Page:The geography of Strabo (1854) Volume 2.djvu/273

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B. xi. c. xm. 8, 9. MEDIA. The country below the Caspian Gates consists of flat groui and valleys. It is very fertile, and produces everything exce the olive, or if it grows anywhere it does not yield oil, and is dry. The country is peculiarly adapted, as well as Armenia, for breeding horses. There is a meadow tract called Hippo- botus, which is traversed by travellers on their way from Persia and Babylonia to the Caspian Gates. Here, it is said, fifty thousand mares were pastured in the time of the Per- sians, and were the king's stud. The Nessean horses, the best and largest in the king's province, were of this breed, according to some writers, but according to others they came from Armenia. Their shape is peculiar, as is that of the Par- thian horses, compared with those of Greece and others in our country. The herbage which constitutes the chief food of the horses we call peculiarly by the name of Medic, from its growing in Media in great abundance. The country produces Silphium, 1 from which is obtained the Medic juice, much inferior to the Cyrenaic, but sometimes it excels the latter, which may be accounted for by the difference of places, or from a change the plant may undergo, or from the mode of extracting and preparing the juice so as to continue good when laid by for use. 8. Such then is the nature of the country with respect to magnitude ; its length and breadth are nearly equal. The greatest breadth (length ?) 2 however seems to be that reckoned from the pass across the Zagrus, which is called the Median Gate, to the Caspian Gates, through the country of ,Sigriana, 4100 stadia. The account of the tribute paid agrees with the extent and wealth of the country. Cappadocia paid to the Persians yearly, in addition to a tribute in silver, 1500 horses, 2000 mules, and 50,000 sheep, and the Medes contributed nearly double this amount. 9. Many of their customs are the same as those of the Arme- nians, from the similarity of the countries which they in- habit. The Medes however were the first to communicate them to the Armenians, and still before that time to the Per- sians, who were their masters, and successors in the empire of Asia. 1 Lucerne ? 2 Groskurd proposes " length."