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[2] A river called the Lymax flowing just beside Phigalia falls into the Neda, and the river, they say, got its name from the cleansing of Rhea. For when she had given birth to Zeus, the nymphs who cleansed her after her travail threw the refuse into this river. Now the ancients called refuse “lymata.” Homer,1 for example, says that the Greeks were cleansed, after the pestilence was stayed, and threw the lymata into the sea.

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Phigalia (Greece) (1)

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