EDETANI and CELTIBERI on the S., the VASCONES panions of Aeneas, who settled in the island, and remained there in quiet until they were compelled by the Africans, who subsequently occupied the coasts of Sardinia, to take refuge in the more rugged and inaccessible mountain districts of the interior. (Paus. x. 17. § 7.) This tale has evidently oriSer-ginated in the resemblance of the name of Ilienses, in the form which the Romans gave it, to that of the Trojans; and the latter part of the story was invented to account for the apparent anomaly of a people that had come by sea dwelling in the interior of the island. What the native name of the Ilienses was, we know not, and we are wholly in the dark as to their real origin or ethnical affinities: but their existence as one of the most considerable tribes of the interior at the period of the Roman conquest, is On a loop of the same road, starting from well ascertained; and they are repeatedly mentioned Caesaraugusta, were: - GALLICUM, 15 M. P., on by Livy as contending against the supremacy of the river Gallicus (Zunra, on the Gallego); Rome. Their first insurrection, in B. c. 181, was BORTINAE, 18 M. P. (Bovpríva, Ptol.: Tori- repressed, rather than put down, by the praetor nos); Osca, 12 M. P.; CAUS, 29 M. P.; MENDI- M. Pinarius; and in B.C. 178, the Ilienses and Balari, CULEIA, 19 M. P. (probably Monzon); ILERDA, in conjunction, laid waste all the more fertile and 22 M. P. (Itin. Ant. pp. 451, 452). On the road settled parts of the island; and were even able to from Caesaraugusta, up the valley of the Gallicus, meet the consul Ti. Sempronius Gracchus in a pitched to Benearnum (Orthes) in Gallia, were, FORUM battle, in which, however, they were defeated with GALLORUM, 30 M. P. (Gurrea), and EBELLINUM, heavy loss. In the course of the following year 22 M. P. (Beilo), whence it was 24 M. P. to the sum- they appear to have been reduced to complete submit of the pass over the Pyrenees (Itin. Ant. p. 452). | mission; and their name is not again mentioned in Besides these places, Ptolemy mentions BERGUSIA history. (Liv. xl. 19, 34, xli. 6, 12, 17.) Bepyovola: Balaguer), on the Sicoris; BERGIDUM (Bépyidov); ERGA (Epya); SUCCOSA (Σovккŵσα); GALLICA FLAVIA (гάλλikα Þλαovía: Fraga ?); and ORGIA ('apкía, prob. Orgagna), a name also found on coins (Sestini, Med. Isp. p. 99), while the same coins bear the name of AESONES, and inscriptions found near the Sicoris have AESONENSIS and JESSONENSIS (Muratori, Nov. Thes. p. 1021, Nos. 2, 3; Spon, Misc. Erud. Ant. p. 188), with which the GESSORIENSES of Pliny may perhaps have some connection. BERSICAL is mentioned on coins (Sestini, p. 107), and OcтOGESA (prob. La Granja, at the confluence of the Segre and the Ebro) by Caesar (B. C. i. 61; Ukert, vol. ii. pt. 1. pp. 450-453). [P.S.] ILE'SIUM. [EILESIUM.] I'LICI or ILLICI (Itin. Ant. 401; 'Iλikiàs 'IXAIKís, Ptol. ii. 6. § 62: Elche), an inland city of the Contestani, but near the coast, on which it had a port (IAAKIтards λuny, Ptol. I. c. § 14), lying just in the middle of the hay formed by the Pr. Saturni and Dianium, which was called Illicitanus Sinus. The city itself stood at the distance of 52 M. P. from Carthago Nova, on the great road to Tarraco (Itin. Ant. p. 401), and was a Colonia immunis, with the jus Italicum (Plin. iii. 3. s. 4; Paulus, Dig. viii. de Cens.). Its coins are extant of the period of the empire (Florez, Med. de Esp. vol. ii. p. 458; Sestini, p. 166; Mionnet, vol. i. p. 45, Suppl. vol. i. p. 90; Eckhel, vol. i. p. 51). Pliny adds to his mention of the place in eam contribuuntur Icositani. (Ukert, vol. ii. pt. 1. pp. 402, 403.) [P. S.] ILIENSES ('Iteis, Paus.), a people of the interior of Sardinia, who appear to have been one of the most considerable