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tain in the interior of India, which he calls Mons
Maleus (vi. 19. s. 22). It has been supposed that
he may refer to the western Ghats; but as Maleus
is evidently derived from the Sanscrit mala, a moun-
tain, this identification cannot, we think, be main-
tained.
[V.]
MALECECA. [LUSITANIA, p. 220, a.]
MALE'NE (Mahun), a place near Atarneus,
where Histiaeus was defeated by the Persians, is not
mentioned by any ancient author except Herodotus
(vi. 29).
[L. S.]
MALETHUBALON (Maλelovaλov, Ptol. iv. 2.
§15; Nobbe, ad loc. reads Maλeboúbador), a moun-
tain of Mauretania Caesariensis, which is identified
with Jebel Nadur in the Sähăra. (Shaw's Travels,
p. 56.)
[E. B. J.]

MALEVENTUM. [BENEVENTUM.] MAʼLEUM P. (Maλew ǎкpov, Ptol. vii. 1. § 4), a promontory which forms the southern termination of Syrastrene (now Cutch). It separated the gulfs of Canthi (the Runn of Cutch) and Barygaza (Cam bay).

[V.]

MA'LIA (Maλía: Eth. Maλievs), a town in Hispania Tarraconensis, near Numantia, but of which nothing more is known. (Appian, Hisp. 77.)

Oetaeans (vii. 217). A more particular description of the locality is given under THERMOPYLAE. According to Stephanus B. (s. v. Maλeus), the Malians derived their name from a town Malieus, not mentioned by any other ancient author, said to have been founded by Malus, the son of Amphictyon. The Malians were reckoned among the Thessalians; but although tributary to the latter, they were genuine Hellenes, and were from the earliest times members of the Amphicy tonic council. They were probably Dorians, and were always in close connection with the acknowledged Doric states. Hercules, the great Doric hero, is represented as the friend of Ceyx of Trachis, and Mount Oeta was the scene of the hero's death. Diodorus (xii. 59) even speaks of Trachis as the mother-town of Lacedaemon. When the Trachinians were hard pressed by their Oetaean neighbours, about the commencement of the Peloponnesian War, they applied for assistance to the Spartans, who founded in consequence the colony of Heracleia near Trachis. (Thuc. iii. 92.)

Scylax (p. 24), who is followed by Diodorus (xviii. 11), distinguishes between the Mnλieîs and Maλeis, the former extending along the northern coast of the Maliac gulf from Lamia to Echinus ; but, as no other writer mentions these towns as belonging to the Lamians, we ought probably to read Aauieis, as K. O. Müller observes. Thucydides mentions three divisions (uépn) of the Malians, called Paralii (Пapáλio), Priests ('Ieps), and Trachinii (Tpaxivio). Who the Priests were is a matter only

MALIACUS SINUS (8 Maλiaкds KóλTOS; MnAlakós, Thuc. iii. 96; Strab. ix. p. 403; 8 MnALEÙS KÓλжOs, Herod. iv. 33; Polyb. ix. 41: Gulf of Zitúni), a long gulf of the sea, lying between the southern coast of Thessaly and the northern coast of the Locri Epicnemidii, and which derived its of conjecture: Grote supposes that they may have name from the country of the Malians, situated at its head. At the entrance of the gulf is the northwestern promontory of Euboea, and the islands Lichades, and into its furthest extremity the river Spercheius flows. The gulf is called LAMIACUS SINUS (8 Aajaкds кóλños) by Pausanias (i. 4. § 3, vii. 15. § 2, x. 1. § 2), from the important town of Lamia; and in the same way the gulf is now called Zitúni, which is the modern name of Lamia. Livy, who usually terms it Maliacus Sinus, gives it in one place the name of Aenianum Sinus (xxviii. 5), which is borrowed from Polybius (x. 42). (Comp. Leake, Northern Greece, vol. ii. p. 4.)

MALIARPHA (Maλiáppa, Ptol. vii. 14), a place of considerable commerce in the territory of the Arvarni, on the western coast of the Bay of Bengal, between the mouths of the Godavari and the Kistna. It is represented now by either Maliapur or by the ruins of Mavalipuram. [V.]

