gates
barred up with beams shod with iron, while beneath the
middle there runs a stream which emits a most fetid odour;
on this side of it is a rock, defended by a fortress, the name of
which is Cumania,[2] erected for the purpose of preventing the
passage of the innumerable tribes that lie beyond. Here, then,
we may see the habitable world severed into two parts by a pair
Beyond the Gates of Caucasus, in the Gordyæan Mountains, the Valli and the Suani, uncivilized tribes, are found; still, however, they work the mines of gold there. Beyond these nations, and extending as far away as Pontus, are numerous nations of the Heniochi, and, after them, of the Achæi. Such is the present state of one of the most famous tracts upon the face of the earth.
Some writers have stated that the distance between the Euxine and the Caspian Sea is not more than three hundred and seventy-five miles; Cornelius Nepos makes it only two hundred and fifty. Within such straits is Asia pent up in this second instance[3] by the agency of the sea! Claudius Cæsar has informed us that from the Cimmerian Bosporus to the Caspian Sea is a distance of only one hundred and fifty[4] miles, and that Nicator Seleucus[5] contemplated cutting through this isthmus just at the time when he was slain by Ptolemy Ceraunus. It is a well-known fact that the distance from the Gates of Caucasus to the shores of the Euxine is two hundred miles.
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