terie,
pontoio kakon saron]. This, by the Scholiast, is interpreted [Greek:
kaluntron;] but it certainly means a Rock. Hymn. in Delon. v. 225.
[290] [Greek: Saronides petrai, e hai dia palaioteta kechenuiai drues].
Hesych.
[291] Callimachus. Hymn to Zeus. v. 22.
[292] Diodorus Siculus. l. 5. p. 308.
[293] See Observations and Inquiries upon Ancient History. p. 196.
[294] Eusebii Praep. Evang. l. 10. c. 13. p. 500.
[295] Josephus contra Apion. l. 1. c. 13. p. 445.
[296] Diodorus Siculus. l. 3. p. 144.
[297] Heliodori AEthiopica. l. 4. p. 174.
[298] Achor, [Greek: theos apomuios]. Clement. Alexandr. Cohortatio. p. 33.
[299] Lucan. l. 8. v. 475.
[300] [Greek: Kai gar ton Osirin Hellanikos Usirin eireken akekoenai apo
ton Hiereon legomenon.] Plutarch. Isis et Osiris. vol. 1. p. 364.
[301] Eusebius. Praep. Evang. l. 1. c. 10. p. 39.
[302] Annum quoque vetustissimi Graecorum [Greek: lukabanta] appellant
[Greek: ton apo tou LYKOU]; id est Sole. &c. Macrob. Saturn. l. 1. c. 17.
p. 194.
[303] Lycaon was the same as Apollo; and worshipped in Lycia: his priests
were styled Lycaones: he was supposed to have been turned into a wolf.
Ovid. Metam. l. 1. v. 232. Apollo's mother, Latona, was also changed to the
same animal. [Greek: He Leto eis Delon elthe metaballousa eis lukon].
Scholia in Dionys. v. 525.
People are said to have been led to Parnassus by the howling of wolves;
[Greek: Lukon orugais]. Pausanias. l. 10. p. 811.
The Hirpi were worshippers of fire, and were conducted to their settlement
in Campania by a wolf. Strabo. l. 5. p. 383.
In the account given of Danaus, and of the temple founded by him at Argos,
is a story of a wolf and a bull. Pausan. l. 2. p. 153. The temple was
styled [Greek: Apollonos hieron Lukiou].
[304] Pausanias above: also, Apollo [Greek: Lukaios], and [Greek: Lukeios].
Pausan. l. 1. p. 44. l. 2. p. 152, 153.
[305] Pausanias. l. 10. p. 811.
[306] Pausanias. l. 7. p. 530.
[307] Pausanias. l. 8. p. 678.
[308] [Greek: Hoi Delphoi to proton Lukoreis ekalounto]. Scholia in
Apollon. Rhod. l. 4. v. 1489.
[309] Stephanus Byzant. and Strabo. l. 9. p. 640. said to have been named
from wolves. Pausanias. l. 10. p. 811.
[310] [Greek: Lukoreia, polis Delphidos, en hei timaitai ho Apollon].
Etymolog. Magnum.
These places were so named from the Sun, or Apollo, styled not only [Greek:
Lukos], but [Greek: Lukoreus] and [Greek: Lukoreios]: and the city Lucoreia
was e
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