MALICHI INSULAE (Maxixou vnooi, Ptol. vi. 7. § 44), two islands in the Sinus Arabicus, off the south coast of Arabia Felix. One of them is the modern Sokar.

MALIS ( Maλls yñ; Mŋλís, Herod. vii. 198: Eth. Maλieús, Mnλieús), a small district of Greece, at the head of the Maliac gulf, surrounded on all sides by mountains, and open only in the direction of the sea. The river Spercheius flowed through it. The limits of Malis are fixed by the description of Herodotus. It extended a little north of the valley of the Spercheius to the narrowest part of the straits of Thermopylae. Anticyra was the northernmost town of the Malians (Herod. vii. 198); the boundary passed between Lamia and Anticyra. Anthela was their southernmost town (vii. 176, 200). Inland, the Anopaea, the path over Mount Oeta, by which the Persians turned the army of Leonidas, in part divided the

been possessors of the sacred spot on which the Amphictyonic meetings were held; while Leake imagines that they were the inhabitants of the Sacred City (iepòv ǎσrv), to which, according to Callimachus (Hymn. in Del. 287), the Hyperborean offerings were sent from Dodona on their way to Delus, and that this Sacred City was the city Oeta mentioned by Stephanus B. The names of the Paralii and Trachinii sufficiently indicate their position. The Malians admitted every man to a share in the government, who either had served or was serving as a Hoplite (Aristot. Polit. iv. 10. § 10). In war they were chiefly famous as slingers and darters. (Thuc. iv. 100.)

TRACHIS was the principal town of the Malians. There were also ANTICYRA and ANTHELA on the coast; and others, of which the names only are preserved, such as COLACEIA (Theopom. ap. Athen. vi. p. 254, f.), AEGONEIA (Lycophr. 903; Steph. B. 8. v.), and IRUS (Schol. in Lycophr. l. c.; Steph. B. s. v.). (Müller, Dorians, vol. i. p. 50; Grote, Greece, vol. ii. p. 378; Leake, Northern Greece, vol. ii. p. 20.)

MALLAEA, MALLOEA, or MALOEA, a town of southern Perrhaebia in Thessaly, perhaps represented in name by Molighusta, which Leake conjectures to be a corruption of Malloea, with the addition of Augusta. But as there are no remains of antiquity at Mológhusta, Leake supposes Malloea to have occupied a height on the opposite side of the river, where are some vestiges of ancient walls. (Liv. xxxi. 41, xxxvi. 10, 13, xxxix. 25; Leake, Northern Greece, vol. iv. p. 311.)

MALLI (Máλλo, Arrian, Anab. vi. 7, 8, 14), the inhabitants of the south part of the district now known by the name of the Panjab. There was probably in ancient times a city from which they derived their name, though the name of the town is

xv. p. 701; Curt. ix. 4.) The people occupied the space between the Acesines (Asikni) and Hyarotis (Irávati), which both enter the Indus at no great distance. There can be little doubt that the name represents at once the country and the town of the Malli, being itself derived from the Sanscrit Málasthúní. Pliny speaks of Malli quorum Mons Mallus (vi. 17. s. 21). If his locality corresponds with that of the other geographers, the name might be taken from the mountain which was conspicuous there. It is not, however, possible from Pliny's brief notice, to determine anything of the position of his Malli. It was in this country, and not improbably in the actual town of the Malli (as Arrian appears to think) that Alexander was nearly slain in combat with the Indian tribes of the Panjab.

[V.]

MALLUS (Maλλós: Eth.Maλλúтns), an ancient city of Cilicia, which, according to tradition, was founded in the Trojan times by the soothsayers Mopsus and Amphilochus. (Strab. xiv. p. 675, &c.; Arrian, Anab. ii. 5.) It was situated near the mouth of the river Pyramus, on an eminence opposite to Megarsus, as we must infer from Curtius (iii. 7), who states that Alexander entered the town after throwing a bridge across the Pyramus. Mallus therefore stood on the eastern bank of the river. | According to Scylax (p. 40) it was necessary to sail up the river a short distance in order to reach Mallus; and Mela (i. 13) also states that the town is situated close upon the river; whence Ptolemy (v. 8. § 4) inust be mistaken in placing it more than two miles away from the river. Mallus was a town of considerable importance, though it does not appear to have possessed any particular attractions. Its porttown was Magarsa [MAGARSA], though in later times it seems to have had a port of its own, called Portus Palorum (Geogr. Nub. p.195; Sanut. Secret. Fid. ii. 4, 26, whence we learn that in the middle ages it continued to be called Malo; comp. Callim. Fragm. 15; Appian, Mithrid. 96; Dionys. Per. 875; Ptol. viii. 17. § 44; Plin. H. N. v. 22; Stadiasm. Mar. M. §§ 151, 152; Leake, Asia Minor, pp. 216, &c.) [L. S.]