of the mountain tribes in that island. Mela calls them "antiquissimi in ea populorum," and Pliny also mentions them among the "celeberrimi populorum" of Sardinia. (Mel. ii. 7. § 19; Plin iii. 7. s. 13.) Pausanias, who terms them 'Ies, distinctly ascribes to them a Trojan origin, and derives them from a portion of the com The situation and limits of the territory occupied by the Ilienses, cannot be determined: but we find them associated with the Balari and Corsi, as inhabiting the central and mountainous districts of the island. Their name is not found in Ptolemy, though he gives a long list of the tribes of the interior. Many writers have identified the Ilienses with the Iolaenses or Iolai, who are also placed in the interior of Sardinia; and it is not improbable that they were really the same people, but ancient authors certainly make a distinction between the two. [E. H. B.] ILIGA. [HELICE.] I'LIPA. 1. (IAma, Strab. iii. pp. 141, seq.; 'I^^λíña † Aaîña μeydλn, Ptol. ii. 4. § 13; Ilipa cognomine Illa, Plin. iii. 1. s. 3, according to the corrupt reading which Sillig's last edition retains for want of a better: some give the epithet in the form Ilpa: Harduin reads Ilia, on the authority of an inscription, which is almost certainly spurious, ap. Gruter, pp. 351,305, and Muratori, p. 1002), a city of the Turdetani, in Hispania Baetica, belonging to the conventus of Hispalis. It stood upon the right bank of the Baetis (Guadalquivir), 700 stadia from its mouth, at the point up to which the river was navigable for vessels of small burthen, and where the tides were no longer discernible. [BAETIS.] On this and other grounds it has been identified with the Roman ruins near Peñaflor. There were great silver mines in its neighbourhood. (Strab. I. c., and pp. 174, 175; Plin. l. c.; Itin. Ant. p. 411; Liv. xxxv. 1; Florez, Esp. S. vol. vii. ILIFENSE COIN OF ILIPA. p. 222, vol. ix. p. 24, vol. xii. p. 52; Morales, Antig. p. 88; Mentelle, Esp. Anc. p. 243; Coins ap. Florez, Med. de Esp. vol. ii. p. 468, vol. iii. p. 79; Mionnet, vol. i. p. 15, Suppl. vol. i. p. 28; Eckhel, vol. i. p. 22; Ukert, vol. ii. pt. 1. p. 374.) 2. [ILIPLA.] [P.S.] I'LIPLA (Coins; ILIPA, Itin. Ant. p. 432; probably the IAλírovλa of Ptol. ii. 4. § 12: Niebla), a city of the Turdetani, in the W. of Hispania Baetica, on the high road from Hispalis to the mouth of the Anas. (Caro, Antig. Hisp. iii. 81; Coins ap. Florez, Med. vol. ii. p. 471; Mionnet, vol. i. p. 16, Suppl. vol. i. p. 29; Sestini, p. 58; Eckhel, vol. i. p. 22.) [P.S.] ILI'PULA. 1. Surnamed LAUS by Pliny (iii. 1. s. 3), and MAGNA by Ptolemy ('IAλíñovλa μeŸáλŋ, ii. 4. § 12), a city of the Turduli, in Baetica, between the Baetis and the coast, perhaps Loxa. (Ukert, vol. ii. pt. 1. p. 363.) 2. MINOR (prob. Olvera or Lepe di Ronda, near Carmona), a tributary town of the Turdetani, in Hispania Baetica, belonging to the conventus of Hispalis. (Plin. iii. 1. s. 3; Sestini, Med. Esp. p. 54.) [P.S.] ILI PULA MONS ('I^írovλα), a range of mountains in Baetica, S. of the Baetis, mentioned only by Ptolemy (ii. 4. § 15), and supposed by some to be the Sierra Nevada, by others the Sierra de Alhama or the Alpujarras. [P.S.] sion by an account of the investigations of modern travellers and scholars to identify the site of the famous city. Our most ancient authority are the Homeric poems; but we must at the very outset remark, that we cannot look upon the poet in every respect as a careful and accurate topographer; but that, admitting his general accuracy, there may yet be points on which he cannot be taken to account as if it had been his professed object to communicate information on the topography of Troy. The city of Ilium was situated on a rising ground, somewhat above the plain between the