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[7] Pindar, however, it seems to me, did not learn everything about the goddess, for he says that this sanctuary was founded by the Amazons during their campaign against Athens and Theseus.1 It is a fact that the women from the Thermodon, as they knew the sanctuary from of old, sacrificed to the Ephesian goddess both on this occasion and when they had fled from Heracles; some of them earlier still, when they had fled from Dionysus, having come to the sanctuary as suppliants. However, it was not by the Amazons that the sanctuary was founded, but by Coresus, an aboriginal, and Ephesus, who is thought to have been a son of the river Cayster, and from Ephesus the city received its name.

1 See Pind. fr. 174.

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  • Cross-references to this page (3):
    • Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), MYUS
    • Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), PRIEĀ“NE
    • Smith's Bio, Philo'tas
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