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COIN OF MALLUS IN CILICIA.

MALOETAS. [METHYDRIUM.]
MALVA. [MULUCHA.]

MALUS. [MALEA; MEGALOPOLIS.] MAMALA (Máμаλa кwμn), a village of the Cassanitae, south of BADEI REGIA, on the Arabian coast of the Red Sea. (Ptol. vi. 7. § 5) [GASANDES; BADEI REGIA.] It has been supposed to be represented by the modern town of Konfoda, and to have been the capital of the piratical tribe of Conraitae, mentioned by Arrian (Periplus, p. 15). [G. W.] MAMERTI'NI MESSANA.]

MAMERTIUM (Maμépriov: Eth. Maueprivos), a city in the interior of the Bruttian peninsula. It is noticed only by Strabo, who places it in the

mountains above Locri, in the neighbourhood of the great forest of Sila, and by Stephanus of Byzantium, who calls it merely a city of Italy. (Strab. vi. p. 261; Steph. B. s. v.) There is no reason to reject these testimonies, though we have no other account of the existence of such a place; and its position cannot be determined with any greater precision. But the Mamertini who figure in history as the occupants of Messana are wholly distinct from the citizens of this obscure town. [MESSANA.] [E. H. B.]

MAMMA (Mauμh), a district in Byzacena, at the foot of a chain of lofty mountains, where in A.D. 536 the eunuch Solomon, with 10,000 Romans, inflicted a signal defeat upon 50,000 Moors. (Procop. B. V. ii. 11; Corippus, Johannis, vi. 283; Theophan. p. 170; Anast. p. 61; Le Beau, Bas Empire, vol. viii. pp. 307-311; comp. Gibbon, c. xli.) Justinian afterwards fortified Mamma (Procop. de Aed. vi. 6), which is represented by the plains lying under the slopes of Jebel Truzza near Kiruân, in the Regency of Tunis. (Barth, Wanderungen, pp. 247, 285.) [E. B. J.] MAMPSARUS MONS. [BAGRADAS.] ΜΑΝΑΡΙΙ (Μανάπιοι), a people of Ireland on the east coast, possessing a town called MANAPIA (Mavaría), near the mouth of the Modonus, the present Dublin. (Ptol. ii. 2. §§ 8, 9.) The name is the same as one of the Celtic tribes of Gaul. [MENAPII.]

MANARMANIS PORTUS (Μαναρμανὶς λιμήν), a harbour on the west coast of Germany, and probably formed by the mouth of the river Unsingis. It is perhaps identical with the modern Marna in West Friesland, which may even owe its name to the ancient port. (Ptol. ii. 11. § 1; Marcian. Heracl. p. 51, where it is called Mapapuapós.) [L. S.] MANASSEH. [PALAESTINA.]

MANCHANE (Mayxávn), a town in Mesopotamia, of which the site is uncertain. (Ptol. v. 18. § 9)

MANCU'NIUM, a town of the Brigantes in Britain (It. Ant. p. 482), now Manchester. But few, if any, of the remains of the ancient town are to be traced at the present day. From inscriptions we learn that at some period of the Roman domination a cohort of the Frisians was stationed at Mancunium; and that the sixth legion, or one of its divisions was there, probably on the occasion of some journey into the north. [C.R.S.]

MANDACADA (Mavdanáda), a place in Mysia, which is not mentioned till the time of Hierocles (p. 663), though it must have existed before, as Pliny (v. 32) mentions Cilices Mandacadeni in the northern part of Mysia on the Hellespont. [L. S.]

