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<TEI.2><text><body><div1 n="10" type="Book" org="uniform" sample="complete"><p><milestone n="6" unit="section" /><milestone ed="P" unit="para" />The poet also names Olenus and Pylene as Aetolian cities.<note anchored="yes" resp="Jones" place="unspecified"><bibl n="Hom. Il. 2.639" default="NO" valid="yes">Hom. Il. 2.639</bibl></note>  Of these, the former, which bears the same name as the Achaean city, was razed to the ground by the Aeolians;  it was near New Pleuron, but the Acarnanians claimed possession of the territory.  The other, Pylene, the Aeolians moved to higher ground, and also changed its name, calling it Proschium.  Hellanicus does not know the history of these cities either, but mentions them as though they too were still in their early status;  and among the early cities he names Macynia and Molycreia, which were founded even later than the return of the Heracleidae, almost everywhere in his writings displaying a most convenient carelessness.
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