rivers Scamander and Simois, at a distance, as Strabo asserts, of 42 stadia from the coast of the Hellespont. (Hom. Il. xx. 216, fol.; Strab. xiii. p. 596.) That it was not quite in the plain is clear from the epithets hveμóeσoa, aineivý, and oppvóerσa. Behind it, on the south-east, there rose a hill, forming a branch of Mount Ida, surmounted by the acropolis, called Pergamum (rò Пépyaμov, Hom. Il. iv. 508, vi. 512; also тà Пépyaμa, Soph. Phil. 347, 353, 611; or, Пéрyaμos, Hom. Il. v. 446, 460.) This fortified acropolis contained not only all the temples of the gods (Il. iv. 508, v. 447, 512, vi. 88, 257, xxii. 172, &c.), but also the palaces of Priam and his sons, Hector and Paris (Il. vi. 317, 370, 512, vii. 345). The city must have had many gates, as may be inferred from the expression nãoα rúλai (Il. ii. 809, and elsewhere), but only one is mentioned by name, viz., the Zkalal múλa, which led to the camp of the Greeks, and must accordingly have been on the northwest part of the city, that is, the part just opposite the acropolis (Il. iii. 145, 149, 263, vi. 306, 392, xvi. 712, &c.). The origin of this name of the "left gate" is unknown, though it may possibly have reference to the manner in which the signs in the heavens were observed; for, during this process, the priest turned his face to the north, so that the north-west would be on his left hand. Certain minor objects alluded to in the Iliad, such as the tombs of Ilus, Aesyetes, and Myrine, the Scopie and Erineus, or the wild fig-tree, we ought probably not attempt to urge very strongly we are, in fact, prevented from attributing much weight to them by the circumstance that the inhabitants of New Ilium, who believed that their town stood on the site of the ancient city, boasted that they could show close to their walls these doubt ILISSUS. [ATTICA, p. 323, a.] ILISTRA (IMσrpa: Illisera), a town in Lycaonia, on the road from Laranda to Isaura, which is still in existence. (Hierocl. p. 675; Concil. Ephes. p. 534; Concil. Chalced. p. 674; Hamilton, Researches, vol.ii. p. 324; Leake, Asia Minor, p. 102.) [L. S.] ILITHYIA (Eixeiovías móλis, Strab. xviii. p. 817; Eiλnovías, Ptol. iv. 5. § 73), a town of the Egyptian Heptanomis, 30 miles NE. of Apollinopolis Magna. It was situated on the eastern bank of the Nile, in lat. 25° 3′ N. According to Plutarch (Isis et Osir. c. 73), Ilithyia contained a temple dedicated to Bubastis, to whom, as to the Taurian Artemis, human victims were, even at a comparatively recent period, sacrificed. A bas-relief (Minutoi, p. 394, seq.) discovered in the temple of Bubastis at ElKab, representing such a sacrifice, seems to confirm Plutarch's statement. The practice of human sacrifice among the Aegyptians is, indeed, called in ques-ful vestiges of antiquity. (Strab. xiii. p. 599.) The tion by Herodotus (ii. 45); yet that it once prevailed among them is rendered probable by Manetho's statement of a king named Amosis having abolished the custom,and substituted a waxen image for the human victim. (Porphyr. de Abstinent. ii. p. 223; Euseb. Praep. Evang. iv. 16; comp. Ovid, Fast. v. 621.) The singularity in Plutarch's story is the recent date of the imputed sacrifices. [W. B. D.] ILITURGIS. [ILLITURGIS.] I'LIUM, I'LIOŠ ("IALOV, “Īλios: Eth. 'Ixueus, f. 