MANDAGARA (Mavdayápa, Ptol. vii. 1. § 7), a small port on the western coast of Hindostán, in the district now called Concan. It was situated a little to the S. of Bombay, nearly in the same latitude as Poonah. The author of the Periplus calls it Mandagora (p. 30). [V.]

MANDAGARSIS (Mavdayapois, Ptol. vi. 2. §2), a small port on the shores of the Caspian sea, between the rivers Strato and Charindas. Forbiger has conjectured that it may be represented by the present Mesheddizar. [V.]

MANDALAE (Mavdáλai, Ptol. vii. 1. § 72), an Indian tribe who occupied both banks of the Ganges in the neighbourhood of Palimbothra (Patna), which was perhaps (as has been conjectured by some geographers), their chief city. They seem

however, to have lived rather lower down the river
near Monghir, in the district now called Behar.
(See Lassen's map.)
[V.]
MANDANE (Mavdávn), a town on the coast of
Cilicia, between Celenderis, and Cape Pisidium, from
which it was only 7 stadia distant (Stadiasm.
SS 174, 175.) It is probably the same place as the
Myanda or Mysanda in Pliny (v. 27); and if so, it
must also be identical with the town of Myus (Muous)
mentioned by Scylax (p. 40) between Nagidus and
Celenderis.
[L. S.]
MANDARAE (Mavdapai), the district about
Cyrrhus in Macedonia. (Steph. B. s. v.) [E. B.
MANDELA. [DIGENTIA.]
MANDORI. [MANDRUS.]

MALCOAE (Maλkóa), and the MANDORI (MárSopo). [E. B. J.] MANDU'BII (Mavdoubio), a Gallic people whom Strabo (iv. p. 191) erroneously calls the neighbours of the Arverni. When Caesar (B. C. 52) was marching through the territory of the Lingones, with the intention of retreating through the Sequani into the Provincia, he was attacked by the confederate Galli under Vercingetorix (B. G. vii. 68). The Galli were defeated, and Vercingetorix, with his men, took refuge in Alesia, a town of the Mandubii. The site of the battle is not indicated by Caesar, but the poJ.]sition of Alesia is at Alise, or Alise Sainte Reine, as it is also called, in the department of the Côte d'Or. The railroad from Paris to Dijon crosses the hills of the Côte d'Or, of which Alesia and the heights around it are a part. The Mandubii were a small people who fed their flocks and cattle on the grassy hills of the Côte d'Or, and cultivated the fertile land at the foot of Alesia. Before the blockade was formed, they had driven a great quantity of their animals (pecus) within the walls. (B. G. vii. 71.)

MANDROCIUM. [CARTHAGO, Vol. I. p. 551, a.] MANDRUANI (Plin. vi. 16. s. 18), a people mentioned by Pliny as occupying a part of Western Bactriana, under the spurs of the Paropamisus. They are now, like several other tribes whose names are given by that geographer to the same locality, no longer to be identified.

[V.]

MANDRUPOLIS (Μανδρούπολις or Μανδρό TOAS), a town in Mysia (Hierocl. p. 664), now called Menduria or Mendreghora, at the foot of Mount Temnus. Stephanus of Byzantium (s. v.) erroneously places the town in Phrygia. There seems to be little doubt but that Mandrupolis is the same town as Mandropus or Mandrupium, mentioned by Livy (xxxviii. 15). [L. S.]

The Mandubii who had received their countrymen into the city, were turned out of it by them, with their wives and children, during Caear's blockade, in order that the scanty supply of provisions for the troops might last longer. The Romans refused to receive the Mandubii and give them food. The certain conclusion from Caesar's narrative is, that these unfortunate people died of hunger between their own walls and the Roman circumvallation (B. G. vii. 78; Dion Cass. xl. 41). Caesar's description of Alesia is true; and the operations of his army about the place (B. G. vii. 69-90) are easily understood.

