Page:The geography of Strabo (1854) Volume 2.djvu/232

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224 STRABO. CASATTB. 495, show of friendship, but his design was discovered, and they on their part attacked him unawares. He was taken prisoner, and put to death. With respect to the Asian Maeotae in general, some of them were the subjects of those who possessed the mart on the Tana'is ; others, of the Bosporani ; and different bodies have revolted at different times. The princes of the Bospo- rani were frequently masters of the country as far as the Tana'is, and particularly the last princes, Pharnaces, Asander, and Polemon. Pharnaces is said to have once brought even the river Hypanis over the territory of the Dandarii through some- ancient canal, which he had caused to be cleared, and inun- dated the country. 12. Next to Sindica, and Gorgipia upon the sea, is the sea-coast inhabited by the Achasi, Zygi, and Heniochi. It is for the most part without harbours and mountainous, being a portion of the Caucasus. These people subsist by piracy. Their boats are slender, narrow, light, and capable of hold- ing about five and twenty men, and rarely thirty. The Greeks call them camarae. They say, that at the time of the expedition of Jason the Achaei Phthiotae founded the Achaia there, and the Lacedaemonians, Heniochia. Their leaders were Rhecas, and Amphistratus, the charioteers l of the Dioscuri ; it is probable that the Heniochi had their name from these persons. They equip fleets consisting of these camaras, and being masters of the sea sometimes at- tack vessels of burden, or invade a territory, or even a city. Sometimes even those who occupy the Bosporus assist them, by furnishing places of shelter for their vessels, and supply them with provision and means for the disposal of their booty. When they return to their own country, not having places suitable for mooring their vessels, they put their camarae on their shoulders, and carry them up into the forests, among which they live, and where they cultivate a poor soil. When the season arrives for navigation, they bring them down again to the coast. Their habits are' the same even in a foreign country, for they are acquainted with wooded tracts, in which, after concealing their camarns, they wander about on foot day