'Ids), sometimes also called TROJA (Tpoía), whence the inhabitants are commonly called Tpŵes, and in the Latin writers Trojani. The existence of this city, to which we commonly give the name of Troy, cannot be doubted any more than the simple fact of the Trojan War, which was believed to have ended with the capture and destruction of the city, after a war of ten years, B. c. 1184. Troy was the principal city of the country called Troas. As the city has been the subject of curious inquiry, both in ancient and modern times, it will be necessary, in the first instance, to collect and analyse the statements of the ancient writers; and to follow up this discus walls of Ilium are described as lofty and strong, and as flanked with towers; they were fabled to have been built by Apollo and Poseidon (Il. i. 129, ii. 113, 288, iii. 153, 384, 386, vii. 452, viii. 519). These are the only points of the topography of Ilium derivable from the Homeric poems. The city was destroyed, according to the common tradition, as already remarked, about B. C. 1184; but afterwards we hear of a new Ilium, though we are not informed when and on what site it was built. Herodotus (vii. 42) relates that Xerxes, before invading Greece, offered sacrifices to Athena at Pergamum, the ancient acropolis of Priam; but this does not quite justify the inference that the new town of Ilium was then already in existence, and all that we can conclude from this passage is, that the people at that time entertained no doubt as to the sites of the ancient city and its acropolis. Strabo (xiii. p. 601) states that Ilium was restored during the last dynasty of the Lydian kings; that is, before the subjugation of Western Asia by the Persians: and both Xenophon (Hellen. i. 1. § 4) and Scylax (p. 35) seem to speak of Ilium as a town actually existing in their days. 34 ILIUM. of Ilium, we shall have to speak in the article TROAS It is also certain that in the time of Alexander, COIN OF ILIUM. ILLI'BERIS (IAA6epís, Ptol. ii. 4. § 11), or ILLI'BERI LIBERINI (Plin. iii. 1. s. 3), one of the chief cities of the Turduli, in Hispania Baetica, between the Baetis and the coast, is identified by It is probably the inscriptions with Granada. Elibyrge ('EX6úpyn) of Stephanus Byzantinus. (Inscr. ap. Gruter, p. 277, No. 3; Florez, Esp. S vol. v. p. 4, vol. xii. p. 81; Mentelle, Geogr. Comp Esp. Mod. p. 163; Coins ap. Florez, Med. vol. Hi [P.S.] p. 75; Mionnet, vol. i. p. 15, Suppl. vol. i. p. 28 Eckhel, vol. i. p. 22.) The site of New Ilium (according to our view, identical with that of Old Ilium) is acknowledged by all modern inquirers and travellers to be the spot covered with ruins now called Kissarlik, between the villages of Kum-kioi, Kalli-fatli, and Tchiblak, a little to the west of the last-mentioned place, and not far from the point where the Simois once joined the Scamander. Those who maintain that Old Ilium was situated in a different locality cannot, of course, be expected to agree in their opinions as to its actual site, it being impossible to fix upon any one spot agreeing in every particular with the poet's description. Respecting the nationality of the inhabitants COIN OF ILLIBERIS (IN SPAIN). ILLI'BERIS or ILLIBERRIS ('IA6epis), a town in the country of the Sordones, or Sardones, or Sordi, in Gallia Aquitania. The first place that Hannibal came to after passing through the Eastern Pyrenees was Illiberis. (Liv. xxi. 24.) He must have passed by Bellegarde. Illiberis was near a small river Illiberis, which is south of another small stream, the Ruscino, which had also on it a town named Ruscino. (Strab. p. 182.) Mela (ii. 5) and Pliny (iii. 4) speak of Illiberis as having once been a great place, but in their time being decayed. The road in the Antonine Itin. from Arelate (Arles) through the Pyrenees to Juncaria passes from Ruscino (CastelRousillon) to Ad Centuriones, and omits Illiberis; but the Table places Illiberis between Ruscino and Ad Centenarium, which is the same place as the Ad Centuriones of the Itin. [CENTURIONES, AD.] Illiberis is Elne, on the river Tech. There Illiberis or Illiberris is an Iberian name. is another place, Climberris, on the Gallic side of the Pyrenees, which has the same termination. [AUSCI.] It is