MANDRUS MONS (Tò Mádpov, Mávdpov opos), one of the chief mountains of Libya, from whence flow all the streams from Salathus to Massa; the middle of the mountain has a position of 14° E. long. and 19° N. lat., assigned to it by Ptolemy (iv. 6. This plan of Alesia and the surrounding country § 8). Afterwards (§ 14) he describes the river is taken from Cassini's large map of France. The Nigeir as uniting, or yoking together (Ceu-city of the Mandubii, or Alesia, was on the summit yvuwv), Mount Mandrus with Mount Thala. [NIGEIR. (Comp. London Geogr. Journ. vol. ii. p. 19; Donkin, Dissertation on the Niger, p. 81.) Ptolemy (§17) places the following tribes in the neighbourhood of this mountain: the RABII ('Pábio), the

66

of a hill, in a very elevated position," as Caesar correctly describes it. This hill stands alone, and, except on the west side, where there is a plain, it is surrounded by hills of the same height, which are separated from Alesia by valleys. In the flat valley

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on the north side of Alesia, and in the narrower valley at the east end, is the railroad from Paris to Dijon. The nearest railway station to Alesia is Les Laumes.

The summit of Alesia is not quite flat; but the irregularities are inconsiderable. The sides of the hill beneath the plateau are steep and rocky; and the upper part of the ascent to the summit is not easy. Below the plateau, and below this steep ascent, there is a narrow level piece of ground, which appears to have been widened a little by the labour of man; and below this level part there is another descent, which in some parts is steep. The fine plain (planities) at the western foot of Alesia, which Caesar describes, is seen well from the western end of the level summit. This is the part which Caesar (c.84) calls the "Arx Alesiae." The surface of the plateau rises a little towards the western extremity, and then falls away abruptly, terminating in a rocky promontory, something like the head of a boat. A cross, with a small tree on each side of it, stands at the edge of the brow, and exactly marks the place from which Vercingetorix looked down on the plain of Alesia (c. 84). Beneath the Arx Alesiae is the small town of Alise, on the western and south-western slope of the hill. It occupies a different place from the old town of the Mandubii, which was on the summit level. The hill is a mass of rock. The plateau has a thin soil, and the few parts which are not cultivated are covered with a short grass like that on the Brighton downs. It appears that the town of the Mandubii occupied all the large plateau, the length of which is shown by the scale, though we must assume that it was not all built on. The Arx, as already explained, was at the west end, commanding a view of the plain. The city wall seems to have been carried all round the margin of the plateau. Caesar says (B. G. vii. 69): "under the wall, that part of the hill which looked towards the east, all this space the forces of the Galli had filled, and they had formed in their front a ditch and a wall of stones (maceria) six feet high." This is the place marked A. in the plan, the only part of the hill of Alesia which is connected with the neighbouring heights. It is a small neck of land which separates the valleys of the Loze and the Lozerain. This is the part where the plateau of Alesia is most accessible, which Vercingetorix first occupied when he retired to Alesia, and where he constructed the wall of loose stones (inaceria). There are plenty of stones on the spot to construct another such wall, if it were wanted.

north-west side the valley is wider. There is a good source of water on the hill B.

The hill of Alesia is well defined on the north and the south by the valleys of the two streams which Caesar mentions (B. G. vii. 69), and on the west side by the plain in which these rivers meet. Caesar estimates the width of this plain from north to south at three Roman miles; and it is that width at least even in the part which is only a little distance from the foot of the hill. It extends much further in a NW. direction on the road to Montbard. This plain is a perfect level, covered in summer with fine wheat. As we go from the foot of the hill of Alesia to Les Laumes, the Arx Alesiae is a conspicuous object.

Caesar made two lines of circumvallation round Alesia. The circuit of the inner lines was eleven Roman miles; and we may infer from his words that this circumvallation was entirely in the plain and the valleys, except that it must have passed over the small elevation or neck of land between A. and B. In making the outer lines, which were fourteen Roman miles in circuit, he followed the level as far as the ground allowed (c. 74); from which we conclude that some parts of the outer line were on the high grounds opposite to the hill of Alesia; and the form of the surface shows that this must have been so. The upper part of the hill west of Cressigny, part of which hill appears in the north-west angle of the plan, was crossed by the lines; and the camp of Reginus and Rebilus (c. 83) was on the slope of this hill which faces Alesia. One of the ditches (fossae) of the interior lines was filled with water from the river (c. 72). The lines of eleven and fourteen miles in circuit are no exaggeration. No less circuit would enclose the hill and give the Romans the necessary space. The boldness of the undertaking may be easily conceived by the aid of numbers; but the sight of the work that was to be done before Vercingetorix and his troops, to the number of 80,000 men, could be shut in, can alone make us fully comprehend and admire the daring genius of the Roman proconsul.

