On leaving Syene,[1] and taking first the Arabian side, we
find the nation of the Catadupi, then the Syenitæ, and the
Juba, however, gives another account; he says that there is a city on Mount Megatichos,[3] which lies between Egypt and Ethiopia, by the Arabians known as Myrson, after which come Tacompsos, Aramus, Sesamos, Pide, Mamuda, Orambis, situate near a stream of bitumen, Amodita, Prosda, Parenta, Mama, Tesatta, Gallas, Zoton, Graucome, Emeus, the Pidibotæ, the Hebdomecontacometæ,[4] Nomades, who dwell in tents, Cyste, Macadagale, Proaprimis, Nups, Detrelis, Patis, the Ganbreves, the Magasnei, Segasmala, Crandala, Denna, Cadeuma, Thena, Batta, Alana, Mascoa, the Scamini, Hora, situate on an island, and then Abala, Androgalis, Sesecre, the Malli, and Agole.
On the African side[5] we find mentioned, either what is another place with the same name of Tacompsos, or else a part of the one before-mentioned, and after it Moggore, Sæa, Edos, Plenariæ, Pinnis, Magassa, Buma, Linthuma, Spintum, Sydop, the Censi, Pindicitora, Acug, Orsum, Sansa, Maumarum, Urbim, the town of Molum, by the Greeks called Hypaton,[6] Pagoarca, Zmanes, at which point elephants begin to be found, the Mambli, Berressa, and Acetuma; there was formerly a town also called Epis, over against Meroë, which had, however, been destroyed before Bion wrote.
These are the names of places given as far as Meroë: but
at the present day hardly any of them on either side of
the river are in existence; at all events, the prætorian troops
In a similar manner, also, there have been conflicting
accounts as to the extent of this country: first by Dalion,
(30.) The whole of this country has successively had the
names of Ætheria,[18] Atlantia, and last of all, Æthiopia, from
Æthiops, the son of Vulcan. It is not at all surprising that
towards the extremity of this region the men and animals
assume a monstrous form, when we consider the changeableness and volubility of fire, the heat of which is the
great agent in imparting various forms and shapes to bodies.
Indeed, it is reported that in the interior, on the eastern
side, there is a people that have no noses, the whole face
presenting a plane surface; that others again are destitute of
the upper lip, and others are without tongues. Others again,
have the mouth grown together, and being destitute of nostrils,
breathe through one passage only, imbibing their drink
through it by means of the hollow stalk of the oat, which
there grows spontaneously and supplies them with its grain
for food. Some of these nations have to employ gestures
by nodding the head and moving the limbs, instead of speech.
Others again were unacquainted with the use of fire before the time of Ptolemy Lathyrus, king of Egypt. Some
writers have also stated that there is a nation of Pygmies,
which dwells among the marshes in which the river Nile takes
its rise; while on the coast of, Æthiopia, where we paused,[19]
All the country, after we pass Meroë, is bounded by the Troglodytæ and the Red Sea, it being three days' journey from Napata to the shores of that sea; throughout the whole of this district the rain water is carefully preserved at several places, while the country that lies between is extremely productive of gold. The parts beyond this are inhabited by the Adabuli, a nation of Æthiopia; and here, over against Meroë, are the Megabarri,[20] by some writers called the Adiabari; they occupy the city of Apollo; some of them, however, are Nomades, living on the flesh of elephants. Opposite to them, on the African side, dwell the Macrobii,[21] and then again, beyond the Megabarri, there are the Memnones and the Dabeli, and, at a distance of twenty days' journey, the Critensi. Beyond these are the Dochi, and then the Gymnetes, who always go naked; and after them the Andetæ, the Mothitæ, the Mesaches, and the Ipsodoræ, who are of a black tint, but stain the body all over with a kind of red earth. On the African side again there are the Medimni, and then a nation of Nomades, who live on the milk of the cynocephalus, and then the Aladi and the Syrbotæ,[22] which last are said to be eight cubits in height.
Aristocreon informs us that on the Libyan side, at a distance of five days' journey from Meroë, is the town of Tolles,
and then at a further distance of twelve days' journey, Esar, a
town founded by the Egyptians who fled from Psammetichus;[23] he states also that they dwelt there for a period of
three hundred years, and that opposite, on the Arabian side,
there is a town of theirs called Daron.[24] The town, however,
which he calls Esar, is by Bion called Sape, who says that the
name means "the strangers:" their capital being Sembobitis,
situate on an island, and a third place of theirs, Sinat in Arabia.
Between the mountains and the river Nile are the Simbarri,
tile Palugges, and, on the mountains themselves, the Asachæ,
Bion makes mention also of some other towns situate on islands, the whole distance being twenty days' journey from Sembobitis to Meroë; a town in an adjoining island, under the queen of the Semberritæ, with another called Asara, and another, in a second island, called Darde. The name of a third island is Medoë, upon which is the town of Asel, and a fourth is called Garodes, with a town upon it of the same name. Passing thence along the banks of the Nile, are the towns of Navi, Modunda, Andatis, Secundum, Colligat, Secande, Navectabe, Cumi, Agrospi, Ægipa, Candrogari, Araba, and Summara.[26]
Beyond is the region of Sirbitum, at which the mountains
terminate,[27] and which by some writers is said to contain
the maritime Æthiopians, the Nisacæthæ, and the Nisyti, a
word which signifies "men with three or four eyes,"—
not that the people really have that conformation, but because they are remarkable for the unerring aim of their
arrows. On that side of the Nile which extends along the
borders of the Southern Ocean beyond the Greater Syrtes,[28]
Dalion says that the people, who use rain-water only, are
called the Cisori, and that the other nations are the Longompori,
M. Agrippa was of opinion that the length[34] of the whole
country of the Æthiopians, including the Red Sea, was two
thousand one hundred and seventy miles, and its breadth,
including Upper Egypt, twelve hundred and ninety-seven.
Some authors again have made the following divisions of its
length; from Meroë to Sirbitum eleven days' sail, from Sirbitum to the Dabelli fifteen days', and from them to the Æthiopian Ocean six days' journey. It is agreed by most authors,
that the distance altogether, from the ocean[35] to Meroë, is six
hundred and twenty-five miles, and from Meroë to Syene,
that which we have already mentioned. Æthiopia lies from
south-east to south-west. Situate as it is, in a southern
hemisphere, forests of ebony are to be seen of the brightest
verdure; and in the midst of these regions there is a mountain of immense height, which overhangs the sea, and emits a
perpetual flame. By the Greeks this mountain is called
Theon Ochema, [36]
and at a distance of four days' sail from it
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27. Travels in Abyssinia.
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