said that berri, in the Basque, means "a town." The site of Illiberis is fixed at Elne by the Itins.; and we find an explanation of the name Elne in the fact that either the name of | ('Iλλupis, Hecat. Fr. 65; Polyb. iii. 16; Strab. ii Illiberis was changed to Helena or Elena, or Helena pp. 108, 123, 129, vii. p. 317; Dionys. Per. 96; was a camp or station near it. Constans was mur- Herodian, vi. 7; Apollod. ii. 1. § 3; Ptol. viii. 7. dered by Magnentius "not far from the Hispaniae, § 1), but the more ancient writers usually employ in a castrum named Helena." (Eutrop. x. 9.) Vic- the name of the people, of 'IXλúpioi (èv toîs 'IXλvtor's Epitome (c. 41) describes Helena as a town píois, Herod. i. 196, iv. 49; Scyl. pp. 7, 10). The very near to the Pyrenees; and Zosimus has the name ILLYRIA ('Iλλupía) very rarely occurs. (Steph. same (ii. 42; and Orosius, vii. 29). It is said by B. s. v.; Prop. i. 8. 2.) By the Latin writers it some writers that Helena was so named after the generally went under the name of "Illyricum place was restored by Constantine's mother Helena, (Caes. B. G. ii. 35, iii. 7; Varr. R. R. ii. 10. §7; or by Constantine, or by some of his children; but Cic. ad Att. x. 6; Liv. xliv. 18, 26; Ovid, Trist. i. the evidence of this is not given. The river of Illi- 3. 121; Mela, ii. 3. § 13; Tac. Ann. i. 5, 46, ii. beris is the TICHIS of Mela, and TECUM of Pliny, 44, 53, Hist. i. 2, 9, 76; Flor. i. 18, iv. 2; Just. now the Tech. In the text of Ptolemy (ii. 10) the vii. 2; Suet. Tib. 16; Vell. Pat. ii. 109), and the name of the river is written Illeris. general assent of geographers has given currency to Some geographers have supposed Illiberis to be this form. Collioure, near Port Vendre, which is a plain mistake. ILLICI. [ILICI.] ILLI'PULA. [ILIPULA.] [G. L.] 2. Extent and Limits. The Roman Illyricum was of very different extent from the Illyris or oi 'IAλúpio of the Greeks, and was itself not the same at all times, but must be considered simply as an derers who occupied the E. coast of the Adriatic, from the junction of that gulf with the Ionic sea, to the estuaries of the river Po. The earliest writer who has left any account of the peoples inhabiting this coast is Scylax; according to whom (c. 19-27) the Illyrians, properly so called (for the Liburnians and Istrians beyond them are excluded), occupy the sea-coast from Liburnia to the Chaonians of Epirus. The Bulini were the northernmost of these tribes, and the Amantini the southernmost. Herodotus (i. 196) includes under the name, the Heneti or Veneti, who lived at the head of the gulf; in another passage (iv. 49) he places the Illyrians on the tributary streams of the Morava in Servia. It is evident that the Gallic invasions, of which there are several traditions, threw the whole of these districts and their tribes into such confusion, that it is impossible to harmonise the statements of the Periplus of Scylax, or the far later Scymnus of Chios, with the descriptions in Strabo and the Roman historians. ILLITURGIS, ILITURGIS, or ILITURGI (pro-artificial and geographical expression for the borbably the 'Ixoupyís of Ptol. ii. 4. § 9, as well as the 'Iλoupyeía of Polybius, ap. Steph. B. s. v., and the 'Lupyia of Appian, Hisp. 32: Eth. Illurgitani), a considerable city of Hispania Baetica, situated on a steep rock on the N. side of the Baetis, on the road from Corduba to Castulo, 20 M. P. from the latter, and five days' march from Carthago Nova. In the Second Punic War it went over to the Romans, like its neighbours, Castulo and Mentesa, and endured two sieges by the Carthaginians, both of which were raised; but, upon the overthrow of the two Scipios, the people of Illiturgis and Castulo revolted to the Carthaginians, the former adding to their treason the crime of betraying and putting to death the Romans who had fled to them for refuge. At least such is the Roman version of their offence, for which a truly Roman vengeance was taken by Publius Scipio, B.C. 206. After a defence, such as might be expected when despair of mercy was added to national fortitude, the city was stormed and burnt over the slaughtered corpses of all its inhabitants, children and women as well as men. (Liv. xxiii. 