There was a cavalry fight in the great plain before Caesar had completed his works. The Galli were driven back from the plain to their camp under the east end of the hill, and took refuge within Alesia. After this defeat Vercingetorix sent his cavalry away, and made preparation for holding out till the Gallic confederates should come to his aid. (B.G. 70, 71.) When the forces of the confederates At the eastern end of the plateau, just under the (vii. 75) came to raise the blockade of Alesia, they summit there is a source of water, which is now posted themselves on the hills where the name covered over with a small building. The water is Mussy appears; and in the battle which is denow carried in pipes round the hill, to supply the scribed in vii. 79, the Gallic cavalry filled the plain hospital of Alise, which is (F.) on the west side of on the west side of the hill of Alesia, while the the hill on the slope. Water is got at Alise by dig- infantry remained on the heights about Mussy. The ging wells in the small level below the plateau; and Gallic horse were beaten back to their camp (c.80); as the Galli held this part of the mountain during but on the following night they renewed the attack the blockade, they may have got water from wells, on that part of the lines which crossed the plain. as they no doubt did from the spring on the plateau. This attack also failed The next night the Gallic Caesar's lines were formed all round the hill of confederates sent 60,000 men under Vergasillaunus Alesia, and they crossed the neck (A.) which con- to the north, to the back of the bill (E.), on the nects this hill with another hill (B.) on the south-south slope of which Reginus and Rebilus had their east side. The "castra" of Caesar (cc. 69, 80) were on B. C. D. E., on all the heights around Alesia. These hills have a steep side turned to Alesia, and flat tops. They are so near to Alesia that Caesar could not be safe against an attack from the outside, unless he occupied them. The valleys between Alesia and B. C. D. are narrow. On the north and

camp. Their orders were to fall on the Romans at midday. The Galli got to the back of the hill at daybreak, and waited till near noon, when they began their attack on the camp. At the same time the cavalry of the confederates came against the lines in the plain; and Vercingetorix descended from the heights of Alesia to attack the lines from

the inside. The Galli failed to force the lines both on the inside and the outside. But the attack on the camp of Reginus and Rebilus was desperate, and Labienus was sent to support them. Neither ramparts nor ditches could stop the fierce assault of the enemy. Labienus summoned to his aid the soldiers from the nearest posts, and sent to tell Caesar what he thought ought to be done. His design was to sally out upon the enemy, as Caesar had ordered him to do, if he could not drive them off from the lines.

The place where the decisive struggle took place is easily seen from the Arx Alesiae; and it is accurately described by Caesar (B.G. 83, 85). This is the hill (E.) which slopes down to the plain of the Loze. The upper part of the slope opposite to the Arx Alesiae is gentle, or "leniter declivis" (c. 83); but the descent from the gentle slope to the plain of the Loze, in which the railway runs, is in some parts very steep. Caesar could draw his lines in such a way as to bring them along the gentle slope, and comprise the steep and lower slope within them. But there would still be a small slope downwards from the upper part of the hill to the Roman lines; and this is this gentle slope downward which he describes in c. 85, as giving a great advantage to the Gallic assailants under Vergasillaunus ("Exiguum loci ad declivitatem fastigium magnum habet momentum ").

The mountain behind which Vergasillaunus hid himself after the night's march is the part of the mountain west of Cressigny. The camp of Reginus and Rebilus being on the south face turned to Alesia, they could see nothing of Vergasillaunus and his men till they came over the hill top to attack the lines. Vercingetorix, from the Arx Alesiae (c. 84), could see the attack on Reginus' camp, and all that was going on in the plain. He could see everything. Caesar's position during the attack of Vergasillaunus was one (idoneus locus) which gave him a view of the fight. He saw the plain, the "superiores munitiones," or the lines on the mountain north-west of Alesia, the Arx Alesiae, and the ground beneath. He stood therefore on the hill south of Alesia, and at the western end of it.

