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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Pausanias, Description of Greece. Search the whole document.
Found 135 total hits in 22 results.
Asine (Greece) (search for this): book 4, chapter 34
Euphrates (search for this): book 4, chapter 34
Corone (Greece) (search for this): book 4, chapter 34
Maeander (Turkey) (search for this): book 4, chapter 34
Boeotia (Greece) (search for this): book 4, chapter 34
Rhine (search for this): book 4, chapter 34
From Messene to the mouth of the Pamisus is a journey of eighty stades. The Pamisus is a pure stream flowing through cultivated lands, and is navigable some ten stades from the sea. Sea-fish run up it, especially in spring, as they do up the Rhine and Maeander. The chief run of fish is up the stream of the Achelous, which discharges opposite the Echinades islands.
But the fish that enter the Pamisus are of quite a different kind, as the water is pure and not muddy like the rivers which I have mentioned. The grey mullet, a fish that loves mud, frequents the more turbid streams. The rivers of Greece contain no creatures dangerous to men as do the Indus and the Egyptian Nile, or again the Rhine and Danube, the Euphrates and Phasis. These indeed produce man-eating creatures of the worst, in shape resembling the cat-fish of the Hermus and Maeander, but of darker color and stronger. In these respects the cat-fish is inferior.
The Indus and Nile both contain crocodiles, and the Nile river-h
Phasis (Georgia) (search for this): book 4, chapter 34
Peloponnesus (Greece) (search for this): book 4, chapter 34
Hermion (Greece) (search for this): book 4, chapter 34
Parnassus (Greece) (search for this): book 4, chapter 34