49, xxiv. 41, xxvi. 17, 41, xxviii. 19, 20.) Ten years later it had recovered sufficiently to be again besieged by the Romans, and taken with the slaughter of all its adult male population. (Liv. xxxiv. 10.) Under the Roman empire it was a considerable city, with the surname of FORUM JULIUM. Its site is believed to have been in the neighbourhood of Andujar, where the church of S. Potenciana now stands. (Itin. Ant. p. 403; Plin. iii. 1. s. 3; Priscian. vi. p. 682, ed. Putsch; Morales, Antig. p. 56, b.; Mentelle Esp. Mod. p. 183; Laborde, Itin. vol. ii. p. 113; Florez, Esp. S. vol. xii. p. 369; Coins, ap. Florez, Med. vol. iii. p. 81; Mionnet, vol. i. p. 16; Sestini, p. 56; Eckhel, vol. i. p. 23; Ukert, vol. ii. pt. 1. p. 380.) [P.S.] ILLURCO or ILURCO, a town in the W. part ILLURGAVONENSES. [ILERCAONES.] ILLY'RICUM (Td 'IXλupikóv: Eth. and Adj. -The Greek name is ILLYRIS On a In consequence of this immigration of the Gauls, Appian has confounded together Gauls, Thracians, Paeonians, and Illyrians. A legend which he records (Illyr. 1) makes Celtus, Illyrius, and Gala, to have been three brothers, the sons of the Cyclops Polyphemus, and is grounded probably on the intermixture of Celtic tribes (the Boii, the Scordisci, and the Taurisci) among the Illyrians: the Iapodes, P. tribe on the borders of Istria, are described by Strabo (iv. p. 143) as half Celts, half Illyrians. rough estimate, it may be said that, in the earliest times, Illyricum was the coast between the Naro (Neretva) and the Drilo (Drin), bounded on the E. by the Triballi. At a later period it comprised all the various tribes from the Celtic Taurisci to the Epirots and Macedonians, and eastward as far as Moesia, including the Veneti, Pannonians, Dalmatians, Dardani, Autariatae, and many others. This is Illyricum in its most extended meaning in the ancient writers till the 2nd century of the Christian era: as, for instance, in Strabo (vii. pp. 313-319), during the reign of Augustus, and in Tacitus (Hist. i. 2, 9, 76, ii. 86; comp. Joseph. B. J. ii. 16), in his account of the civil wars which preceded the fall of Jerusalem. When the boundary of Rome reached to the Danube, the "Illyricus Limes" (as it is designated in the "Scriptores Historiae Augustae"), or Illyrian frontier," comprised the following provinces: - Noricum, Pannonia Superior, Pannonia Inferior, Moesia Superior, Moesia Inferior, Dacia, and Thrace. This division continued till the time of Constantine, who severed from it Lower Moesia and Thrace, but added to it Macedonia, Thessaly, Achaia, Old and New Epirus, Praevalitana, and Crete. At this period it was one of the four great divisions of the Roman empire under a "Praefectus Praetorio," and it is in this signification that it is used by the later writers, such as Sextus Rufus, the "Auctor Notitiae Dignitatum Imperii," Zosimus, Jornandes, and others. At the final division of the Roman empire, the so-called "Illyricum Orientale," containing the provinces of Macedonia, Thessaly, Epirus, Hellas, New Epirus, Crete, and Praevalitana, was incorporated with the Lower Empire; while "Illyricum Occidentale" was united with Rome, and embraced Noricum, Pannonia, Dalmatia, Savia, and Valeria Ripensis. A. ILLYRIS BARBARA or ROMANA, was separated from Istria by the small river Arsia (Arsa), and