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Roman soldier throws his pila aside; and the sword begins its work. All at once Caesar's cavalry appears in the rear of Vergasillaunus: "other cohorts approach; the enemy turn their backs; the cavalry meet the fugitives; there is a great slaughter; "and the victory is won. The Galli who were on the outside of the fortifications desert their camp, and the next day Vercingetorix surrenders Alesia. The fight of Alesia was the last great effort of the united Galli against Caesar. They never recovered from this defeat; and from this time the subjugation of Gallia, though not yet quite completed, was near and certain.

Alesia was a town during the Roman occupation of Gallia; but the plateau has long since been deserted, and there is not a trace of building upon it. Many medals and other antiquities have been found by grubbing on the plateau. A vigneron of Alise possesses many of these rare things, which he has found; a fine gold medal of Nero, some excellent bronze medals of Trajan and Faustina, and the wellknown medal of Nemausus (Nîmes), called the "pied de biche." He has also a steelyard, keys, and a variety of other things.

The plan of Cassini is tolerably correct; correct enough to make the text of Caesar intelligible. [G.L.] MANDUESSEDUM, a Roman station in Britain (It. Ant. p. 470), the site of which is supposed to be occupied by Mancester in Warwickshire. [C. R. S.]

MANDURIA (Mavdúpiov, Steph. B.: Eth. Mav dupîvos: Manduria), an ancient city of Calabria, in the territory of the Salentines, situated at the distance of 24 miles E. of Tarentum. Its name has obtained some celebrity from its being the scene of the death of Archidamus, king of Sparta, the son of Agesilaus, who had been invited to Italy by the Tarentines, to assist them against their neighbours the Messapians and Lucanians; but was defeated and slain in a battle under the walls of Manduria, which was fought on the same day with the more celebrated battle of Chaeronea, 3rd Aug., B. C. 338. (Plut. Ages. 3, who writes the name Mavdóviov; Theopomp. ap. Athen. xii. p. 536; Diod. xvi. 63, 88; Pans. iii. 10. § 5.) This is the first notice we find of the name of Manduria: it would appear to have Caesar, hearing from Labienus how desperate was been a Messapian (or rather perhaps a Salentine) the attack on the upper lines, sent part of his city, and apparently a place of considerable importcavalry round the exterior lines to attack Verga-ance; but the only other mention of it that occurs sillaunus in the rear. The cavalry went round by the east end of Alesia. They could not go round the west end, for they would have crossed the plain outside of the lines, and the plain was occupied by the Galli. Nor could they have got up the hill on that side without some trouble; and they would not have come on the rear of the enemy. It is certain that they went by the east end, and upon the heights round Alesia, which would take a much longer time than Caesar's rapid narrative would lead us to suppose, if we did not know the ground.

When Caesar sent the cavalry round Alesia, he went to the aid of Labienus with four cohorts and somne cavalry. The men from the higher ground could see him as he came along the lower ground (cc. 87, 88). He came from the hill on the south of Alesia, between his lines along the plain, with the Arx Alesia on his right, from which the men in the town were looking down on the furious battle. The scarlet cloak of the proconsul told his men and the enemies who was coming. He was received with a shout from both sides, and the shout was answered from the circumvallation and all the lines.

The

in history is in the Second Punic War, when it revolted to the Carthaginians, but was taken by assault by Fabius Maximus, just before he recovered Tarentum, B. c. 209. (Liv. xxvii. 15.) We have no account of its fate on this occasion, but it would seem certain that it was severely punished, and either destroyed or at least reduced to a degraded condition; for we find no mention of it as a municipal town under the Romans; and Pliny omits its name in his list of towns in this part of Italy, though he elsewhere (ü. 103. s. 106) incidentally notices it as oppidum in Salentino." The name is again found in the Tabula, which places it at the distance of 20 M. P. from Tarentum, an interval less than the truth, the actual distance being 20 geog. miles, or at least 24 Roman miles. (Tab. Peut.)

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The existing ruins are considerable, especially those of the ancient walls, great part of the circuit of which is still preserved: they are built of large rectangular blocks, but composed of the soft and porous stone of which the whole neighbouring country consists; and in their original state appear to have formed a double circuit of walls, with a

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