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Μήδων ἄποικοι. Myres (op. cit. p. 260) holds that time will not allow of this Median origin, and suggests a confusion with the Μαιδοί (Thuc, ii. 98, &c.), a Thracian tribe which apparently moved from the middle Strymon to the upper Axius. Λίγυες. These Ligurians (cf. vii. 165) are described so as to distinguish them from the Asiatic Ligyes (vii. 72). They once held the coastland as far as the Rhone, but later either submitted to Massilia and the other Greek colonies on the coast or retired up the river valleys and into the Maritime Alps. In the Sigynnae, who trade as pedlars, Myres sees Sequani trading in iron, and especially in iron spears of the gaesum type (op. cit. p. 261 f.). δόρατα. Cf. Arist. Poet. 21 τὸ σίγυνον Κυπρίοις μὲν κύριον, ἡμῖν δὲ γλῶττα. Later on the word σίγυννα and its variants become fairly common. From the scholium on Plato, p. 384, σίγυννος δ᾽ ἐστὶ ξυστὸν δόρυ, παρ᾽ Ἡροδότῳ δὲ τὸ ὁλοσίδηρον ἀκόντιον, Myres (op. cit. p. 272 f.) is able to identify Sigynnae in this sense with some ‘long cylindrical spits’ from Tamassos in Cyprus. He would also connect Sigynnae in both senses with the iron-using culture of Hallstatt.
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