bounded S. and E. by the Drilo, and on the N. by the Savus; consequently it is represented now by part of Croatia, all Dalmatia, the Herzegovina, Monte-Negro, nearly all Bosnia, and part of Albania. Illyris Romana was divided into three districts, the northern of which was IAPYDIA, extending S. as far as the Tedanius (Zermagna); the strip of land extending from the Arsia to the Titius (La Kerka) was called LIBURNIA, or the whole of the north of what was once Venetian Dalmatia; the territory of the DALMATAE was at first comprehended between the Naro and the Tilurus or Nestus: it then extended to the Titius. A list of the towns will be found under the several heads of IAPYDIA, LIBURNIA, and DALMATIA. | to Roman Illyricum; as Lissus, which was situated Skumbi. The Drin at Struga Akridha. Prespa. B. ILLYRIS GRAECA, which was called in later times EPIRUS NOVA, extended from the river Drilo to the SE., up to the Ceraunian mountains, which separated it from Epirus Proper. On the N. it was bounded by the Roman Illyricum and Mount Scordus, on the W. by the Ionian sea, on the S. by Epirus, and on the E. by Macedonia; comprehending, therefore, nearly the whole of modern Albania. Next to the frontier of Chaonia is the small town of AMANTIA, and the people of the AMANTIANS and BULLIONES. They are followed by the TAULANTII, who occupied the country N. of the Aous-the great river of S. Macedonia, which rises in Mount Laemon, and discharges itself into the Adriatic-as far as Epidamnus. The chief towns of this country were APOLLONIA, and EPIDAMNUS or DYRRHACHIUM. In the interior, near the Macedonian frontier, there is a considerable lake, LACUS LYCHNITIS, from which the Drilo issues. Ever since the middle ages there has existed in this part the town of Achrida, which has been supposed to be the ancient LYCHNIDUS, and was the capital of the Bulgarian empire, when it extended from the Euxine as far as the interior of Aetolia, and comprised S. Illyricum, Epirus, Acarnania, Aetolia, and a part of Thessaly. During the Roman period the DASSARETAE dwelt there; the neighbouring country was occupied by These islands appear to have originated on the the AUTARIATAE, who are said to have been driven breaking up of the lower grounds by some violent from their country in the time of Cassander, when action, leaving their limestone summits above water. they removed as fugitives with their women and From the salient position of the promontory termichildren into Macedonia. The ARDIAEI and PAR-nating in Punta della Planca, they are divided into THINI dwelt N. of the Autariatae, though not at the same time, but only during the Roman period. SCODRA (Scuturi), in later times the capital of Praevalitana, was unknown during the flourishing period of Grecian history, and more properly belongs 3. Physical Geography. The Illyrian range of mountains, which traverses Dalmatia under the name of Mount Prolog, and partly under other names (Mons Albius, Bebius), branches off in Carniola from the Julian Alps, and then, at a considerable distance from the sea, stretches towards Venetia, approaches the sea beyond Aquileia near Trieste, and forms Istria. After passing through Istria as a lofty mountain, though not reaching the snow line, and traversing Dalmatia, which it separates from Bosnia, it extends into Albania. It is a limestone range, and, like most mountains belonging to that formation, much broken up; hence the bold and picturesque coast runs out into many promontories, and is flanked by numerous islands. two distinct groups, which the Greek geographers called ABSYRTIDES and LIBURNIDES. They trend NW. and SE., greatly longer than broad, and form various fine channels, called "canale," and named from the nearest adjacent island; these being bold |